Title: Regulation Possiblilites:
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2Regulation Possiblilites
Regulate transcription Regulate
translation Regulate activity
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8The lac operon
- E-coli uses three enzymes to take up and
metabolize lactose. - The genes that code for these three enzymes are
clustered on a single operon the lac Operon.
Whats lactose??
9Figure 31-2 Genetic map of the E. coli lac operon.
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10The lac repressor gene
- Prior to these three genes is an operator region
that is responsible for turning these genes on
and off. - When there is not lactose, the gene for the lac
repressor switches off the operon by binding to
the operator region. - A bacteriums prime source of food is glucose.
- So if glucose and lactose are around, the
bacterium wants to turn off lactose metabolism in
favor of glucose metabolism.
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13Isopropyl thio -? -D- galactoside
14Figure 31-25 The base sequence of the lac
operator.
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15- Lac repressor binding to DNA animation
- http//molvis.sdsc.edu/atlas/morphs/lacrep/index.h
tm
16Figure 31-28a X-Ray structures of CAPcAMP
complexes. (a) CAPcAMP in complex with a
palindromic 30-bp duplex DNA.
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17Figure 31-36 X-Ray structure of the lac repressor
subunit.
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18Figure 31-37a X-ray structure of the lac
repressor-DNA complex.
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21Induction.
- Allolactose is an isomer formed from lactose that
derepresses the operon by inactivating the
repressor, - Thus turning on the enzymes for lactose
metabolism.
22The lac operon in action.
- When lactose is present, it acts as an inducer of
the operon (turns it on). - It enters the cell and binds to the Lac
repressor, causing a shape change that so the
repressor falls off. - Now the RNA polymerase is free to move along the
DNA and RNA can be made from the three genes. - Lactose can now be metabolized (broken down).
23When the inducer (lactose) is removed
- The repressor returns to its original shape and
binds to the DNA, so that RNA polymerase can no
longer get past the promoter. No RNA and no
protein is made. - Note that RNA polymerase can still bind to the
promoter though it is unable to move past it.
That means that when the cell is ready to use the
operon, RNA polymerase is already there and
waiting to begin transcription.
24Lac movie
Lac and trp
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26- The lac repressor bound to operator sequences and
the CAP-cAMP in complex with its 30 bp binding
site. The TATA box and -35 region of the
promoter are also indicated.
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28Catabolite repression happens when glucose (a
catabolite) levels are high.
- Then cyclic AMP is inhibited from forming.
- When glucose levels drop, more cAMP forms.
- cAMP binds to a protein called CAP (catabolite
activator protein), which is then activated to
bind to the CAP binding site. - This activates transcription, perhaps by
increasing the affinity of the site for RNA
polymerase. - This phenomenon is called catabolite repression,
29Suggested readings on regulation/dna bp Voet
pp 1237-1253 Problems 2, 4 Heres a quiz on the
lac operon http//www.bio.davidson.edu/courses/
movies.html
30Figure 31-39 A genetic map of the E. coli trp
operon indicating the enzymes it specifies and
the reactions they catalyze.
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31Figure 31-40 The base sequence of the trp
operator. The nearly palindromic sequence is
boxed and its 10 region is overscored.
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32Figure 31-41 The alternative secondary structures
of trpL mRNA.
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33Figure 31-42a Attenuation in the trp operon. (a)
When tryptophanyltRNATrp is abundant, the
ribosome translates trpL mRNA.
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34Figure 31-42b Attenuation in the trp operon. (b)
When tryptophanyltRNATrp is scarce, the ribosome
stalls on the tandem Trp codons of segment 1.
35Table 31-3 Amino Acid Sequences of Some Leader
Peptides in Operons Subject to Attentuation.
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37Figure 31-43 The structure of the 5 cap of
eukaryotic mRNAs.
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38Figure 31-46 An electron micrograph and its
interpretive drawing of a hybrid between the
antisense strand of the chicken ovalbumin gene
and its corresponding mRNA.
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39Figure 31-47 The sequence of steps in the
production of mature eukaryotic mRNA as shown for
the chicken ovalbumin gene.
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40Figure 31-48 The consensus sequence at the
exonintron junctions of vertebrate pre-mRNAs.
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41Figure 31-49 The sequence of transesterification
reactions that splice together the exons of
eukaryotic pre-mRNAs.
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42Table 31-4 Types of Introns.
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