Title: Genetics PCB 3063
1Genetics - PCB 3063
- Todays focus
- Gene Regulation
- We will focus on two major questions today
- How does the structure of the genetic material
alter the expression of genes? - What are additional mechanisms of gene regulation?
2Gene Expression
- We discussed multiple points at which the
activity of gene products are controlled. These
include - Transcription
- Translation
- Processing of Transcripts (and/or Proteins)
- Degradation (of mRNA and/or protein)
- Control of protein activity (e.g.,
phosphorylation) - Although post-translational modification of
proteins by processes like phosporylation is very
important, it is the first four processes that
are usually studied in the context of gene
expression. - Are there additional ways to regulate gene
expression?
3Examining Transcriptional Regulation
- This basic method was extended for the Gal4p
study that we have been discussing discussed. - For this study, the researchers tagged the Gal4p
protein so the could purify from the cell. - Then, they chemically cross-linked it to DNA and
purified it. - This allowed them to purify the DNA that Gal4p
was bound to in the cell. - The DNA that Gal4p was bound to in the cell was
labeled and used to probe the microarray. - Does this examine transcriptional regulation?
4Examining Transcriptional Regulation
- This study established several interesting facts
- The Gal4p binding sites in the DNA are sometimes
bound by Gal4p in the absence of galactose,
others are bound only in the presence of
galactose. - So the trigger is more complex than simply
whether or not the Gal4p protein can bind. - This more complex regulation involves Gal80p, an
inhibitor.
Two possible models for regulation of
the Gal4p-Gal80p complex by galactose.
The models differ only in the exact binding sites
for Gal80p.
5How do Eukaryotic Transcriptional Regulators Work?
- There are a few specific types of proteins that
act to increase transcriptional activity - Many proteins have an acidic domain.
- Surprisingly, these acid-blob proteins often
require a hydrophobic residue embedded in an
acidic region. - Both Gal4p and the herpes simplex virus VP16
protein (an transcriptional regulator for this
virus) have acid blobs. - Glutamine-rich and Proline-rich transcriptional
activation domains have been characterized. - These protein regions activate transcription when
fused to other DNA-binding domains. - Alternatively, they can be recruited by
protein-protein interactions - e.g., a
DNA-binding protein binds the enhancer, and it
contains a region that recruits and acid-blob
protein.
6Using Eukaryotic Transcriptional Regulators
- The yeast 2-hybrid system exploits these features
of eukaryotic transcription factors to examine
protein-protein interactions. - The DNA-binding and transcription activating
regions of Gal4p can be separated. - Interestingly, if you fuse one protein to the
Gal4p DNA-binding domain (BD) and a second
protein that it interacts (physically) with to
the Gal4p transcriptional activating domain (AD),
one can see transcriptional activation
7How do Eukaryotic Transcriptional Regulators Work?
- Another interesting phenomenon that is sometimes
seen with transcription factor is SQUELCHING. - Overexpression of transcription activators like
Gal4p can result in a general inhibition of
transcriptional activity. - How does this happen?
- Presumably, specific transcription factors like
Gal4p act by recruiting basal transcription
factors. - In fact, some basal factors that physically
interact with these transcription activating
domains have been found. - Basal factors are factors involved in recruiting
RNA polymerase II to a large number of promoters. - So overexpressing proteins with these
transcription activating domains can actually
turn gene expression off, by competing for these
factors.
8How do Eukaryotic Transcriptional Regulators Work?
- At least one way is by altering the packing of
DNA into chromatin. - The role of chromatin structure in the regulation
of transcription is an area of very active
investigation. - However, two important factors that play clear
roles in transcriptional regulation are known - DNA METHYLATION - A subset of cytosine (C)
residues are modified by methylation. - HISTONE ACETYLATION - Histones can be modified by
acetylation.
9Chromatin
- Remember, DNA in eukaryotes packs into CHROMATIN.
- HISTONES form the NUCLEOSOME, which DNA loops
around. - EUCHROMATIN - less compact actively transcribed
- HETEROCHROMATIN - more compact transcriptionally
inactive. - Heterochromatin can be either constitutive or
facultative.
10DNA Methylation
- Genes that are transcriptionally inactive are
often METHYLATED. - In eukaryotes, cytosine residues are modified by
methylation. - Typically, the sites of methylation are CG
dinucleotides (vertebrates). - This allows maintenance through replication.
CYTOSINE
METHYL-C
11Histone Acetylation
- HISTONES in transcriptionally active genes are
often ACETYLATED. - Acetylation is the modification of lysine
residues in histones. - Reduces positive charge, weakens the interaction
with DNA. - Makes DNA more accessible to RNA polymerase II
- Enzymes that ACETYLATE HISTONES are recruited to
actively transcribed genes. - Enzymes that remove acetyl groups from histones
are recruited to methylated DNA. - There are additional types of histone
modification as well, such as methylation of the
histones.
12Genetic Imprinting
- Remember that DNA methylation can be maintained
through replication. - This allows the packing of chromatin to be passed
on - just like a gene sequence. - However, differences in chromatin packing are not
as stable as gene sequences. - Heritable but potentially reversible changes in
gene expression are called EPIGENETIC phenomena - Vertebrates use these differences in chromatin
packing to IMPRINT certain patterns of gene
regulation. - Some genes show MATERNAL IMPRINTING while other
show PATERNAL IMPRINTING. - The alleles of some genes that are inherited from
the relevant parent are methylated, and therefore
are not expressed.
13Prader-Willi Angelman Syndromes
- Both of these genetic disorders are caused by
deletion of a region of chromosome 15. - However, the syndromes differ
- Prader-Willi Syndrome - obesity, mental
retardation, short stature. (abbreviated PWS) - Angelman Syndrome - uncontrollable laughter,
jerky movements, and other motor and mental
symptoms. (abbreviated AS) - Syndrome that develops depends upon the parent
that provided the mutant chromosome. - This is a common phenomenon for - imprinted genes
tend to be found in clusters.
14PWS Mouse model
PWS
AS Mouse model
AS
From Annu Rev Genomics Hum Genet
15Prader-Willi Angelman Syndromes
- Prader-Willi Syndrome - develops when the
abnormal copy of chromosome 15 is inherited from
the father. - Angelman Syndrome - develops when the abnormal
copy of chromosome 15 is inherited from the
mother. - The differences reflect the fact that some loci
are IMPRINTED. - For imprinted loci, only the allele inherited
from one parent is expressed. - The PWS/AS region contains both maternally and
paternally imprinted genes.
16Imprinted Genes in the Mouse
- Data from http//www.mgu.har.mrc.ac.uk/research/im
printed/imprin.html
Red Maternal allele.
Blue Paternal allele.
17Methylation and Gene Regulation
- For imprinted genes, the pattern of gene
regulation is dependent upon the parent that
donated the chromosome. - The methylation pattern is reprogrammed in the
germ line. - There are other cases where changes in the
pattern of methylation alter gene expression. - In mammals, one of the two X chromosomes in
females is inactivated and the inactivated X
chromosome is methylated. - Methylation is common in filamentous fungi. E.g.,
Ascobolus has a process called MIP that leads to
the methylation of all C residues, whether they
belong to symmetrical sequences or not, in
repeated sequences (both repeats are methylated).
18X Chromosome Inactivation
- Female mammals inactivate one X chromosome.
- Thus, females arent truly homozygous for genes
on the X, since one allele is expressed in some
areas of the body and the other allele is
expressed in other areas of the body. - This makes female mammals MOSAICS.
- The most famous phenotype reflecting this is coat
color for Calico and Tortoiseshell Cats...
Tortoiseshell
Calico
19X Chromosome Inactivation
- The Tortoiseshell pattern reflects a color gene
(O for orange) on the feline X chromosome...
- Early in embryonic development, the X chromosomes
are inactivated randomly. - The tortoiseshell cat is heterozygous for the O
locus, so patches of fur are expressing either
the O (orange) or o (black) allele. - Calicos have a specific allele of an autosomal
gene that causes white spotting.
20X Chromosome Inactivation
- However, this phenomenon also impacts humans.
- The disease EDA (Ectodermal dysplasia 1,
anhidrotic) reflects an allele of an X-linked
gene that cause a number of glandual defects and
problems with the development of hair and teeth. - This is most famous for causing a defect in sweat
glands, so females that are heterozygous for the
EDA gene have patches of skin with no functional
sweat glands. - How would you expect EDA to affect males?
Note the dental phenotype
21How Does X Inactivation Work?
