Abstract

Transcriptional activation of enhancer and σ54-dependent promoters requires efficient interactions between enhancer-binding proteins (EBP) and promoter bound σ54-RNA polymerase (Eσ54) achieved by DNA looping, which is usually facilitated by the integration host factor (IHF). Since the lengths of the intervening region supporting DNA-loop formation are similar among IHF-dependent and IHF-independent promoters, the precise reason(s) why IHF is selectively important for the frequency of transcription initiation remain unclear. Here, using kinetic cyclization and in vitro transcription assays we show that, in the absence of IHF protein, the DNA fragments containing an IHF-binding site have much less looping-formation ability than those that lack an IHF-binding site. Furthermore, when an IHF consensus-binding site was introduced into the intervening region between promoter and enhancer of the target DNA fragments, loop formation and DNA-loop-dependent transcriptional activation are significantly reduced in a position-independent manner. DNA-looping-independent transcriptional activation was unaffected. The binding of IHF to its consensus site in the target promoters clearly restored efficient DNA looping formation and looping-dependent transcriptional activation. Our data provide evidence that one function for the IHF protein is to release a communication block set by intrinsic properties of the IHF DNA-binding site.

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