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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 275, Issue 40, 30886-30893, October 6, 2000
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From the Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Tennessee, Memphis, Tennessee 38163
Received for publication, June 27, 2000, and in revised form, July 12, 2000
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ABSTRACT |
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Allophanate/oxalurate-induced gene expression in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae requires at least five
transcription factors, four of which act positively (Gln3p, Gat1p,
Dal81p, and Dal82p) and one negatively (Dal80p). Gln3p binds to and
Gat1p is proposed to bind to single GATA sequences; Dal80p binds to
pairs of specifically oriented and spaced GATA sequences, and Dal82p
binds to a pathway-specific element, UISALL. Dal82p
consists of at least three domains as follows: (i) UISALL
DNA-binding, (ii) transcriptional activation, and (iii)
coiled-coilDAL82. Here we show that the
coiled-coilDAL82 domain possesses two demonstrable
functions. (i) It prevents Dal82p-mediated transcription when inducer
is absent. (ii) It is a major, although not exclusive, domain through
which the inducer signal is received. Supporting the latter conclusion,
a 38-amino acid fragment, containing little more than the
coiled-coilDAL82 domain, supports oxalurate-inducible, Dal81p-dependent, reporter gene transcription. Dal81p is
required for inducer responsiveness of LexAp-Dal82p and LexAp
coiled-coilDAL82-mediated transcription but isn't needed
for inducer-dependent activation mediated by a Dal82p
containing deletions in both the coiled-coilDAL82, UISALL-binding domains. There may be an interaction between
Dal81p and the coiled-coilDAL82 domain since (i) Dal81p is
required for transcription mediated by
LexA-coiled-coilDAL82p and (ii) a Dal81p-Dal82p complex is detected by two-hybrid assay.
The transmission of environmental signals to the transcription
apparatus has been extensively studied. The molecular communication networks vary widely, involving one or more of the following: protein-protein complex formation, post-translational protein modification, and subcellular localization/exclusion of regulatory proteins (1). The Saccharomyces cerevisiae allantoin pathway genes (DAL1-5 and DUR1-3) encode the permeases
and enzymes required to degrade allantoin or its metabolic products to
ammonia and carbon dioxide (2). Expression of these genes is subject to several major types of control. First and foremost is nitrogen catabolite repression (NCR)1
in which the GATA family transcription activators Gln3p and Gat1p are
excluded from the nucleus and hence cannot reach their GATA-binding sites (3-11). In this way, DAL and DUR gene
expression is drastically down-regulated when a good nitrogen source is
available (2). When a poor nitrogen source is present, the GATA family
transcription activators are nuclear, occupy their GATA-binding sites,
and mediate DAL and DUR gene expression (4-8).
In contrast to NCR, which is a global control mechanism shared by other
nitrogen catabolic gene systems, induced DAL and
DUR gene expression represents a second type of control (2).
It is allantoin pathway-specific with the inducer being the last
intermediate in the pathway, allophanate, or its non-metabolized
analogue oxalurate (OXLU) (2).
The broad outlines of DAL gene induction have most recently
been derived from analyses of the DAL7 promoter and
transcription associated with it (12, 13). Three types of
cis-acting sites are located upstream of DAL7 as
follows: (i) UASNTR, the Gln3p-, Gat1p-binding sites,
consisting of single GATA sequences, (ii) Dal80p-binding sites,
consisting of pairs of GATA sequences in specific orientation and
spacing, and (iii) UISALL sites that are specifically
associated with induction (2, 12, 13). Increasing evidence supports the
hypothesis that the repressor, Dal80p, competes with Gln3p and/or Gat1p
for binding to the GATA sequences (3, 13, 14). In the absence of
inducer, Dal80p-mediated repression prevails, and allantoin pathway
genes are expressed at low basal levels (13). In the presence of
inducer, Gln3p- Gat1p-mediated transcription prevails and the
expression of these genes occurs at high levels. Induction requires the
dodecanucleotide, UISALL, and two trans-acting
factors, Dal81p and Dal82p (2); Dal82p binds UISALL (15),
whereas the function of Dal81p is unknown. Although only 29 kDa, Dal82p
possesses at least three demonstrable domains as follows: a
UISALL-DNA binding domain (a.a. 1-85), a transcriptional
activation domain (a.a. 66-99); and a putative (based on predicted
sequence and secondary structure homology) C-terminal coiled-coil
domain, designated coiled-coilDAL82 (a.a. 217-255) (16).
