MOLECULAR-CLONING AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A CELLULAR PROTEIN THAT INTERACTS WITH THE HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1 TAT TRANSACTIVATOR AND ENCODES A STRONG TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATION DOMAIN

被引:78
作者
YU, L [1 ]
ZHANG, ZH [1 ]
LOEWENSTEIN, PM [1 ]
DESAI, K [1 ]
TANG, QQ [1 ]
MAO, DL [1 ]
SYMINGTON, JS [1 ]
GREEN, M [1 ]
机构
[1] ST LOUIS UNIV, SCH MED, INST MOLEC VIROL, ST LOUIS, MO 63110 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1128/JVI.69.5.3007-3016.1995
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
The mechanism by which human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Tat transactivates the long terminal repeat promoter is not understood. It is generally believed that Tat has one or more transcription factors as its cellular target. One might expect a cellular target for Tat to possess several properties, including (i) the ability to bind to the Tat activation region, (ii) the possession of a transcriptional activation domain, and (iii) the ability to contact the cellular transcription machinery. Here we describe the cloning, expression, and characterization of a human protein, termed TAP (Tat-associated protein), which possesses some of these properties. TAP is highly conserved in eukaryotes and is expressed in a variety of human tissues. The major intracellular species of TAP is a highly acidic 209-amino-acid protein that likely is formed by removal of a highly basic 70-amino-acid N-terminal segment from a primary translation product. By deletion analysis, we have identified a TAP C-terminal region rich in acidic amino acids and leucine residues which acts as a strong transcriptional activator when bound through GAL4 sites upstream of the core long terminal repeat promoter, as well as flanking sequences that mask the activation function. Amino acid substitution of two leucine residues within the core activation region results in loss of the TAP activation function. Two lines of evidence suggest that Tat interacts with TAP in vivo. First, promoter-bound Tat can recruit a TAP/VP16 fusion protein to the promoter. Second, transiently expressed Tat is found associated with endogenous TAP, as demonstrated by coimmunoprecipitation analysis. As shown in an accompanying report, the TAP activation region binds the Tat core activation region and general transcription factor TFIIB (L. Yu, P. M. Loewenstein, Z. Zhang, and M. Green, J. Virol, 69:3017-3023, 1995). These combined results suggest the hypothesis that TAP may function as a coactivator that bridges Tat to the general transcription machinery of the cell via TFIIB.
引用
收藏
页码:3007 / 3016
页数:10
相关论文
共 63 条
[41]   HUMAN CHROMOSOME-12 ENCODES A SPECIES-SPECIFIC FACTOR WHICH INCREASES HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1 TAT-MEDIATED TRANS ACTIVATION IN RODENT CELLS [J].
NEWSTEIN, M ;
STANBRIDGE, EJ ;
CASEY, G ;
SHANK, PR .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1990, 64 (09) :4565-4567
[42]   CUG INITIATION CODON USED FOR THE SYNTHESIS OF A CELL-SURFACE ANTIGEN CODED BY THE MURINE LEUKEMIA-VIRUS [J].
PRATS, AC ;
DEBILLY, G ;
WANG, P ;
DARLIX, JL .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1989, 205 (02) :363-372
[43]   ACTIVATORS AND TARGETS [J].
PTASHNE, M ;
GANN, AAF .
NATURE, 1990, 346 (6282) :329-331
[44]   HOW EUKARYOTIC TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATORS WORK [J].
PTASHNE, M .
NATURE, 1988, 335 (6192) :683-689
[45]   PATTERN OF AROMATIC AND HYDROPHOBIC AMINO-ACIDS CRITICAL FOR ONE OF 2 SUBDOMAINS OF THE VP16 TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATOR [J].
REGIER, JL ;
SHEN, F ;
TRIEZENBERG, SJ .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1993, 90 (03) :883-887
[46]   INTERACTION BETWEEN AN ACIDIC ACTIVATOR AND TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR-TFIIB IS REQUIRED FOR TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATION [J].
ROBERTS, SGE ;
HA, I ;
MALDONADO, E ;
REINBERG, D ;
GREEN, MR .
NATURE, 1993, 363 (6431) :741-744
[47]   VECTORS FOR SELECTIVE EXPRESSION OF CLONED DNAS BY T7 RNA-POLYMERASE [J].
ROSENBERG, AH ;
LADE, BN ;
CHUI, DS ;
LIN, SW ;
DUNN, JJ ;
STUDIER, FW .
GENE, 1987, 56 (01) :125-135
[48]  
SADOWSKI I, 1989, NUCLEIC ACIDS RES, V17, P7639
[49]  
Sambrook J., 1989, MOL CLONING LAB MANU
[50]   DNA SEQUENCING WITH CHAIN-TERMINATING INHIBITORS [J].
SANGER, F ;
NICKLEN, S ;
COULSON, AR .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1977, 74 (12) :5463-5467