Delineation of a small region within the majortransactivation domain of the human glucocorticoid receptor that mediatestransactivation of gene expression.

Abstract
Previous deletion analysis localized the major transactivation function of the human glucocorticoid receptor to a 185-amino acid segment close to the N terminus of the receptor protein. This region was named tau 1 [Hollenberg, S. M. & Evans, R. M. (1988) Cell 55, 899-906]. To delineate the smallest active region within tau 1, we have systematically tested the transactivation capacity of deletion derivatives of the tau 1 domain, fused to the glucocorticoid receptor DNA-binding domain, in yeast cells. Internal scanning deletions suggested that residues near the C terminus of tau 1 are most important for activity. Deletions of N-terminal and C-terminal sequences identified a 41-amino acid "core" region near the C terminus of tau 1 that is crucial for tau 1 function. Small peptide fragments containing the tau 1 core region are competent for transactivation, while regions outside the tau 1 core are not active. We have previously demonstrated that the intact tau 1 domain squelches the activity of a minimal promoter in vivo and in vitro, suggesting involvement of interactions with a component/components of the basal transcription machinery in the mechanism of transactivation. This activity was maintained in the tau 1 core-containing segments.