Identification of plant transcriptional activation domains
Gene expression in Arabidopsis is regulated by more than 1,900 transcription factors (TFs), which have been identified genome-wide by the presence of well-conserved DNA-binding domains. Activator TFs contain activation domains (ADs) that recruit coactivator complexes; however, for nearly all Arabido...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2024-08, Vol.632 (8023), p.166-173 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Gene expression in
Arabidopsis
is regulated by more than 1,900 transcription factors (TFs), which have been identified genome-wide by the presence of well-conserved DNA-binding domains. Activator TFs contain activation domains (ADs) that recruit coactivator complexes; however, for nearly all
Arabidopsis
TFs, we lack knowledge about the presence, location and transcriptional strength of their ADs
1
. To address this gap, here we use a yeast library approach to experimentally identify
Arabidopsis
ADs on a proteome-wide scale, and find that more than half of the
Arabidopsis
TFs contain an AD. We annotate 1,553 ADs, the vast majority of which are, to our knowledge, previously unknown. Using the dataset generated, we develop a neural network to accurately predict ADs and to identify sequence features that are necessary to recruit coactivator complexes. We uncover six distinct combinations of sequence features that result in activation activity, providing a framework to interrogate the subfunctionalization of ADs. Furthermore, we identify ADs in the ancient AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR family of TFs, revealing that AD positioning is conserved in distinct clades. Our findings provide a deep resource for understanding transcriptional activation, a framework for examining function in intrinsically disordered regions and a predictive model of ADs.
A high-throughput yeast-based assay is used to identify more than 1,500 activation domains (ADs) in
Arabidopsis
transcription factors, and a deep learning approach applied to this dataset can predict AD activity on the basis of sequence features. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41586-024-07707-3 |