Deletions within these domains result in loss of only one function.
However, deletions within the overlapping region of the
UISALL binding and transcriptional activation domains (a.a.
66-85) eliminate both functions. A LexA-Dal82p fusion protein devoid
of the coiled-coilDAL82 supports 5-fold greater induced reporter gene expression than full-length wild type (16). The objective
of this work is to further understand the roles played by the three
Dal82p domains in the induction process.
Plasmid Constructions--
Plasmids, containing deletions of
Dal82p binding and activation regions, were derived from pRD41 (15,
16), using the single-stranded template method (pSelectTM
mutagenesis kit, Promega Corp.). For each deletion, annealed complementary strand oligonucleotides, respectively, covering 25 bp 5'
and 25 bp 3' of the desired deletion and maintaining the native reading
frame were prepared. All constructs were sequenced to verify that no
changes were made other than the designated deletion and to confirm
maintenance of the correct reading frame.
Two types of LexAp-Dal82p plasmids were used as follows: 1) a
"bait" plasmid for two-hybrid studies was a pEG202 derivative (contains HIS3 marker), and 2) LexAp fusion plasmids for
activation studies were BTM116 derivatives (a close derivative of
pEG202 containing a TRP1 marker) (both vectors were from
Roger Brent's laboratory (17)). The LexAp DNA binding domain in both
plasmids was under control of the yeast ADH1 promoter. The
pEG202 derivative, containing DAL82, was constructed using
an EcoRI-BamHI adapter (5'-GATCCACCGATTCATCCATG-3' and 5'-AATTCATGGATGAATCGGTG-3') cloned into
pEG202 digested with EcoRI and BamHI. This insert
fragment generated the correct reading frame for fusing the LexAp
DNA-binding domain to the first 8 Dal82p a.a. The remainder of
DAL82 (BamHI-BglII fragment from pM08
(18) was cloned into the BamHI site yielding pSS8202. All of
the above plasmids contain 2 µ sequences.
The pBTM116-based vector was constructed by cloning the 500-bp
EcoRI-EcoRI fragment from pSS8202 into
EcoRI-digested pBTM116. The remainder of DAL82 (a
SalI-PstI fragment from pSS20) was then cloned
into the SalI-PstI sites. pSS20 was
constructed by subcloning the 3.9-kilobase pair
EagI-ClaI fragment from pMO8 (18) into YCp50
yielding pSS82BTM. Various deletion derivatives of pSS82BTM were
constructed by replacing wild type sequences between the BamHI and XhoI sites with sequences containing
the desired deletion from the pRD
To construct "prey" pVS8115, full-length DAL81 was
cloned, in-frame with B42, into the XhoI site of pJG4-5
using SalI-BsmFI and
PstI-SalI polymerase chain reaction adaptors.
Full-length DAL81, including its promoter, from pPB14 (19)
and pVS8115, was cloned into the SalI and NotI
sites of 2-µm pRS423 to yield pSS42381. pSS42381 was used to test the
effect of Dal81p overproduction in the two-hybrid assay (20).
Construction of LexA-Gln3 pVS3BTM and pVS32 have been described
(21).
Dal82p-dependent Transcriptional Activation Requires
Dal81p--
Dal82p supports transcriptional activation when tethered
to a UAS-less promoter via LexAp (16). To establish the requirements for this activity, we assayed it in wild type (M1682-19b) and dal81
Since protein-protein interactions can occur through coiled-coil motifs
such as the one in Dal82p, we reasoned that
inducer-dependent transcription might derive from Dal81p
being recruited to the reporter gene promoter via Dal82p,
i.e. Dal82p acts as a bridge between DNA and Dal81p. To test
this idea, we removed the putative C-terminal
coiled-coilDAL82 (a.a. 217-255) (16). This mutation drastically altered the transcription profile (Fig.
