Abstract

Bicoid (Bcd) is a transcriptional activator required for early embryonic patterning in Drosophila. Despite extensive studies, it currently remains unclear how Bcd activates transcription and what proteins participate in its activation process. In this report, we describe experiments to analyze the role of the Drosophila co-activator dCBP in Bcd-mediated activation. In Drosophila S2 cells, the Bcd activity is increased by the co-transfection of plasmids expressing dCBP and reduced by double-stranded RNA-mediated interference against dCBP. We further show that Bcd and dCBP can interact with each other and that Bcd-interacting domains of dCBP can cause dominant negative effects on Bcd activity in S2 cells. Our comparison of two Bcd-responsive enhancers, hunchback (hb) and knirps (kni), reveals a differential role of dCBP in facilitating Bcd activation. A dCBP mutant defective in its histone acetyltransferase activity exhibits a reduced, but not abolished, co-activator function for Bcd. Our chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments show that dCBP can increase not only the occupancy of Bcd itself at the enhancers but also the recruitment of general transcription factors to the promoter. Together, these experiments suggest that dCBP is an enhancer-dependent co-activator of Bcd, facilitating its activation through multiple mechanisms.

Highlights

  • Transcription activation is an important and highly coordinated process requiring the actions of both gene-specific activators and co-activators [1,2,3,4]

  • Bcd Activity Is Regulated by dCBP in S2 Cells—dCBP, encoded by nejire, is a co-activator for several activators including Dorsal (Dl) [34], Cubitus interruptus (Ci) [28], Mad [35], and Deformed (Dfd) [36]

  • The experiments described in this report suggest that the activity of Bcd is regulated by dCBP

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Summary

TABLE I Plasmids used in this study

Note pFY442 pFY413 pFY409 pFY408 pFY451 pFY416 pFY414 pPac/dCBP dCBP(WT)-V5 dCBP(M5)-V5 pDF376 pDF377 pDF378 pDF536 pDF364 pDF370 pDF371 pDF373 pCZ3005 pCZ3006 pDF521 pDF522 pCZ3008.

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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DISCUSSION
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