We have previously reported the presence of a hormone-inducible transcriptional activation function (TAF-2) within the region of the estrogen receptor (ER) that contains the hormone binding domain. We show here that the N-terminal A/B region of the ER contains an independent constitutive activation function (TAF-1) that exhibits cell type specificity since it activates transcription efficiently in chicken embryo fibroblasts, but only poorly in HeLa cells. By analyzing the ability of TAF-1, TAF-2, and the GAL4 and VP16 acidic activating domains (AADs) to homosynergize and heterosynergize with one another and with the factor binding to the upstream element (UE) of the adenovirus 2 major late promoter, we show that the activation properties of TAF-1 and TAF-2 are different and distinct from those of AADs, in agreement with the absence of acidic amino acid stretches in TAF-1 and TAF-2.