pubmed:abstractText |
Transcriptional regulation in eukaryotes is thought to occur through interactions between specific transcription factors and the general transcription machinery. We show that the regulatory protein FosB, but not FosB/SF or Fra-1, specifically and stably associates with the TATA box binding protein (TBP) and the multiprotein complex TFIID. The binding to TBP is specified by the last 55 C-terminal amino acids of FosB, requiring a small amino acid sequence, termed the 'TBP binding motif' (TBM). Deletion of the TBM affects transcriptional activity slightly, but it is adjacent to a proline-rich sequence which constitutes the major transactivation domain. However, both regions are required for the transformation of Rat-1A cells by FosB. Transfection experiments demonstrate that inhibition of transactivation due to excess levels of Gal4-FosB (squelching) can be partially relieved by the co-expression of TBP, which establishes that TFIID is a functional target of FosB. Since TBP binding is not exhibited by FosB/SF or Fra-1, we suggest that the activity mediated by the TBP interaction is one differentiating characteristic that distinguishes the FosB functions from those of FosB/SF and Fra-1.
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