Tl. Aldrich et al., STRUCTURE OF THE YEAST TAP1 PROTEIN - DEPENDENCE OF TRANSCRIPTION ACTIVATION ON THE DNA CONTEXT OF THE TARGET GENE, Molecular and cellular biology, 13(6), 1993, pp. 3434-3444
Sequence data are presented for the Saccharomyces cerevisiae TAP1 gene
and for a mutant allele, tap1-1, that activates transcription of the
promoter-defective yeast SUP4 tRNA(Tyr) allele SUP4A53T61. The degree
of in vivo activation of this allele by tap1-1 is strongly affected by
the nature of the flanking DNA sequences at 5'-flanking DNA sequences
as far away as 413 bp from the tRNA gene and by 3'-flanking sequences
as well. We considered the possibility that this dependency is relate
d to the nature of the chromatin assembled on these different flanking
sequences. TAP1 encodes a protein 1,006 amino acids long. The tap1-1
mutation consists of a thymine-to-cytosine DNA change that changes ami
no acid 683 from tyrosine to histidine. Recently, Amberg et al. report
ed the cloning and sequencing of RAT1, a yeast gene identical to TAP1,
by complementation of a mutant defect in poly(A) RNA export from the
nucleus to the cytoplasm (D. C. Amberg, A. L. Goldstein, and C. N. Col
e, Genes Dev. 6:1173-1189, 1992). The RAT1/TAP1 gene product has exten
sive sequence similarity to a yeast DNA strand transfer protein that i
s also a riboexonuclease (variously known as KEM1, XRN1, SEP1, DST2, o
r RAR5; reviewed by Kearsey and Kipling [Trends Cell Biol. 1:110-112,
1991]). The tap1-1 amino acid substitution affects a region of the pro
tein in which KEM1 and TAP1 are highly similar in sequence.