| Literature DB >> 24176642 |
Toshinao Oyama1, Satoru Sasagawa2, Shugaku Takeda1, Rex A Hess3, Paul M Lieberman4, Emily H Cheng5, James J Hsieh6.
Abstract
The evolution of tissue-specific general transcription factors (GTFs), such as testis-specific TBP-related factor 2 (TRF2), enables the spatiotemporal expression of highly specialized genetic programs. Taspase1 is a protease that cleaves nuclear factors MLL1, MLL2, TFIIAα-β, and ALFα-β (TFIIAτ). Here, we demonstrate that Taspase1-mediated processing of TFIIAα-β drives mammalian spermatogenesis. Both Taspase1(-/-) and noncleavable TFIIAα-βnc/nc testes release immature germ cells with impaired transcription of Transition proteins (Tnp) and Protamines (Prm), exhibiting chromatin compaction defects and recapitulating those observed with TRF2(-/-) testes. Although the unprocessed TFIIA still complexes with TRF2, this complex is impaired in targeting and thus activating Tnp1 and Prm1 promoters. The current study presents a paradigm in which a protease (Taspase1) cleaves a ubiquitously expressed GTF (TFIIA) to enable tissue-specific (testis) transcription, meeting the demand for sophisticated regulation of distinct subsets of genes in higher organisms.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24176642 PMCID: PMC3947863 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2013.09.025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270