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      PP4 dephosphorylates Maf1 to couple multiple stress conditions to RNA polymerase III repression

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          Abstract

          Maf1 is the ‘master' repressor of RNA polymerase III (Pol III) transcription in yeast, and is conserved in eukaryotes. Maf1 is a phospho-integrator, with unfavourable growth conditions leading to rapid Maf1 dephosphorylation, nuclear accumulation, binding to RNA Pol III at Pol III genes and transcriptional repression. Here, we establish the protein phosphatase 4 (PP4) complex as the main Maf1 phosphatase, and define the involved catalytic (Pph3), scaffold (Psy2) and regulatory subunits (Rrd1, Tip41), as well as uninvolved subunits (Psy4, Rrd2). Multiple approaches support a central role for PP4 in Maf1 dephosphorylation, Maf1 nuclear localization and the rapid repression of Pol III in the nucleus. PP4 action is likely direct, as a portion of PP4 co-precipitates with Maf1, and purified PP4 dephosphorylates Maf1 in vitro. Furthermore, Pph3 mediates (either largely or fully) rapid Maf1 dephosphorylation in response to diverse stresses, suggesting PP4 plays a key role in the integration of cell nutrition and stress conditions by Maf1 to enable Pol III regulation.

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          Toward a comprehensive atlas of the physical interactome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

          Defining protein complexes is critical to virtually all aspects of cell biology. Two recent affinity purification/mass spectrometry studies in Saccharomyces cerevisiae have vastly increased the available protein interaction data. The practical utility of such high throughput interaction sets, however, is substantially decreased by the presence of false positives. Here we created a novel probabilistic metric that takes advantage of the high density of these data, including both the presence and absence of individual associations, to provide a measure of the relative confidence of each potential protein-protein interaction. This analysis largely overcomes the noise inherent in high throughput immunoprecipitation experiments. For example, of the 12,122 binary interactions in the general repository of interaction data (BioGRID) derived from these two studies, we marked 7504 as being of substantially lower confidence. Additionally, applying our metric and a stringent cutoff we identified a set of 9074 interactions (including 4456 that were not among the 12,122 interactions) with accuracy comparable to that of conventional small scale methodologies. Finally we organized proteins into coherent multisubunit complexes using hierarchical clustering. This work thus provides a highly accurate physical interaction map of yeast in a format that is readily accessible to the biological community.
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            Getting started with yeast.

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              Recruitment of RNA polymerase III to its target promoters.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                EMBO J
                EMBO J
                The EMBO Journal
                Nature Publishing Group
                0261-4189
                1460-2075
                21 March 2012
                14 February 2012
                14 February 2012
                : 31
                : 6
                : 1440-1452
                Affiliations
                [1 ]simpleHHMI, Department of Oncological Sciences, Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah School of Medicine , Salt Lake City, UT, USA
                Author notes
                [a ]HHMI, Department of Oncological Sciences, Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA. Tel.: +1 801 585 1822; Fax: +1 801 585 6410; E-mail: brad.cairns@ 123456hci.utah.edu
                Article
                emboj2011501
                10.1038/emboj.2011.501
                3321174
                22333918
                2f3a6d29-9821-4376-b25b-7dc65c4a8d72
                Copyright © 2012, European Molecular Biology Organization

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share Alike 3.0 Unported License, which allows readers to alter, transform, or build upon the article and then distribute the resulting work under the same or similar license to this one. The work must be attributed back to the original author and commercial use is not permitted without specific permission.

                History
                : 05 August 2011
                : 16 December 2011
                Categories
                Article

                Molecular biology
                maf1,transcription,protein phosphatase 4 (pp4),rna polymerase iii
                Molecular biology
                maf1, transcription, protein phosphatase 4 (pp4), rna polymerase iii

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