2, pSS43). (i) Induced
lacZ expression increased 5-fold with respect to wild type
(pSS82BTM) and became largely, but not completely, inducer-independent (Fig. 1, WT, pSS43). (ii) High level expression,
similar to that seen in the uninduced wild type, occurred in a
dal81
These experiments revealed several additional characteristics of
Dal82p-dependent transcriptional activation. (i) The
coiled-coilDAL82 domain mediates strong negative regulation
of Dal82p-dependent activation when inducer is absent and
continues this role, albeit to a lesser extent, when inducer is
present. (ii) Relief of this down-regulation requires inducer and
Dal81p whether or not the coiled-coilDAL82 domain is
present. (iii) Dal82p-mediated transcription remains 2-fold
inducer-responsive even when the coiled-coilDAL82 domain is
absent; this response is Dal81p-dependent. (iv) Dal81p is
not required for high level transcription if Dal82p lacks its coiled-coilDAL82 domain.
Since the Dal82p transcriptional activation and
UISALL-binding domains partially overlap, we next
investigated whether alteration of the UISALL-binding
domain influenced the LexA-Dal82p-mediated transcriptional activation
profile. Note that for this experiment we chose a
UISALL-binding domain deletion that did not demonstrably affect transcriptional activation (16). Deleting the Dal82p UISALL-binding domain (amino acids 8-16) did not affect
basal level expression but dramatically increased induced transcription to the same high level observed with the coiled-coilDAL82
deletion (Fig. 1, pSS489). Induced transcription, like that
supported by wild type pSS82BTM, was completely
Dal81p-dependent. In other words, deleting the
coiled-coilDAL82 or a portion of the
UISALL-binding domain yields the same phenotype in the
presence of inducer. As with the coiled-coilDAL82 deletion,
a Dal82p activation domain deletion was epistatic to one in the Dal82p
UISALL-binding domain (Fig. 1, pSS889).
When deletions were introduced into both the Dal82p
coiled-coilDAL82 and UISALL-binding domains,
several changes occurred in the activation profile. (i) Reporter gene
expression became fully Dal81p- and partially inducer-independent; wild
type and dal81
The important regulatory role demonstrated above for the
coiled-coilDAL82 domain prompted us to determine whether it
could function on its own; LexA was fused ahead of sequences encoding the coiled-coilDAL82 (a.a. 210-255, pSSCCBTM, Fig. 2).
Remarkably, LexA-coiled-coilDAL82p supports
OXLU-induced transcription, although more weakly (6-7-fold) than with
full-length LexA-Dal82p (Fig. 2). Transcription is both inducer- and
Dal81p-dependent, arguing that the
coiled-coilDAL82p is structurally sufficient to mediate basic inducer responsiveness and Dal81p participation in it. On the
other hand, inducer and Dal81p function through more than one domain of
Dal82p. We base this conclusion on the observation that LexA-Dal82p
lacking the coiled-coilDAL82 (pSS43) retains some
Dal81p-dependent inducer responsiveness (Fig. 1).
Dal82p-dependent Transcriptional Activation Requires
Gln3p--
During characterization of cis-acting mutations
in the Gln3p-binding sites of DAL7, we observed that single base
substitutions in these GATA sequences destroyed their ability to
support heterologous reporter gene expression (24). This phenotype
could be effectively suppressed if we cloned a UISALL
(Dal82p-binding site) adjacent to the mutated GATA sequence.
Suppression required both Dal82p and its ability to bind to the
UISALL element but did not require inducer or Dal81p (24).
