Different mechanisms participate in the R-dependent activity of the R2R3 MYB transcription factor C1

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Abstract

The R2R3 MYB transcription factor C1 requires the basic helix-loop-helix factor R as an essential co-activator for the transcription of maize anthocyanin genes. In contrast, the R2R3 MYB protein P1 activates a subset of the C1-regulated genes independently of R. Substitution of six amino acids in P1 with the C1 amino acids results in P1*, whose activity on C1-regulated and P1-regulated genes is R-dependent or R-enhanced, respectively. We have used P1* in combination with various promoters to uncover two mechanisms for R function. On synthetic promoters that contain only C1/P1 binding sites, R is an essential co-activator of C1. This function of R is unlikely to simply be the result of an increase in the C1 DNA-binding affinity, since transcriptional activity of a C1 mutant that binds DNA at a higher affinity, comparable with P1, remains R-dependent. The differential transcriptional activity of C1 fusions with the yeast Gal4 DNA-binding domain in yeast and maize cells suggests that part of the function of R is to relieve C1 from a plant-specific inhibitor. A second function of R requires cis-regulatory elements in addition to the C1/P1 DNA-binding sites for R-enhanced transcription of α1. We hypothesize that R functions in this mode by binding or recruiting additional factors to the anthocyanin regulatory element conserved in the promoters of several anthocyanin genes. Together, these findings suggest a model in which combinatorial interactions with co-activators enable R2R3 MYB factors with very similar DNA binding preferences to discriminate between target genes in vivo.

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Hernandez, J. M., Heine, G. F., Irani, N. G., Feller, A., Kim, M. G., Matulnik, T., … Grotewold, E. (2004). Different mechanisms participate in the R-dependent activity of the R2R3 MYB transcription factor C1. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(46), 48205–48213. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M407845200

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