Title: Regulation of gene expression
1Regulation of gene expression
- Haixu Tang
- School of Informatics
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3Genetic material are not lost
4Different Cell Types Synthesize Different Sets of
Proteins
- Many processes are common to all cells, and any
two cells in a single organism therefore have
many proteins in common. - Some proteins are abundant in the specialized
cells in which they function and cannot be
detected elsewhere, even by sensitive tests.
Hemoglobin, for example, can be detected only in
red blood cells. - Studies of the number of different mRNAs suggest
that, at any one time, a typical human cell
expresses approximately 10,000 20,000 of its
approximately 30,000 genes - Although the differences in mRNAs among
specialized cell types are striking, they
nonetheless underestimate the full range of
differences
5Gene Expression is regulated in Response to
External Signals
6Switching devices for gene regulation
- Short stretches of DNA of defined sequence
(cis-elements) - gene regulatory proteins that recognize and bind
to them (trans-factors)
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8Base pairs in DNA can be recognized from their
edges
9DNA conformation changes after protein binding
10Table 7-1. Some Gene Regulatory Proteins and the
DNA Sequences That They Recognize
Bacteria lac repressor 5 AATTGTGAGCGGATAACAATT
CAP TGTGAGTTAGCTCACT
lambda repressor TATCACCGCCAGAGGTA
Yeast Gal4 CGGAGGACTGTCCTCCG
Mata2 CATGTAATT
Gcn4 ATGACTCAT
Drosophila Kruppel AACGGGTTAA
Bicoid GGGATTAGA
Mammals Sp1 GGGCGG
Oct-1 Pou domain ATGCAAAT
GATA-1 TGATAG
MyoD CAAATG
p53 GGGCAAGTCT
11DNA binding on the major groove
12The DNA-binding helix-turn-helix motif
13Some helix-turn-helix DNA-binding proteins
14lambda Cro protein
15Hemeodomain
16Zinc fingers
17DNA binding by a zinc finger protein
18A dimer of the zinc finger domain
19b sheets Can Also Recognize DNA
20Leucine Zipper
21Heterodomain of Leucine zipper
22Dimerization of HTH
23A heterodimer composed of two homeodomain
24DNA-protein interaction
25DNA recognition code
26Gel-mobility assay
27DNA affinity chromatography
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30Tryptophan switch
31Switch on/off
32Switch on/off by tryptophan binding
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34Dual control of the lac operon
35Enhancers from distance
36Binding of two proteins to separate sites on the
DNA double helix can greatly increase their
probability of interacting
37Protein interaction in gene switch
38Gene control region for a eukaryotic gene
39The modular structure of a gene activator protein
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41Transcriptional synergy
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43Repressor
44Assembled complex
45The nonuniform space distribution
46Switching gene expression by DNA inversion in
bacteria.
47Control of cell type in yeast
48Cassette model of yeast mating-type switching
49Speculative model for the heterochromatin
50A positive feedback loop
51Circadian clock
52Clustered genes coordinated by single protein
53Myogenic regulatory proteins in muscle
development
54ey gene in precursor cells of the leg
55X-inactivation
56DNA methylation patterns are faithfully inherited
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58Genome imprinting
59CG island
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61An explanation of CG island
62Post transcriptional regulation
63Alternative splicing
64Negative and positive control of alternative RNA
splicing
65Regulation of the site of RNA cleavage
66RNA editing in the mitochondria of trypanosomes
67Mechanism of A-to-I RNA editing in mammals
68Negative translational control
69The elF-2 cycle
70Translation initiation
71mRNA decay
72The competition between mRNA translation and mRNA
decay
73Two posttranslational controls mediated by iron
74Nonsense mRNA decay