From the Department of Biochemistry, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242
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ABSTRACT |
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P-TEFb is required for the transition from
abortive elongation into productive elongation and is capable of
phosphorylating the carboxyl-terminal domain (CTD) of the largest
subunit of RNA polymerase II. We cloned a cDNA encoding the large
subunit of Drosophila P-TEFb and found the predicted
protein contained a cyclin motif. We now name the large subunit cyclin
T and the previously cloned small subunit (Zhu, Y. R., Peery, T.,
Peng, J. M., Ramanathan, Y., Marshall, N., Marshall, T., Amendt,
B., Mathews, M. B., and Price, D. H. (1997) Genes Dev.
11, 2622-2632) cyclin-dependent kinase 9 (CDK9).
Recombinant P-TEFb produced in baculovirus-transfected Sf9 cells
exhibited
5,6-dichloro-1--D-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole-sensitive kinase activity similar to native P-TEFb. Kc cell nuclear
extract depleted of P-TEFb failed to generate long DRB-sensitive
transcripts, but this activity was restored upon addition of either
native or recombinant P-TEFb. Like other CDKs, CDK9 is essentially
inactive in the absence of its cyclin partner. P-TEFb containing a CDK9 mutation that knocked out the kinase activity did not function in
transcription. Deletion of the carboxyl-terminal domain of cyclin T in
P-TEFb reduced both the kinase and transcription activity to about
10%. The CDK-activating kinase in TFIIH was unable to activate the CTD
kinase activity of P-TEFb.
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INTRODUCTION |
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The elongation potential of RNA polymerase II is proposed to be controlled by negative transcription elongation factors (N-TEF)1 and positive transcription elongation factors (P-TEF) (1-3) reviewed in Ref. 4. All initiated RNA polymerase II molecules enter abortive elongation in which only short transcripts are generated due to function of N-TEF. These negative factors are exemplified by factor 2 (5) and a DRB sensitivity-inducing factor (DSIF) (6). Upon the action of positive factors such as P-TEFb, the RNA polymerase II molecules overcome the promoter-proximal pausing and premature termination to enter productive elongation (2, 3, 7). After the initial switch into a productive mode, the efficiency of elongation can be further increased by other factors such as S-II, TFIIF, ELL, and elongin to generate long transcripts (8).
Phosphorylation of the carboxyl-terminal domain (CTD) of the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II is a regulatory event in transcription (9, 10). The unphosphorylated RNA polymerase II (IIA) has been found in preinitiation complexes (11) and in early elongation complexes in vitro (3), whereas the hyperphosphorylated polymerase II (IIO) has been observed in productive elongation (11, 12). The phosphorylation state of the CTD is controlled by the action of kinases and phosphatases (9, 10). DmP-TEFb has been identified as a kinase with subunits of 124 and 43 kDa that can phosphorylate the CTD of RNA polymerase II (3). The kinase activity of P-TEFb is very sensitive to the purine analog DRB (3). Consistently, the transition from abortive to productive elongation can be inhibited by DRB in vitro and in vivo (4). The 43-kDa subunit of DmP-TEFb was cloned and found to be similar to Cdc2, a cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) (13).
