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Rpb4, a subunit of RNA Polymerase II plays an important role in various stress responses in budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In response to nitrogen starvation, diploid yeast undergoes a dimorphic transition to filamentous pseudohyphal growth, which is regulated through cAMP-PKA and MAP kinase pathway. In the present study, we show that disruption of Rpb4 leads to enhanced pseudohyphal growth, which is independent of nutritional status. We observed that the rpb4Delta/rpb4Delta cells exhibit pseudohyphae even in the absence of functional MAP kinase and cAMP-PKA pathways. Genome-wide expression profiling showed that in the absence of Rpb4 several genes controlling mother daughter cell separation are down regulated. Our genetic studies also provide evidence for involvement of RNA Pol II subunit Rpb4 in the expression of genes downstream of the RAM pathway. Finally, we show that this effect on expression of RAM pathway may at least be partially responsible for the pseudohyphal phenotype of rpb4Delta/rpb4Delta cells.  相似文献   

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Both the gene and the cDNA encoding the Rpb4 subunit of RNA polymerase II were cloned from the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The cDNA sequence indicates that Rpb4 consists of 135 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of 15,362. As in the case of the corresponding subunits from higher eukaryotes such as humans and the plant Arabidopsis thaliana, Rpb4 is smaller than RPB4 from the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and lacks several segments, which are present in the S. cerevisiae RPB4 subunit, including the highly charged sequence in the central portion. The RPB4 subunit of S. cerevisiae is not essential for normal cell growth but is required for cell viability under stress conditions. In contrast, S. pombe Rpb4 was found to be essential even under normal growth conditions. The fraction of RNA polymerase II containing RPB4 in exponentially growing cells of S. cerevisiae is about 20%, but S. pombe RNA polymerase II contains the stoichiometric amount of Rpb4 even at the exponential growth phase. In contrast to the RPB4 homologues from higher eukaryotes, however, S. pombe Rpb4 formed stable hybrid heterodimers with S. cerevisiae RPB7, suggesting that S. pombe Rpb4 is similar, in its structure and essential role in cell viability, to the corresponding subunits from higher eukaryotes. However, S. pombe Rpb4 is closer in certain molecular functions to S. cerevisiae RPB4 than the eukaryotic RPB4 homologues.  相似文献   

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Rpb4 is a subunit of Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNA polymerase II (Pol II). It associates with the polymerase preferentially in stationary phase and is essential for some stress responses. Using the promoter-independent initiation and chain elongation assay, we monitored Pol II enzymatic activity in cell extracts. We show here that Rpb4 is required for the polymerase activity at temperature extremes (10 and 35°C). In contrast, at moderate temperature (23°C) Pol II activity is independent of Rpb4. These results are consistent with the role previously attributed to Rpb4 as a subunit whose association with Pol II helps Pol II to transcribe during extreme temperatures. The enzymatic inactivation of Pol II lacking Rpb4 at the nonoptimal temperature was prevented by the addition of recombinant Rpb4 produced in Escherichia coli prior to the in vitro reaction assay. This finding suggests that modification of Rpb4 is not required for its functional association with the other Pol II subunits. Sucrose gradient and immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that Rpb4 is present in the cell in excess over the Pol II complex during all growth phases. Nevertheless, the rescue of Pol II activity at the nonoptimal temperature by Rpb4 is possible only when cell extracts are obtained from postlogarithmic cells, not from logarithmically growing cells. This result suggests that Pol II molecules should be modified in order to recruit Rpb4; the portion of the modified Pol II molecules is small during logarithmic phase and becomes predominant in stationary phase.  相似文献   

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Rpb9 is a small subunit of yeast RNA polymerase II participating in elongation and formed of two conserved zinc domains. rpb9 mutants are viable, with a strong sensitivity to nucleotide-depleting drugs. Deleting the C-terminal domain down to the first 57 amino acids has no detectable growth defect. Thus, the critical part of Rpb9 is limited to a N-terminal half that contacts the lobe of the second largest subunit (Rpb2) and forms a beta-addition motif with the "jaw" of the largest subunit (Rpb1). Rpb9 has homology to the TFIIS elongation factor, but mutants inactivated for both proteins are indistinguishable from rpb9 single mutants. In contrast, rpb9 mutants are lethal in cells lacking the histone acetyltransferase activity of the RNA polymerase II Elongator and SAGA factors. In a two-hybrid test, Rpb9 physically interacts with Tfa1, the largest subunit of TFIIE. The interacting fragment, comprising amino acids 62-164 of Tfa1, belongs to a conserved zinc motif. Tfa1 is immunoprecipitated by RNA polymerase II. This co-purification is strongly reduced in rpb9-Delta, suggesting that Rpb9 contributes to the recruitment of TFIIE on RNA polymerase II.  相似文献   

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