Title: REVIEW SESSION
1REVIEW SESSION
- Wednesday, September 15 530 PM
- SHANTZ 242 E
2Gene Regulation
3Gene Regulation
- Gene expression can be turned on, turned off,
turned up or turned down! - For example, as test time approaches, some of you
may note that stomach acid production increases
dramatically. due to regulation of the genes
that control synthesis of HCl by cells within the
gastric pits of the stomach lining.
4Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes
- Prokaryotes may turn genes on and off depending
on metabolic demands and requirements for
respective gene products. - NOTE For prokaryotes, turning on/off refers
almost exclusively to stimulating or repressing
transcription
5Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes
- Inducible/Repressible gene products those
produced only when specific chemical substrates
are present/absent. - Constitutive gene products those produced
continuously, regardless of chemical substrates
present.
6Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes
- Regulation may be
- Negative gene expression occurs unless it is
shut off by a regulator molecule - or
- Positive gene expression only occurs when a
regulator mole turns it on
7Operons
- In prokaryotes, genes that code for enzymes all
related to a single metabolic process tend to be
organized into clusters within the genome, called
operons. - An operon is usually controlled by a single
regulatory unit.
8Regulatory Elements
- cis-acting element The regulatory region of the
DNA that binds the molecules that influences
expression of the genes in the operon. It is
almost always upstream (5) to the genes in the
operon. - Trans-acting element The molecule(s) that
interact with the cis-element and influence
expression of the genes in the operon.
9The lac operon
- The lac operon contains the genes that must be
expressed if the bacteria is to use the
disaccharide lactose as the primary energy
source. - To be used as an energy source, lactose must be
cleaved into glucose and galactose. The glucose
is then available for metabolism (glycolysis). - Note glucose is the preferred energy substrate.
10Negative Control
- The genes in the lac operon are normally turned
off, and only expressed when a repressor molecule
is removed from the regulatory region. - This repressor is removed only in the presence of
lactose
11The lac Operon
Regulatory Region
Repressor gene
Structural Genes
PPromoter OOperator
12Structural Genes
- Structural genes are those that encode for the
enzymes that do the metabolic work. - LacZ b-galactosidase, cleaves lactose into
glucose and galactose - LacY Permease, promotes entry of lactose into
cell - LacA Transacetylase, thought to reduce toxicity
of byproducts of lactose metabolism
13Structural Genes
- In prokaryotes, all the structural genes within
an operon are usually transcribed as a single
mRNA, then the genes are independently translated
by ribosomes.
14LacIThe Repressor
- LacI is the regulatory molecule.
- When there is no lactose present in the cell,LacI
binds to the Operator element and blocks binding
of RNA polymerase to the Promoter element.
X
15LacIThe Repressor
- When lactose IS present, the genes to metabolize
lactose must be expressed. - Lactose itself causes LacI to dissociate from the
operator, which frees up the promoter region,
allowing RNA polymerase to bind, and
transcription begins. - Lactose is the inducer molecule for the lac
operon.
16Induction of the lac operon
Lactose
Binding of lactose causes a change in the shape
of LacI
17Induction of the lac operon
18What happens if you mutate LacI?
- LacI encodes the lac repressor, which keeps the
operon shut off in the absence of lactose.
19What happens if you mutate LacI?
- Inactivation of LacI would be called a
constitutive mutation, because the genes of the
lac operon would be on all the time even if there
is no lactose present (removed repression).
20Positive Control of the lac Operon
- A further increase in transcription of the lac
operon occurs if a molecule called
catabolite-activating protein (CAP) also binds
the promoter region.
CAP facilitates the binding of RNA
polymerase, and therefore increases transcription
21Positive Control
- Remember, glucose is the preferred substrate.
- CAP exists in the state that will bind the
promoter ONLY when glucose is absent.
This is the form CAP takes when there is no
glucose
22Positive Control
- When glucose is present, CAP exists in a state
that will NOT bind the promoter of the lac
operon.
X
This is the shape CAP takes when glucose
is present. It cannot bind the promoter in this
shape
X
23Regulation of the lac Operon
- So, transcription is regulated as follows
- Off when lactose is absent (repressed)
- Active when lactose is present as well as glucose
(de-repressed) - Really active when lactose is present but glucose
is absent (activated)
24Gene Regulation in Eukaryotes
25Differences between Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes
- 1. DNA is a lot more complicated in
eukaryotestheres a lot more of it and its
complexed with proteins to form chromatin - 2. Genetic information is carried on multiple
chromosomes - 3. Transcription and translation are physically
separated
26Differences between Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes
(cont.)
- 4. Eukaryotic mRNA is processed prior to
translation - 5. Eukaryotic mRNA is much more stable (not as
easily degraded) - Gene expression can be controlled at the level of
translation! - 6. Different cell types express different genes
27Chromatin Remodeling
- Chemical alteration of the histone proteins of
chromatin facilitates or inhibits access of RNA
polymerases to DNA promoters.
28Recruitment of Co-activators
- Remember enhancer elements? These are binding
sites for molecules that influence formation of
the RNA polymerase initiation complex. - Enhancer elements may have DNA sequences for both
positive and negative regulators of
transcription.
29Enhancers
- The presence or absence of regulators is
determined by the cells environment, metabolic
state, developmental state and/or the presence or
absence of signal molecules. - The net effect of all the information available,
summed up by the regulators present, dictates the
transcription efficiency of RNA polymerase from a
given promoter.
30DNA Methylation
- Chemical modification of DNA by adding or
removing methyl (-CH3) groups from the DNA bases,
usually cytosine. - The presence of the methyl group alters the shape
of DNA, which influences the binding of proteins
to the methylated DNA.
31DNA Methylation
- Typically, increased methylation decreases
transcription efficiency. - In mammalian females, one X chromosome is
inactivated (only one of the X chromosomes is
used to drive transcription). The inactivated X
chromosome has much more methylation than the
active chromosome.
32Post-Transcriptional Regulation
Exon 1
Exon 2
Exon 3
Exon 4
Exon 5
1.
Exon 1
Exon 2
Exon 3
Exon 4
Exon 5
2.
Exon 1
Exon 2
Exon 4
Exon 5
33Post-Transcriptional Control
- RNA Stability
- Stability sequences
- Instability sequences
- Translation efficiencyincreased translation
increases stability