Most known CDKs play a role in regulating the cell cycle, but some CDKs have been found to be involved in other cellular events (14). A CDK can be activated by binding of a cyclin and phosphorylation of a conserved threonine residue in the T-loop of the catalytic subunit. Conversely, a CDK·cyclin complex can be inactivated by phosphorylation of a threonine residue and a tyrosine residue near the ATP binding site or by binding of a family of small proteins termed CKIs (14). The catalytic subunits are well conserved in the CDK family, but the cyclins are not conserved except for the cyclin box that is predicted as a helix-rich structure (15). We show here that Drosophila P-TEFb is composed of a CDK·cyclin pair.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Cloning of the Large Subunit of Drosophila P-TEFb-- Drosophila P-TEFb was purified as described (3). The large subunit was excised from an SDS gel and used for peptide sequencing (Keck Facility, Yale University, New Haven, CT). Based on the peptide sequences, three degenerate primers were designed to clone a 1.6-kb cDNA fragment with nested PCR reactions. First, a 35-cycle PCR reaction was performed using Taq DNA polymerase, two degenerate primers (5'-GGAATTCTGGTAYTTYWSNAAYGA and 5'-CGGGATCCTGYTCRAANGGNGGCAT), and Drosophila embryonic cDNA from CLONTECH as a template. Second, a 1.6-kb cDNA fragment was amplified in another 35-cycle PCR reaction using the total PCR products above as template, and the primer (5'-GGAATTCTGGTAYTTYWSNAAYGA) and a nested primer (5'-CGGGATCCAANGGNGGCATNCCRT). Third, this 1.6-kb fragment was digested into three fragments of 0.9, 0.6, and 0.1 kb. The 0.9- and 0.6-kb fragments were cloned into the Bluescript II SK+ vector (Stratagene). A 1.5-kb cDNA fragment sequence was obtained by combining the 0.9- and 0.6-kb fragments.
The 3' region of the full-length cDNA sequence was obtained using a Life Technologies, Inc. 3' RACE kit with three gene specific primers based on the 1.5-kb sequence (5'-ATCACGACACCACCAGAGCTGTTA, 5'-CGAATTCAGATCGTGAACGGGA and 5'-CGAATTCAGGCGCTAGCAATG). The 5' region of cDNA sequence was obtained using a Life Technologies, Inc. 5' RACE kit with three gene-specific primers (5'-GAAAGGCGTAGAACCGA, 5'-GCTGACCCATTTCCTGTATCAGATAG and 5'-GGAATTCTTCTGCTTGGCGAAT). The entire coding sequence of the large subunit was cloned by reverse transcription PCR. First, the cDNA of the large subunit was generated in a reverse transcription using a primer (5'-GGGAATTCGAGGTTCTATACATAT) and Drosophila embryonic mRNA. Second, a 4-kb cDNA fragment containing the coding sequence was produced in a 35-cycle PCR reaction using Expand polymerase (Boehringer Mannheim), two primers (5'-CTGTGTGAATGGAATCTGTGATGTG and 5'-GGGAATTCGAGGTTCTATACATAT), and the cDNA as template. Third, the 3.3-kb encoding sequence was amplified in another PCR reaction using Vent DNA polymerase, the 4-kb fragment as template and two primers (5'-TATCCCGGGTCATATGAGTCTCCTAGCC and 5'-GGGAATTCGAGGTTCTATACATAT). Finally, the coding sequence was digested with SmaI and EcoRI and cloned into a pET21a-GST vector (3) to produce pET21a-GST-Dmcyclin T.Generation of P-TEFb Constructs for Expression-- The coding region of the small subunit of Drosophila P-TEFb (DmCDK9) was amplified by reverse transcription PCR and cloned into a pET21a-GST vector to generate pET21a-GST-DmCDK9. The DmCDK9 coding region was amplified by Vent DNA polymerase using pET21a-GST-DmCDK9 as template and two primers (5'-GAATGCCCGGGATAAATATGGCGCACATGTCCCA and 5'-ATCCCACCTCGAGCCAAACCCGGTCAATCAT). The amplified 1.2-kb fragment was digested with XmaI and XhoI and cloned into the pBAC4X-1 (Novagen) to generate a plasmid (pBAC-DmCDK9) for expression of a His-tagged DmCDK9. The coding region of Dmcyclin T was amplified by Vent DNA polymerase using pET21a-GST-Dmcyclin T as template and two primers (5'-GCTCTAGATAAATATGAGTCTCCTAGCC and 5'-GGGAATTCGAGGTTCTATACATAT). The PCR product was digested with XbaI and EcoRI and cloned into pBAC-DmCDK9 to generate a plasmid (pBAC-DmP-TEFb) for co-expression of Dmcyclin T and DmCDK9.
To make the kinase knockout of DmCDK9 the same mutation used to knockout the kinase activity of the human homologue, PITALRE (D199N) was used (16). Site-directed mutagenesis was performed according to the CLONTECH manual (Transformer site-directed mutagenesis kit) using a selection primer (5'-CTCAGGTCTAGCTGGGATATCGAGGTTCTATAC), a mutagenic primer (5'-GGCATCTTAAAGCTGGCTAATTTTGGCTTGGCCCGTGC), and pBAC-DmP-TEFb as the target plasmid. The mutations were confirmed by sequencing. Because extra mutations in the plasmid could have been generated, a short sequence containing the mutation site was cut from the mutated plasmid and recloned into the original plasmid, yielding a mutated plasmid pBAC-DmCDK9 (D199N)-Dmcyclin T. To generate the C-terminal truncations of Dmcyclin T, pBAC-DmP-TEFb was digested with EcoRV and EcoRI followed by filling in of the cohesive ends and religation to generate pBAC-DmCDK9-Dmcyclin T (1-543). The plasmid pBAC-DmCDK9-Dmcyclin T (1-714) was made in the same way except that PpuMI and EcoRI sites were used.Expression and Purification of Recombinant P-TEFb Proteins-- Five plasmids, pBAC-DmCDK9, pBAC-DmP-TEFb, pBAC-DmCDK9 (D199N)-Dmcyclin T, pBAC-DmCDK9-Dmcyclin T (1-543), and pBAC-DmCDK9-Dmcyclin T (1-714), were used to cotransfect Sf9 cells with BaculoGold DNA (PharMingen) to generate recombinant baculoviruses. After 5 days, recombinant viruses were harvested and amplified again. The optimal level of the baculoviruses for expression was determined by an end point dilution assay.
To express the recombinant proteins, Sf9 cells (5 × 108 in 10 flasks of 150 cm2) were infected with the baculovirus, incubated for 2-3 days, and harvested by centrifugation at 2000 × g for 10 min. The cells were resuspended into 9 ml of a lysis buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 1% Triton X-100, and 0.1% of a saturated solution of PMSF in isopropanol and other protease inhibitors aprotinin, leupeptin, pepstatin, chymostatin, and antipain at 0.5 µg/ml), incubated on ice for 1 h, and centrifuged at 2000 × g for 10 min. The supernatant was supplemented with NaCl to 0.5 M and imidazole to 5 mM followed by centrifugation at 250,000 × g for 1 h. A 0.4-ml Ni2+-NTA-agarose column (Qiagen) was loaded with the clarified supernatant, washed with 20 ml of a wash buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 0.5 M NaCl, 5 mM imidazole, and PMSF), and eluted with 2 ml of an elution buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 0.5 M NaCl, 200 mM imidazole, and PMSF). The eluted fraction was diluted by HGEDP (25 mM HEPES, pH 7.6, 15% glycerol, 0.1 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, and PMSF) so that the final salt concentration was equivalent to that in 80 mM HGKEDP (HGEDP with 80 mM KCl). The diluted fraction was loaded onto a 1-ml Mono Q column. Recombinant protein flowed through the Mono Q and was directly loaded onto a 1-ml Mono S column. Proteins bound to the Mono S were eluted with a linear gradient from 0.1 M to 0.5 M HGKEDP and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Different proteins eluted at different salt concentrations: DmCDK9, 110-160 mM; DmP-TEFb, 240-300 mM; DmCDK9 (D199N)/Dmcyclin T, 240-300 mM; DmCDK9/Dmcyclin T (1-543), 160-210 mM; and DmCDK9/Dmcyclin T (1-714), 140-190 mM. All procedures of purification were performed at 4 °C unless indicated. The protein concentration of CDK9 (D199N)/cyclin T was measured using a Bio-Rad assay with bovine serum albumin as a standard. Concentrations of other proteins were determined by comparing the CDK9 subunit on silver-stained gels using CDK9 (D199N)/cyclin T as a standard. Although the comparisons are fairly precise, the absolute amount of the proteins could be inaccurate due to differences in response of CDK9 (D199N)/cyclin T and bovine serum albumin to the detection reagent.CTD Kinase Assay--
The assay was performed as described (3).
Purified Drosophila RNA polymerase II (about 10 ng) was
incubated with kinase samples in a 20-µl reaction including 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.6, 5 mM MgCl2, 55 mM KCl, 10 µM unlabeled ATP, and 2 µCi of
[-32P]ATP (ICN) at 23 °C for 5 min unless
indicated. Reactions were terminated by SDS loading buffer and then
analyzed by SDS-PAGE followed by silver staining and
autoradiography.
Production of DmP-TEFb Polyclonal Antibodies-- Recombinant GST-Dmcyclin T(CT) fusion protein was produced in Escherichia coli using a T7 polymerase-dependent expression system. Plasmid pET21a-GST-Dmcyclin T was cut with BamHI and religated to generate a plasmid (pET21a-GST-Dmcyclin T(CT)). The GST fusion protein containing the C terminus of Dmcyclin T (Gly550 to Lys1097) was expressed in DE3 cells, purified using a glutathione affinity column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech), and then used to immunize rabbits (Pocono Rabbit Farm).
Immunodepletion of DmP-TEFb-- Dry protein A-Sepharose (Sigma) beads were swollen in water, washed with 150 mM HGKEDPB (HGKEDP buffer plus 0.1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin), and incubated with either preimmune serum or anti-serum for 30 min at 4 °C. The beads were spun down, washed with a wash buffer (25 mM HEPES, pH 7.6, 0.6 M KCl, 0.5% Nonidet P-40, 1% Triton X-100) followed by 150 mM HGKEDPB, and then packed into three columns. Kc cell nuclear extract (KcN in 150 mM HGKEDP) was passed over the three columns in succession. The flowthrough of the third column was used as depleted KcN.
In Vitro Transcription--
Transcription assay was carried out
using a continuous labeling procedure (7). The actin Act5C template
linearized with HpaI (15 µg/ml) giving a 520-nucleotide
runoff transcript was used. Transcription reactions (15 µl) contained
either KcN or depleted KcN, 20 mM
HEPES, pH 7.6, 5 mM MgCl2, 55 mM
KCl, 600 µM each of ATP, GTP, and UTP, 30 µM CTP, and 4 µCi of [-32P]CTP and
were incubated at 23 °C for 20 min. P-TEFb proteins and DRB were
included as indicated. Labeled transcripts were analyzed on 6%
denaturing gels.
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RESULTS |
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To advance our understanding of the function of P-TEFb as a CTD kinase controlling the elongation phase of transcription, it was necessary to obtain cDNAs encoding the two subunits. We recently cloned a cDNA encoding the small subunit and found that it was a kinase that might require a cyclin subunit for activity (13). Our next goal was to clone the large subunit, determine if it had homology to other cyclins, and generate recombinant P-TEFb by co-expressing both subunits.
Cloning of the Large Subunit of Drosophila P-TEFb-- We cloned a full-length cDNA encoding the large subunit of Drosophila P-TEFb from sequence information obtained from the pure protein. The large subunit from purified P-TEFb was excised from an SDS gel and subjected to a peptide sequencing protocol. Based on the peptide sequence information, we cloned a 4.3-kb cDNA from Drosophila embryonic mRNA (Fig. 1). The open reading frame was determined by knowing the size of P-TEFb large subunit and by finding a consensus sequence for the translational start site (17). The cDNA encodes a 118-kDa protein (1097 amino acids) with an isoelectric point of 9.5 and a putative nuclear localization signal from amino acids 872-876 (18). The 5'-untranslated region is relatively long, and the 3'-untranslated region is terminated by a poly(A) tail. Northern analysis indicated embryonic and adult flies contained mRNAs 5, 5.5, and 7 kb in length (data not shown).
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Recombinant P-TEFb Functions in a Similar Manner to Native P-TEFb-- cDNAs encoding both subunits of P-TEFb were co-expressed in Sf9 cells (Fig. 3A), and recombinant Drosophila P-TEFb (rDmP-TEFb) was purified using a nickel column followed by Mono Q and Mono S. Both subunits were retained on the nickel column even though only the small subunit was tagged. Both proteins co-eluted from Mono S at the identical salt concentration at which native P-TEFb eluted. These results demonstrate a strong interaction between the two recombinant proteins. On a polyacrylamide gel (Fig. 3B), the cyclin T subunit of rDmP-TEFb (lane a) had the same mobility as the large subunit of purified native DmP-TEFb (lane S). The CDK9 subunit of rDmP-TEFb had a slightly lower mobility compared with that of native DmP-TEFb due to the presence of the His tag. These results further support our hypothesis that the cDNAs encode the subunits of Drosophila P-TEFb.
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The Cyclin Subunit and an Active Kinase Subunit Are Required for P-TEFb Function-- To begin to elucidate the role of the cyclin subunit and to determine the requirement of the kinase activity, recombinant proteins containing various mutations were generated (Fig. 3). The proteins were produced in baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells and then purified as described under "Materials and Methods." Recombinant proteins included a kinase knockout, CDK9 alone, and two CDK9/cyclin pairs in which portions of the carboxyl-terminal region of the cyclin subunit were deleted. In each case, the CDK9 subunit was His tagged, and as long as the cyclin subunit contained an intact cyclin box, it associated strongly with the kinase subunit. This was also found with another construct that contained only amino acids 1-348 of the cyclin subunit; however, this construct was not included in this analysis because of the low expression level (data not shown).
The recombinant proteins were examined for their ability to phosphorylate the CTD of RNA polymerase II (Fig. 6A) as well as their ability to function during transcription (Fig. 6B). CDK9 alone had no activity in either assay, demonstrating that, indeed, its activity is cyclin dependent. The kinase knockout mutant also had no activity in either assay, demonstrating that the function of DmP-TEFb is through its ability to carry out phosphorylation. Deletion of the unique carboxyl-terminal domain of cyclin T caused a dramatic reduction in both activities measured. The two cyclin T truncation mutants gave only 10-20% of the kinase activity seen with the intact protein, and this reduction was quantitatively mirrored in the transcription assay. An unusual feature of the phosphorylation of RNA polymerase II by the two truncation mutants was that the shift from IIA to IIO did not occur as readily. DmP-TEFb has been shown to preferentially phosphorylate a CTD that has already been phosphorylated (3), and at low levels of the kinase this leads to the hyperphosphorylation of a subset of the polymerases (see Fig. 4A). Evidently, the carboxyl-terminal region of cyclin T is responsible for this preferential phosphorylation of the partially phosphorylated polymerase molecules.
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P-TEFb and TFIIH Do Not Affect Each Other's Ability to Phosphorylate the CTD-- Others have implicated the kinase activity of TFIIH in CTD phosphorylation (22) and in elongation control (23). Therefore, we wanted to determine if the CDK-activating kinase associated with TFIIH could affect the CTD kinase activity of P-TEFb. Kinase reactions were set up with RNA polymerase II as substrate, limiting amounts of P-TEFb or lower levels of Drosophila TFIIH. As expected, CTD phosphorylation by P-TEFb but not TFIIH was sensitive to DRB (Fig. 8). In reactions containing both kinases, the signals were apparently the sum of the two activities. The phosphorylation of cyclin T (Fig. 8) and CDK9 (data not shown) was also unaffected by the presence of TFIIH. This suggests that neither kinase has a dramatic effect on the other.
