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Inhibition of transcription by the trimeric cyclin-dependent kinase 7 complex.

The Journal of biological chemistry (1999-05-01)
D A Bochar, Z Q Pan, R Knights, R P Fisher, A Shilatifard, R Shiekhattar
RESUMEN

Cyclin-dependent kinase 7 (CDK7) can be isolated as a subunit of a trimeric kinase complex functional in activation of the mitotic promoting factor. In this study, we demonstrate that the trimeric cdk-activating kinase (CAK) acts as a transcriptional repressor of class II promoters and show that repression results from CAK impeding the entry of RNA polymerase II and basal transcription factor IIF into a competent preinitiation complex. This repression is independent of CDK7 kinase activity. We find that the p36/MAT1 subunit of CAK is required for transcriptional repression and the repression is independent of the promoter used. Our results demonstrate a central role for CAK in regulation of messenger RNA synthesis by either inhibition of RNA polymerase II-catalyzed transcription or stimulation of transcription through association with basal transcription repair factor IIH.