Gossypol was found to induce sterility in male rats when administered orally. A reduction in the number of spermatozoa in the epididymis from the gossypol-treated rats was observed when compared to the control animals. An examination of the spermatozoa from the treated rats showed the following ultrastructural modifications: disorganization of the mitochondiral sheath and missing cell membrane from the middle piece, broken cell membrane and missing members of both outer fibers and inner microtubules of the principal piece, and broken cell membrane of the sperm head. Serial mating experiments proved that gossypol-treated males were indeed sterile. The results suggest that gossypol at low concentrations is able to affect the motility of spermatozoa, thus contributing to its contraceptive action.
A role of the TATA box and the general co-activator hTAF II The small t antigen (st-ag) of simian virus 40 can exert pleiotropic effects on biological processes such as DNA replication, cell cycle progression and gene expression. One possible mode of achieving these effects is through stimulation of NFkB-responsive genes encoding growth factors, cytokines, transcription factors and cell cycle regulatory proteins. Indeed, a previous study has shown that st-ag enhanced NFkB-mediated transcription. This study demonstrates that promoters possessing a consensus TATA box (i.e. TATAAAAG) in the context of either NFkB-or Sp1-binding sites are trans-activated by st-ag. Overexpressing the general transcription factor hTAF II 130/135, but not hTAF II 28 or hTAF II 80, stimulated the activity of promoters in a consensus TATA box-dependent mode. Converting the consensus TATA motif into a non-consensus TATA box strongly impaired activation by st-ag and hTAF II 130/135. Conversely, mutating a non-consensus TATA motif into the consensus TATA box rendered the mutated promoter inducible by st-ag and hTAF II 130/135. Mutation of the TATA box had no effect on TNFa-or RelA/p65-mediated induction of NFkB-responsive promoters, indicating a specific st-ag effect on hTAF II 130/135. St-ag stimulated the intrinsic transcriptional activity of hTAF II 130/135. Substitutions in the conserved HPDKGG motif in the N-terminal region or a mutation that impaired the interaction with protein phosphatase 2A abrogated the ability of st-ag to activate hTAF II 130/135-mediated transcription. These results indicate that trans-activation of promoters by st-ag may depend on a consensus TATA motif and suggest that such promoters recruit the general transcription factor hTAF II 130/135.
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