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DISCUSSION |
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We have completed the cloning of cDNAs encoding Drosophila P-TEFb, a novel CDK/cyclin pair and we name the subunits CDK9 and cyclin T. Cytogenetic mapping was performed, and we found that the CDK9 and cyclin T mapped to 58F and 74EF, respectively (data not shown). A number of mutations including lethal mutations also map to these areas. We produced fully functional recombinant DmP-TEFb. Furthermore, we showed that the cyclin subunit was required to activate the kinase and that the carboxyl-terminal region of cyclin T was important in this activation. Finally, we found that TFIIH did not affect the ability of P-TEFb to phosphorylate the CTD of pure RNA polymerase II.
Our results here coupled with earlier results suggest that DmP-TEFb is not part of a larger complex and does not stably associate with RNA polymerase II or the elongation complex (2). Depletion of DmP-TEFb even under low salt conditions did not remove other required factors because addition of pure DmP-TEFb was able to restore DRB-sensitive transcription. It is possible that other required factors are in excess over the DmP-TEFb. We do not believe this is the case because when the kinase knockout mutant was added in more than 10-fold excess over the wild type kinase, no reduction in kinase activity or DRB-sensitive transcription was observed (data not shown). Consistent with this, we have not been able to detect more than one chromatographic form of DmP-TEFb.
DmP-TEFb must interact at least briefly with the polymerase to carry out phosphorylation, and this transient interaction may be enhanced by the positive charge of the carboxyl-terminal region of cyclin T. This could explain why DmP-TEFb preferentially phosphorylated a CTD that was already partially phosphorylated (3). When the CTD is partially phosphorylated, it contains more negative charge and might interact more strongly with the positively charged region of cyclin T. Removal of this region decreased the kinase activity.
The timing of phosphorylation of the polymerase in an early elongation complex is important because of the termination activity of factor 2 (5). Essentially, there is a functional competition between factor 2 and P-TEFb. During a short period of time after initiation, P-TEFb must phosphorylate the CTD to an appropriate extent to cause the transition into productive elongation. Otherwise factor 2 will cause premature termination. This may be why the cyclin mutants lacking the carboxyl-terminal region were able to generate only low levels of runoff transcripts. The reduced ability of the cyclin mutants to recognize partially phosphorylated RNA polymerase II in an early elongation complex would lead to a reduced rate of phosphorylation and, therefore, ultimately a reduced number of hyperphosphorylated polymerases that generate runoff.
As a cyclin-dependent kinase, P-TEFb is likely to be activated by phosphorylation of the catalytic subunit. The TFIIH-associated kinase is a CDK-activating kinase termed CDK7 that has been shown to activate CDC2, CDK2, and CDK4 (14). TFIIH has also been shown to function in transcription elongation (23). Although it is possible that TFIIH plays a role in activating P-TEFb, our results do not support this hypothesis. Using pure RNA polymerase II as a substrate, TFIIH had no effect on the kinase activity of P-TEFb. It is possible that in the context of transcription with other factors involved, TFIIH might play a role in activating P-TEFb. It is also possible that P-TEFb purified from eucaryotic cells is already activated. Further work in vitro and in vivo will be required to understand how P-TEFb activity is regulated.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Lori Wallrath for providing Drosophila embryonic and adult mRNAs, and both Lori Wallrath and Ian Duncan for expert help in cytogenic mapping. We also thank Rick Austin and Mark Biggin (Yale) for the generous gift of Drosophila TFIIH.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM35500.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Present address: Section of Molecular and Cellular Biology,
Division of Biological Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA
95616.
§ To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 319-335-7910; Fax: 319-335-9570; E-mail: david-price{at}uiowa.edu.
1
The abbreviations used are: N-TEF, negative
transcription elongation factors; P-TEF, positive transcription
elongation factors; CTD, carboxyl-terminal domain; CDK,
cyclin-dependent kinase; kb, kilobase(s); PCR, polymerase
chain reaction; PMSF, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride; PAGE,
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; DRB,
5,6-dichloro-1--D-ribofuranosylbenzimidazole.
2 K. Barrier and Y. Xiong, unpublished data.
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REFERENCES |
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