These observations pointed to a functional relationship between Gln3p
and Dal82p. Therefore, we investigated whether LexAp-Dal82p-mediated
transcription was affected by mutations in GLN3. Basal level
(uninduced) reporter gene expression supported by full-length
LexA-Dal82p and LexA-Dal82p lacking the UISALL-binding domain was largely Gln3p-dependent (Fig.
3A, pSS82BTM and
pSS489). Only uninduced levels of
In most cases, Gln3p dependence of the expression of a gene strongly
correlates with it being NCR-sensitive (3), thereby providing an
independent indication of Gln3p participation in the expression of a
gene. In wild type strain TCY5,
A possible, trivial explanation for the Gln3p dependence of
Dal82p-mediated activation might derive from the existence of Gln3p-binding sites near the LexAp-binding sites. If such sites exist,
it is conceivable that we are reconstituting a more or less ordinary
allantoin pathway gene promoter with binding of the Dal82p to the
promoter occurring through LexAp-binding sites rather than a
UISALL element. A computer search revealed two
vector GATAA sequences 5 and 50 bp from the LexAp-binding sites. To
determine whether these gratuitous sites accounted for the observed
Gln3p dependence, we mutated them. Dal81p and Dal82p Interact in a Two-hybrid Assay--
One
way Dal81p dependence of LexA-Dal82p-mediated transcription might occur
is via formation of a Dal81p-Dal82p complex; data obtained with
pSSCCBTM (Fig. 2), containing the coiled-coilDAL82 domain,
are consistent with such a hypothesis. Because we were reluctant to
tamper with the Dal82p activation domain, we used LexA-DAL82 pSS8202 as
bait (Fig. 5). Without inducer,
there was little transcription with negative control B42 activation
domain pJG4-5 whether glucose or galactose was used as carbon source (Fig. 5B, prey, pJG4-5 is galactose-inducible). In proline + OXLU medium, irrespective of the carbon source provided,
Although we would have preferred using a bait plasmid that was
transcriptionally inactive whether or not inducer was present, the most
straightforward interpretation of the data obtained in inducer-free
medium is that the transcription we observed derived from the B42p
activation domain of the Dal81p-B42 prey plasmid. The result argues in
favor of a protein-protein interaction between Dal81p and Dal82p. High
level reporter gene expression with repressive nitrogen sources
supports this interpretation. If the activity derived solely from
Dal82p-mediated activation, it would be NCR-sensitive (see Fig. 5).
Another observation supports the contention of a functional
relationship between Dal81p and Dal82p. Overproduction of Dal81p or
Gln3p, but not Dal82p, is toxic, resulting in slow growth
(25).3 Simultaneous
overproduction of Dal82p along with either Dal81p or Gln3p, however,
suppresses this toxicity (data not shown).
SAGA Complex Requirements for LexAp-Gln3p and LexAp-Dal82p-mediated
Activation--
The partial requirement of Gln3p for Dal82p-mediated
transcriptional activation (Fig. 3) and the growth phenotype
suppression data just discussed raise the possibility that Gln3p might
complex to Dal82p and thereby account for its activation capability. If such an interaction occurred, the SAGA components required for Dal82p-
and Gln3p-mediated transcription would probably be similar since
transcriptional activation would be achieved by Gln3p in both cases
(26, 27). To evaluate this possibility, we compared the SAGA
requirement profiles of transcription mediated by LexA-Dal82p lacking
the coiled-coilDAL82 and LexA-Gln3p (Fig.
6). Coiled-coilDAL82 minus
Dal82p was used for this experiment in preference to the inducer-dependent full-length protein, because Gln3p is
required for uptake of inducer thereby compromising results obtained in the presence of inducer. The SAGA requirements of LexA-Gln3p and LexA-Dal82p differ for Spt3p, Spt8p, Spt20p, and Snf2p and maybe Spt7p and Gcn5p. LexAp-Dal82p-mediated activation possesses a greater
requirement for Spt3p and smaller requirements for Spt8p, Snf2p,
and perhaps Spt7p than that mediated by LexAp-Gln3p. Both proteins
possess strong requirements for Spt20p/Ada5p.
