General transcription factor specified global gene regulation in archaea

Marc T. Facciotti(Institute for Systems Biology), David J. Reiss(Institute for Systems Biology), Min Pan(Institute for Systems Biology), Amardeep Kaur(Institute for Systems Biology), Madhavi Vuthoori(Institute for Systems Biology), Richard Bonneau(New York University), Paul Shannon(Institute for Systems Biology), Alok Srivastava(Institute for Systems Biology), Samuel Donohoe(Institute for Systems Biology), Leroy Hood(Institute for Systems Biology), Nitin S. Baliga(Institute for Systems Biology)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 8, 2007
Cited by 118

Abstract

Cells responding to dramatic environmental changes or undergoing a developmental switch typically change the expression of numerous genes. In bacteria, sigma factors regulate much of this process, whereas in eukaryotes, four RNA polymerases and a multiplicity of generalized transcription factors (GTFs) are required. Here, by using a systems approach, we provide experimental evidence (including protein-coimmunoprecipitation, ChIP-Chip, GTF perturbation and knockout, and measurement of transcriptional changes in these genetically perturbed strains) for how archaea likely accomplish similar large-scale transcriptional segregation and modulation of physiological functions. We are able to associate GTFs to nearly half of all putative promoters and show evidence for at least 7 of the possible 42 functional GTF pairs. This report represents a significant contribution toward closing the gap in our understanding of gene regulation by GTFs for all three domains of life and provides an example for how to use various experimental techniques to rapidly learn significant portions of a global gene regulatory network of organisms for which little has been previously known.


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