Activation domain-mediated enhancement of activator binding to chromatin in mammalian cells.
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 93 (20) , 10820-10825
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.93.20.10820
Abstract
DNA binding by transcriptional activators is typically an obligatory step in the activation of gene expression. Activator binding and subsequent steps in transcription are repressed by genomic chromatin. Studies in vitro have suggested that overcoming this repression is an important function of some activation domains. Here we provide quantitative in vivo evidence that the activation domain of GAL4-VP16 can increase the affinity of GAL4 for its binding site on genomic DNA in mammalian cells. Moreover, the VP16 activation domain has a much greater stimulatory effect on expression from a genomic reporter gene than on a transiently transfected reporter gene, where factor binding is more permissive. We found that not all activation domains showed a greater activation potential in a genomic context, suggesting that only some activation domains can function in vivo to alleviate the repressive effects of chromatin. These data demonstrate the importance of activation domains in relieving chromatin-mediated repression in vivo and suggest that one way they function is to increase binding of the activator itself.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Zta trans-activator protein stabilizes TFIID association with promoter DNA by direct protein-protein interaction.Genes & Development, 1991
- Role of Nucleosomal Cores and Histone H1 in Regulation of Transcription by RNA Polymerase IIScience, 1991
- Facilitated binding of GAL4 and heat shock factor to nucleosomal templates: differential function of DNA-binding domains.Genes & Development, 1991
- Activation domains of stably bound GAL4 derivatives alleviate repression of promoters by nucleosomesCell, 1991
- Transcription factor access is mediated by accurately positioned nucleosomes on the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter.Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1991
- Nucleosome positioning modulates accessibility of regulatory proteins to the mouse mammary tumor virus promoterCell, 1990
- In situ nucleoprotein structure at the SV40 major late promoter: melted and wrapped DNA flank the start site.Genes & Development, 1989
- An amino-terminal fragment of GAL4 binds DNA as a dimerJournal of Molecular Biology, 1989
- Transcription in yeast activated by a putative amphipathic α helix linked to a DNA binding unitNature, 1987
- Steroid-dependent interaction of transcription factors with the inducible promoter of mouse mammary tumor virus in vivoCell, 1987