The above data provide further insight into the mechanism of
allophanate-induced gene expression. Fig.
7 depicts a very preliminary working
hypothesis whose function is to provide a way of organizing and
visualizing the large number of observations and correlations we have
made; it is not meant to propose/summarize a definitive explanation of
the induction process. Multiple domains of Dal82p, the
UISALL-binding protein, play significant roles in this
process. The Dal82p C-terminal coiled-coilDAL82 domain
appears to be central to down-regulating Dal82p-mediated transcription
in the absence of inducer. Moreover, coiled-coilDAL82 is
one of the domains through which Dal81p participates in the induction
process as evidenced by the following observations: (i) a
LexA-coiled-coilDAL82 fusion protein alone can mediate
inducer- and Dal81p-dependent transcriptional activation,
and (ii) transcription mediated by dal82 constructs lacking
coiled-coilDAL82 is largely Dal81p-independent. Dal81p appears necessary to neutralize negative control of OXLU-induced transcription that occurs through coiled-coilDAL82. Similar
results would be expected, however, if Dal81p was potentiating the
elimination of negative control that occurs through another
mechanism.
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INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
and pSS
plasmids (16).
-Galactosidase Assay--
Transformants, generally appearing
2-3 days after incubation (30 °C), were patched onto plates
containing selective medium, incubated 2 days at 30 °C, and then
inoculated into 50 ml of liquid YNB media (0.17% YNB without casamino
acids or ammonium sulfate, 2% glucose, and 0.1% nitrogen source).
Where indicated, inducer (OXLU) was added to a final concentration of
66 mg/liter. These cultures were grown overnight to a density of
A600 = 0.45-1.00 and assayed as described
earlier (22). Units of activity were calculated as Miller (23)
(units = 1000 × A420/time
(min) × volume (ml) × A600) except
that 10 ml instead of 1 ml of culture were used. Each transformant was
assayed in duplicate, and the reported
-galactosidase activities are
the average of at least two separate, randomly selected transformants
from the same transformation event and in many cases from two
independent transformation events.
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RESULTS
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
(PB200) strains growing in glucose/proline medium.
LexA-Dal82p-mediated transcription requires both Dal81p and inducer,
oxalurate (OXLU) (Fig. 1,
pSS82BTM). It is important to note that OXLU uptake does not
depend upon a permease whose production is
Dal81p-dependent.2
Therefore, the Dal81p dependence of lacZ expression doesn't
derive indirectly from a Dal81p requirement for OXLU transport. A small deletion in the Dal82p activation domain (residues 89 to 95) destroys LexA-Dal82p-mediated transcription, demonstrating its absolute requirement for the activity we measured (Fig. 1, pSS480).
pSS480 contains the same dal82 deletion as pRD480 which was
demonstrated by Western analysis to produce a stable truncated protein.
Furthermore, Dal82p produced from pSS480, although transcriptionally
inactive, is able to bind DNA fragments containing UISALL
(16).

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Fig. 1.
Requirement of Dal81p for transcriptional
activation mediated by LexA-Dal82p (pSS82BTM) and its deletion
derivatives. M1682-19b (WT, wild type) PB200
(dal81
) were transformed with reporter pSH18-34 and the
indicated pSS82BTM derivatives as follows: pSS480 lacks activation a.a.
89-95; pSS43 lacks coiled-coilDAL82 a.a. 220-255; pSS890
lacks a.a. 89-95 and 220-255; pSS489 lacks
UISALL-DNA-binding a.a. 8-16; pSS820 lacks a.a. 8-16 and
220-255; and pSS889 lacks a.a. 8-16 and 89-95. Cultures were assayed
after growth in glucose/proline medium with or without OXLU.
, but addition of OXLU no longer increased
expression (Fig. 1, pSS43). Again, an additional small
activation domain deletion destroyed lacZ expression,
demonstrating its epistasis to the coiled-coilDAL82 deletion (plasmid pSS890).

