Abstract
SUMMARYThe acidic activation domain (AD) of yeast transcription factor Gal4 plays a dual role in both transcription repression and activation through sequence-dependent binding to Gal80 repressor and sequence-independent binding to Mediator subunit Med15. The activation function of Gal4 arises from two hydrophobic regions within the 40-residue AD. We show by NMR that each AD region binds the Mediator subunit Med15 using a “fuzzy” protein interface. Remarkably, comparison of chemical shift perturbations shows that Gal4 and Gcn4, two ADs of different sequence, interact nearly identically with Med15. The findings that two ADs of different sequence use an identical fuzzy binding mechanism shows a common sequence-independent mechanism for AD-Mediator binding, similar to interactions within a hydrophobic cloud. In contrast, the same region of Gal4 AD interacts with Gal80 via a tight structured complex, implying that the structured binding partner of an intrinsically disordered protein dictates the type of protein interaction.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory