Activation domain-dependent monoubiquitylation of Gal4 protein is essential for promoter binding in vivo

Author(s): Archer CT, Delahodde A, Gonzalez F, Johnston SA, Kodadek T

Abstract

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Gal4 protein is a paradigmatic transcriptional activator containing a C-terminal acidic activation domain (AD) of 34 amino acids. A mutation that results in the truncation of about two-thirds of the Gal4AD (gal4D) results in a crippled protein with only 3% the activity of the wild-type activator. We show here that although the Gal4D protein is not intrinsically deficient in DNA binding, it is nonetheless unable to stably occupy GAL promoters in vivo. This is because of the activity of the proteasomal ATPases, including Sug1/Rpt6, which bind to Gal4D via the remainder of the AD and strip it off of DNA. A mutation that suppressed the Gal4D "no growth on galactose" phenotype repressed the stripping activity of the ATPase complex but not other activities. We further demonstrate that Gal4D is hypersensitive to this stripping activity because of its failure to be monoubiquitylated efficiently in vivo and in vitro. Evidence is presented that the piece of the AD that is deleted in Gal4D protein is likely a recognition element for the E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase that modifies Gal4. These data argue that acidic ADs comprise at least two small peptide subdomains, one of which is responsible for activator monoubiquitylation and another that interacts with the proteasomal ATPases, coactivators and other transcription factors. This study validates the physiological importance of Gal4 monoubiquitylation and clarifies its major role as that of protecting the activator from being destabilized by the proteasomal ATPases.

Similar Articles

Inhibition of carcinogenesis by tea

Author(s): Yang CS, Maliakal P, Meng X

Prostate cancer chemoprevention by green tea

Author(s): Gupta S, Ahmad N, Mukhtar H

Apoptosis-inducing activity of high molecular weight fractions of tea extracts

Author(s): Hayakawa S, Kimura T, Saeki K, Koyama Y, Aoyagi Y, et al.

Apoptosis induction by epigallocatechin gallate involves its binding to Fas

Author(s): Hayakawa S, Saeki K, Sazuka M, Suzuki Y, Shoji Y, et al.

Synthetic analogs of green tea polyphenols as proteasome inhibitors

Author(s): Smith DM, Wang Z, Kazi A, Li LH, Chan TH, et al.

The proteasome: paradigm of a self-compartmentalizing protease

Author(s): Baumeister W, Walz J, Zühl F, Seemüller E

Physical and functional association of RNA polymerase II and the proteasome

Author(s): Gillette TG, Gonzalez F, Delahodde A, Johnston SA, Kodadek T

Recruitment of a 19S proteasome subcomplex to an activated promoter

Author(s): Gonzalez F, Delahodde A, Kodadek T, Johnston SA

The 19S complex of the proteasome regulates nucleotide excision repair in yeast

Author(s): Gillette TG, Huang W, Russell SJ, Reed SH, Johnston SA, et al.

Distinct functions of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway influence nucleotide excision repair

Author(s): Gillette TG, Yu S, Zhou Z, Waters R, Johnston SA, et al.

Synergistic effect of green tea catechins on cell growth and apoptosis induction in gastric carcinoma cells

Author(s): Horie N, Hirabayashi N, Takahashi Y, Miyauchi Y, Taguchi H, et al.

Lactacystin, proteasome function, and cell fate

Author(s): Fenteany G, Schreiber SL

Apoptosis induced by proteasome inhibition in cancer cells: predominant role of the p53/PUMA pathway

Author(s): Concannon CG, Koehler BF, Reimertz C, Murphy BM, Bonner C, et al.

Caspases and apoptosis

Author(s): Salvesen GS

NF-kappaB controls cell growth and differentiation through transcriptional regulation of cyclin D1

Author(s): Guttridge DC, Albanese C, Reuther JY, Pestell RG, Baldwin AS Jr

Tea polyphenols, their biological effects and potential molecular targets

Author(s): Chen D, Milacic V, Chen MS, Wan SB, Lam WH, et al.