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Fig. 2.
Requirement of Dal81p for
LexA-coiled-coilDAL82-mediated transcriptional
activation. The strains and conditions were as described in Fig.
1. pSSCCBTM, used in this experiment, contains the LexA DNA-binding
domain fused to coiled-coilDAL82 a.a. 210-255.
WT, wild type.
strains behaved identically (Fig. 1,
pSS820). The induced level with the double mutant, although
2-3 times that seen with the induced wild type LexA-Dal82p (pSS82BTM),
was only half the induced level supported by pSS489 and pSS43, or about
the same as with pSS43 in a dal81
(Fig. 2). (ii) pSS820
retained a clear inducer response, arguing that inducer played a role
beyond Dal81p and the coiled-coilDAL82 domain. (iii)
Maximum induced Dal82-mediated activation could be achieved by deleting
either the coiled-coilDAL82 or UISALL-binding
domains, but not both.
-galactosidase
production were assayed because Gln3p is required for OXLU uptake.
Although there was demonstrable Gln3p dependence of transcriptional
activation supported by a coiled-coilDAL82 deletion, the
requirement was modest (~2-fold) (Fig. 3B,
pSS43).
-Galactosidase production supported by the coiled-coilDAL82, UISALL-binding domain double
mutant (pSS820) was 25% lower than seen with the single
coiled-coilDAL82 deletion (pSS43) in gln3
strain RR911 and was Gln3p-independent (Fig. 3B, pSS43
open bar and pSS820 open and filled
bars). pSS820 supported greater lacZ expression than
either pSS82BTM or pSS489 in a gln3
. Note that both
Dal81p and Gln3p dependence are lost together in the
coiled-coilDAL82, UISALL-binding domain double
deletion pSS820, although transcription supported by pSS820 in a
Gln3+ strain is still inducer-responsive.

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Fig. 3.
Requirement of Gln3p for transcriptional
activation mediated by LexA-Dal82p (pSS82BTM) and its deletion
derivatives. Wild type TCY5 and gln3
RR911 were
transformed with the indicated plasmids as described in Fig. 1.
A and B show
-galactosidase production in
glucose/proline grown cultures. C, compares
-galactosidase production in glucose/glutamine and glucose/proline
media. WT, wild type.
-galactosidase production supported
by pSS43 was 2-fold NCR-sensitive; a similar sized effect was observed
relative to wild type in proline medium with a gln3
(Fig.
3C). Little if any NCR sensitivity occurred when the
experiment was performed in gln3
(strain RR911) (Fig. 4C). That NCR sensitivity
parallels Gln3p dependence of transcription supported by LexA-Dal82p
lacking the coiled-coilDAL82 argues in favor of the Gln3p
dependence.

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Fig. 4.
LexA-Dal82p-mediated transcription supported
by wild type reporter pSH18-34 or a derivative of this plasmid
containing mutated GATA sequences (pSS618-34). pSH18-34 or mutant
pSS618-34 was used to transform either wild type TCY5 or
gln3
. Transformants were grown on
glucose/proline medium with or without OXLU prior to assaying reporter
gene expression. WT, wild type.
-Galactosidase production with
wild type pSH18-34 was the same as with pSS618-34 in which the GATA sequences were mutated, arguing against the possibility of such an
artifact (Fig. 4).
-galactosidase production is high because of the ability of
LexA-Dal82p (the bait) to support inducer-dependent
activation. A similar result was observed when Dal81-B42 pVS8115 was
used as prey (Fig. 5C). If overproducing full-length Dal81p
influenced the transcriptional activation assay, we would have detected
it here; there was no effect, and the profile was the same as with the
B42 vector alone (Fig. 5D). It is also important to note the
lack of
-galactosidase production with ammonia or glutamine as
nitrogen source in the control experiments (Fig. 5, A-C).
