Title: Control of Gene Expression
1Control of Gene Expression
- Dr. Jason Linville
- University of Alabama at Birmingham
- jglinvil_at_uab.edu
2Summary
- Gene Regulation General
- Strategy for Controlling Genes
- Gene Regulation in Bacteria
- Lac operon
- Gene Regulation in Eukaryotes
- Human metallothionein gene
3Gene Control
- Some genes are on (being transcribed) almost
all the time. - Called housekeeping genes
- Examples ribosome components, enzymes used in
basic metabolic pathways
Many genes are only turned on when they are
needed.
4Gene Control
Transcribing genes that are not needed is a waste
of energy and may interfere with the status of
the cell.
5Gene Control
- Respond to a Range of Stimuli
- Prokaryotes respond to external stimuli (food
detected, metabolizing enzymes turned on) - Eukaryotes also respond to internal stimuli (some
types of cells release hormones, growth factors,
etc., that affect other types of cells)
6Gene Control
- Developmentally Regulated
- Multicellular organisms progress through
developmental stages - Different genes expressed at different times
during development
7Gene Control
- Cell Specialization in Multicellular Organisms
- Cell differentiation is a result of differences
in gene expression - Different genes expressed in different cells
8Gene Control gt Strategy
- Gene control is control over amount of gene
product (RNA or protein) in cell
- Multiple ways to control the amount of gene
product in a cell
9Gene Control gt Strategy
- Controlling Gene Product Amount
- Rate of transcription rate mRNA is produced
faster produced more product - mRNA degradation rate mRNA is broken down
faster broken down less product - mRNA processing capping, polyadenylation,
splicing slower processing less product - Translation rate of translation or number of
ribosomes translating fast/more more product
10Gene Control gt Strategy
- Although control probably involves all of these,
the most understood are changes in the rate of
transcription.
11Gene Control gt Lac Operon
- Gene Expression in Bacteria
- Regulation of lac operon is a classic example
- Bacteria have 3 genes in a row (operon) that
involve breaking down lactose for energy
- In order to be efficient, these genes should not
be expressed unless lactose is present.
12Gene Control gt Lac Operon
- Goal
- Transcription low when lactose is absent
- Lac I (gene upstream from operon) produces a
repressor which binds to promoter region.
- Binding of repressor prevents RNA polymerase from
binding and transcribing genes
13Gene Control gt Lac Operon
- Goal
- Increase transcription when lactose is present
- Allolactose will bind to the repressor, changing
its conformation and causing it to fall off the
promoter site
- Promoter site now available for RNA polymerase to
bind transcription of lac genes begins
14Gene Control gt Lac Operon
15Gene Control gt Lac Operon
- Goal
- Turn off transcription when lactose is used up
- Allolactose binding is an equilibrium event. As
it dissociates, it is metabolized by
ß-galactosidase
- The free repressor is available to bind the
promoter site and stop transcription
16Gene Control gt Lac Operon
If both glucose and lactose are present, it is
more efficient for the bacteria to utilize
glucose, and not worry about lactose.
A system is in place where the presence of
glucose can prevent the metabolization of lactose.
17Gene Control gt Lac Operon
- Goal
- Decrease transcription if lactose and glucose are
present.
- Glucose inhibits adenylate cyclase, which
produces cAMP.
18Gene Control gt Lac Operon
- Goal
- Decrease transcription if lactose and glucose are
present.
- cAMP binds catabolite activator protein (CAP),
which is then able to bind the cap site upstream
of the promoter.
- CAP binding needed to stimulate binding of RNA
polymerase and transcription.
19Gene Control gt Lac Operon
- Goal
- Decrease transcription if lactose and glucose are
present.
- High glucose low cAMP low cAMP-CAP complex
low transcription lactose not used
- Low glucose High cAMP high cAMP-CAP complex
high transcription possible (lactose used)
20Gene Control gt Lac Operon
- Binding sites upstream of transcription origin.
Proteins binding to these sites can repress or
activate transcription
21Gene Control
- Human metallothionein gene
- Protects from toxic effects of metals
- Heavy metals stimulate transcription
22Gene Control gt Metallothionein
- Human metallothionein gene
9 Upstream Sites (4 types)
- TATA box where RNA polymerase attaches to gene
- Upstream Promoter Elements (UPEs)
- GC box or CAAT box
- Bind proteins that activate transcription
- Enhancers activators of transcription
- Longer than UPEs farther upstream
23Gene Control gt Metallothionein
- Human metallothionein gene
9 Upstream Sites (4 types)
- Transient Response Element activates
transcription in a temporary fashion - In metallothionein, heavy metals bind to proteins
enabling them to bind metal response elements - This binding promotes transcription of
metallothionein gene
24Gene Control
There are common polypeptide conformations found
in most binding proteins.
- Helixturn-helix
- Zinc Fingers
- Leucine Zippers