- X chromosome inactivation (XCI) was first
reported in 1961 by Mary Lyon. - The X chromosome inactivation is correlated with
formation of a condensed BARR BODY named for
Murray Barr, who had observed sex chromatin in
females. - An RNA gene called XIST acts in cis to recruit
factors that silence the inactive X chromosome
(Xi). - Expression of XIST on the active X chromosome
(Xa) is blocked by another RNA called TSIX. - XCI is global - it affects almost all genes on
the X chromosome. - Once established, the pattern of XCI is
irreversible in the soma. - How Xist RNA paints the Xi and how Tsix blocks
this epigenetic painting are two of the most
compelling questions in the field of X
chromosome inactivation J. T. Lee (2003)
22Gene Regulation DNA Rearrangement
- We discussed multiple points at which the
activity of gene products are controlled. These
include - Transcription
- Translation
- Processing of Transcripts (and/or Proteins)
- Degradation (of mRNA and/or protein)
- Control of protein activity (e.g.,
phosphorylation) - We saw modifications to the DNA (and associated
proteins) as a means of gene regulation. - One might imagine that DNA sequence changes might
be able to change gene expression. - Has this been documented?
23Salmonella Phase Variation
- For Salmonella, the flagellum is the major
antigen. - This organism escapes the immune system of hosts
is by switching the type of flagellin produced. - Flagellin is the major protein of the flagellum.
- This switching occurs through a mixture of DNA
rearrangements and transcriptional regulation
Arrow indicates the direction of transcription.
- H1 repressor (second gene in the H2 operon) turns
transcription of the H1 flagellin gene off. - Thus, in one arrangement H2 is expressed (but not
H1) while in the other H1 is expressed (but not
H2).
24Salmonella Phase Variation Mechanism
- Phase variation is mediated by the product of the
hin recombinase gene. - This gene product allows DNA between inverted
repeats to recombine, flipping it
- The Hin recombinase is related to the Flp
recombinase of S. cerevisiae. - Flp resolves concatamers of the yeast 2 µm
plasmid, which are replication intermediates.
25Anabaena N2 Fixation
- The cyanobacterium Anabaena is capable of fixing
atmospheric nitrogen. - Cyanobacteria produce oxygen during
photosynthesis. - This is a problem, because nitrogenase, the
enzyme responsible for fixing nitrogen, is
inactivated by oxygen.
- Anabaena solves this problem by fixing nitrogen
in specialized cells. - These cells are called heterocysts.
- Heterocysts do not produce oxygen, but they do
express nitrogenase.
26Anabaena N2 Fixation DNA Rearrangement
- In heterocysts, two segments of DNA that
interrupt genes involved in fixing nitrogen are
deleted
- Deletion elements encodes recombinases (XisA and
XisF) that excise the material between direct
repeats. - Do you think this can be reversed?
27Gene Cassettes in Eukaryotes
- S. cerevisiae switches mating types by moving a
gene cassette into an expressed position
a-specific genes
a-specific genes
- There are two silent mating type cassetes (HML
and HMR) that can recombine to the MAT locus. - The MAT locus is expressed.
- The products of the MAT locus is a master
regulator, MAT a turns a-specific genes on and
a-specific genes off.
28TrypanosomesVariable Surface Glycoproteins
- Trypanosoma brucei is the protozoan that causes
African sleeping sickness. - These organisms are transmitted by the bite of
the tsetse fly
- The antigen presented by trypanosomes are the
variable surface glycoprotein (VSG) - Trypanosomes have more than 1000 VSG genes, but
only the VSG gene at a specific telomeric locus
is expressed. - New (unexpressed) VSG genes are moved into the
expressed locus.
29Heritable and Non-Heritable Changes
- MUTATIONS are heritable changes in DNA.
- In contrast, some chemicals or conditions cause
phenotypic changes that cannot be inherited. - Non-heritable changes caused by chemical agents
or other environmental conditions that resemble
mutant phenotypes are often said to PHENOCOPY the
mutation. - For example, thalidomide causes severe birth
defects that resemble the inherited condition
phocomelia. - SC phocomelia is sometimes called
pseudothalidomide syndrome. - Likewise, vitamin D deficiency can cause rickets
(lack of proper bone calcification). This is a
phenocopy of vitamin D resistant rickets, an
X-linked mutation in humans. - Ultimately, these conditions cause a change in
gene expression that causes the phenotype