In contrast, when Dal81-B42 pVS8115 was the prey and galactose was the
carbon source, high level
-galactosidase production occurred in
minimal glutamine, ammonia, or proline medium, all devoid of inducer
(Fig. 5D). Addition of inducer had no demonstrable effect
upon the assay results except in glucose/proline medium where it was
expected. In other words, the DAL81 prey yielded positive
results in the absence of inducer only when the B42 activation domain
was fused to it (Fig. 5, compare C and D).

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Fig. 5.
Two-hybrid assay with LexA-Dal82p as bait and
B42-Dal81p as prey. A, results obtained when
control vectors were used as bait (pEG202) and prey (pJG4-5).
B,
-galactosidase production in wild type EGY48
transformed with reporter pSH18-34, bait pSS8202 (LexA-Dal82p), and
galactose-inducible B42 activation pJG4-5. Transformants were grown
with either glucose or galactose. C is the same with the
exception that the B42 activation plasmid was fused to Dal81p
(pVS8115). The cultures were grown with the designated nitrogen sources
as follows: GLN, glutamine; NH4,
ammonia; PRO, proline. D, full-length Dal81p (but
lacking the fused B42 activation domain) expressed from a 2-µm
plasmid.

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Fig. 6.
Requirement profiles of SAGA components for
transcriptional activation mediated by LexAp-Dal82p
(coiled-coilDAL82
)
(A) or LexAp-Gln3p (B). Strains
with deletions in GCN5, SPT3, -7, -8, -20, SPT2, or
ADA5 (strains listed in Table
I) were transformed with reporter
pSH18-34 and either pSS43 or pVS3BTM. In some cases pVS32, a plasmid
similar to VS3BTM but with different selectable markers was used in
place of pVS3BTM. Cultures were grown in glucose/proline medium and
assayed as described in Fig. 1.
Strains used in this work
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DISCUSSION
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

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Fig. 7.
Working hypothesis used as a means to
organize, visualize, and correlate data presented in this
work.
Data in Fig. 5 lead us to conclude that a complex forms between Dal81p and Dal82p, possibly through the coiled-coilDAL82 domain. However, we were unable to demonstrate direct participation of coiled-coilDAL82 in complex formation experimentally because (i) a LexA-coiled-coilDAL82p bait does not appear to function in the two-hybrid assay with Dal81p as prey, and (ii) a coiled-coilDAL82 minus DAL82 construct (pSS43) cannot be used as a bait because of the high level transcription it supports on its own. The alternative approach to this question is to employ Dal81p as the bait. Unfortunately, characterization of the very large Dal81p and its potential domains are not available because so far the cloning experiments have, for unknown reasons, not been possible.
Although the coiled-coilDAL82 is a major domain associated
with inducer and Dal81p function, it is not unique in this regard. Inducer responsiveness of the coiled-coilDAL82,
UISALL-binding domain single deletion mutants (pSS43 and
pSS489) and the double deletion mutant (pSS820) argues that the inducer
signal, and the participation of Dal81p in responding to it, must occur
through a second part of Dal82p as well. In addition, the induction
characteristics of a coiled-coilDAL82 deletion alone and in
combination with a binding site deletion as well as those of the
LexA-coiled-coilDAL82p argues against the inducer
simply binding to either Dal81p or Dal82p and seems to implicate an as
yet unknown protein that is responsible for sensing the presence of the
inducer. This reasoning is based on the following facts: (i)
transcription mediated by the LexA-coiled-coilDAL82p
(pSSCCBTM, Fig. 2) responds to inducer even though there is
little more than the coiled-coilDAL82 present in the
construct, (ii) LexA-Dal82p lacking the coiled-coilDAL82 (pSS43) remains inducer-responsive, and (iii) the dal82
UISALL DNA binding, coiled-coilDAL82 double
deletion (pSS820) supports inducer-responsive reporter gene expression
that also occurs in a dal81
recipient.
