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TFIIA transcriptional activity is controlled by a ‘cleave-and-run’ Exportin-1/Taspase 1-switch
Author(s) -
Christian Schrenk,
Verena Fetz,
Cecilia Vallet,
Christina Heiselmayer,
Elisabeth Schröder,
Astrid Hensel,
Angelina Hahlbrock,
Desirée Wünsch,
Dorothée Goesswein,
Carolin Bier,
Negusse Habtemichael,
Günter Schneider,
Roland H. Stauber,
Shirley K. Knauer
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of molecular cell biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.825
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1674-2788
pISSN - 1759-4685
DOI - 10.1093/jmcb/mjx025
Subject(s) - transcription factor ii a , microbiology and biotechnology , nuclear transport , nuclear export signal , tata box , nuclear localization sequence , transcription (linguistics) , biology , transcription factor , tata binding protein , cell nucleus , genetics , dna binding protein , cytoplasm , promoter , gene , gene expression , linguistics , philosophy
Transcription factor TFIIA is controlled by complex regulatory networks including proteolysis by the protease Taspase 1, though the full impact of cleavage remains elusive. Here, we demonstrate that in contrast to the general assumption, de novo produced TFIIA is rapidly confined to the cytoplasm via an evolutionary conserved nuclear export signal (NES, amino acids 21VINDVRDIFL30), interacting with the nuclear export receptor Exportin-1/chromosomal region maintenance 1 (Crm1). Chemical export inhibition or genetic inactivation of the NES not only promotes TFIIA's nuclear localization but also affects its transcriptional activity. Notably, Taspase 1 processing promotes TFIIA's nuclear accumulation by NES masking, and modulates its transcriptional activity. Moreover, TFIIA complex formation with the TATA box binding protein (TBP) is cooperatively enhanced by inhibition of proteolysis and nuclear export, leading to an increase of the cell cycle inhibitor p16INK, which is counteracted by prevention of TBP binding. We here identified a novel mechanism how proteolysis and nuclear transport cooperatively fine-tune transcriptional programs.

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