In Archaea Archaea have a preinitiation complex resembling that of a minimized Pol II PIC, with a TBP and an
Archaeal transcription factor B (TFB, a TFIIB homolog). The assembly follows a similar sequence, starting with TBP binding to the promoter. An interesting aspect is that the entire complex is bound in an inverse orientation compared to those found in eukaryotic PIC. They also use TFE, a TFIIE homolog, which assists in transcription initiation but is not required.
RNA Polymerase I (Pol I) Formation of the Pol I preinitiation complex requires the binding of
selective factor 1 (SL1 or TIF-IB) to the core element of the
rDNA promoter. SL1 is a complex composed of
TBP and at least three
TBP-associated factors (TAFs). For basal levels of transcription, only SL1 and the initiation-competent form of
Pol I (Pol Iβ), characterized by
RRN3 binding, are required. For activated transcription levels,
UBTF (UBF) is also required. UBTF binds as a dimer to both the upstream control element (UCE) and core element of the rDNA promoter, bending the DNA to form an
enhanceosome.
RNA Polymerase III (Pol III) Pol III has three classes of initiation, which start with different factors recognizing different control elements but all converging on TFIIIB (similar to TFIIB-TBP; consists of TBP/TRF, a
TFIIB-related factor, and a
B″ unit) recruiting the Pol III preinitiation complex. The overall architecture resembles that of Pol II. Only TFIIIB needs to remain attached during elongation. == References ==