The yeast PHO2 gene encodes a homeodomain protein that exemplifies combinatorial control in transcriptional activation. Pho2 alone binds DNA in vitro with low affinity, but in vivo it activates transcription with at least three disparate DNA-binding proteins: the zinc finger protein Swi5, the helix-loop-helix factor Pho4, and Bas1, an myb-like activator. Pho2 + Swi5 activates HO, Pho2 + Pho4 activates PH05, and Pho2 + Bas1 activates genes in the purine and histidine biosynthesis pathways. We have conducted a genetic screen and identified 23 single amino acid substitutions in Pho2 that differentially affect its ability to activate its specific target genes. Analysis of the mutations suggests that the central portion of Pho2 serves as protein-protein interactive surface, with a requirement for distinct amino acids for each partner protein.
CITATION STYLE
Bhoite, L. T., Allen, J. M., Garcia, E., Thomas, L. R., David Gregory, I., Voth, W. P., … Stillman, D. J. (2002). Mutations in the Pho2 (Bas2) transcription factor that differentially affect activation with its partner proteins Bas1, Pho4, and Swi5. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277(40), 37612–37618. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M206125200
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