Another novel characteristic of the Dal81-Dal82 interaction is the negative regulation of the ability of Dal82p to mediate transcription in the absence of inducer. Here, although there is some loss of this negative regulation in a DNA-binding site deletion mutant, this domain does not seem to play as important a role as the coiled-coilDAL82. The centrality of the coiled-coilDAL82 in this function is further supported by the fact that one observes negative regulation of the ability of the isolated coiled-coilDAL82 to mediate reporter gene transcription in the absence of inducer. Dal82p has previously been characterized as a strictly positive regulatory protein. However, from this vantage point its coiled-coilDAL82 can also be considered a negative regulator of Dal82p-mediated transcription in the absence of inducer and that a potential function of Dal81p is to participate in the removal of this negative regulation or potentiation of its removal. There is another participant in the removal of negative regulation when inducer is present because limited induction remains in dal81 mutants (Fig. 1, pSS820).
A possible explanation for these results is that the coiled-coilDAL82, or some other part of the protein which is influenced by the coiled-coilDAL82, can mask the Dal82p transcriptional activation domain. By this reasoning, Dal81p, in the presence of inducer, interacts with the coiled-coilDAL82, and this complex unmasks the activation domain. The binding site deletion argues that a second portion of Dal82p participates in masking/unmasking the activation domain as well.
Separate from the Dal81p, Gln3p also participates in Dal82p-mediated transcription. Two lines of evidence support this proposal. (i) UISALL/Dal82p suppression of Gln3p-binding site mutation (mutations in the GATA sequence) phenotypes occurs in the absence of Dal81p and inducer (24). (ii) Dal82p participates in transcription mediated by CAR2 promoter fragments in the absence of inducer and Dal81p (28). Although there are no Gln3p-binding sites in CAR2, a functional UAS (RAP1-binding site) is required for UISALL to mediate transcription (28). Another possibility is that Dal81p forms a bridge between Dal82p and Gln3p which in turn interacts with the core transcription apparatus. This is less likely since (i) different subsets of SAGA components are required for LexA-Dal82p and LexA-Gln3p-mediated transcriptional activation, and (ii) Dal82p possesses a transcriptional activation domain and is able to support transcriptional activation in the absence of Gln3p or Dal81p. Objectively, however, we must also concede the existence of an alternative explanation for the SAGA results. It is possible that the Dal82p-Gln3p complex formation alters the conformation of Gln3p, and it is this alteration that is reflected in the Dal82p-specific SAGA component requirements. We have not distinguished between the two possibilities.
These arguments lead to our current hypothesis that the functional
interaction that appears to exist between Gln3p and Dal82p is not a
direct Gln3p-Dal82p protein-protein complex but involves components of
the core transcription complex. The bridge could be the SAGA complex
itself with Gln3p and Dal82p contacting it at different points. By this
view, one would expect the existing indications of a Gln3p-Dal82p
interaction (24) but without a demonstrable direct interaction.
Although some components of the allophanate-mediated induction of
transcription quite likely remain to be found (the hypothetical inducer
binding protein), and the detailed protein-protein interactions are
only now coming into focus, progress is being made toward filling in
the missing pieces of the mechanism. This information will no doubt be
prerequisite to understanding how UISALL-Dal82p-Dal81p and
inducer are able to tip the equilibrium of Dal80p competing with Gln3p
for binding to the GATA sequences upstream of the allantoin pathway
genes in favor of Gln3p.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
|---|
We thank Dr. Fred Winston and colleagues for the SAGA mutant strains, Dr. Vladimir Svetlov for LexA-Gln3 pVS8115 and pVS32 as well as DAL81-B42 pVS8115, the University of Tennessee Yeast Group for suggested improvements to the manuscript, and Tim Higgins for preparing the figures.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM-35642.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 901-448-6175;
Fax: 901-448-8462; Email: tcooper@utmem.edu.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, July 20, 2000, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M005624200
2 J. McKelvey and T. G. Cooper, unpublished observations.
3 S. Scott and T. G. Cooper, unpublished observations.
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
The abbreviations used are: NCR, nitrogen catabolite repression; a.a., amino acid; bp, base pair; OXLU, oxalurate.
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