1 / 16

CHAPTER 11: Gene Expression

CHAPTER 11: Gene Expression. Recall that gene information codes for the proteins a cell needs for structure & function. **But not all proteins are needed all the time. **How does a cell control when & which proteins are made???. http://upload.wikimedia.org. I. Control of Gene Expression.

kert
Download Presentation

CHAPTER 11: Gene Expression

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHAPTER 11: Gene Expression Recall that gene information codes for the proteins a cell needs for structure & function. **But not all proteins are needed all the time. **How does a cell control when & which proteins are made??? http://upload.wikimedia.org

  2. I. Control of Gene Expression A. Gene Expression-Is the activation, or “turning on” of a gene that results in transcription & the production of mRNA. • Most of the mRNA is then translated into proteins. • Genome- is the complete genetic material contained in an individual.

  3. B. Prokaryotic Gene Expression • Since prokaryotes are simpler cells (single ring of DNA- no nucleus)- they are easier to study. • Scientists-Francois Jacob & Jacques Monod • in the 1960’s studied E. coli. • discovered how E. coli genes • control the metabolism of sugar (lactose). • Won noble prize 1965. http://zebu.uoregon.edu/~imamura/121/images/e_coli.gif

  4. C. Eukaryotic Gene Expression • Very Different than prokaryotes. • Eukaryotes MUCH more complex. • Operons rarely used. • Multicellular, • Specialized cells • Some cells use different proteins • not all genes expressed at times

  5. 1. Eukaryotic Gene Structure • Chormosomes- tightly coiled DNA for cell division. • Some DNA remains tightly coiled & is not transcribed. • Some DNA uncoils- allows transcription • Euchromatin- uncoiled DNA molecule- • Site of active transcription http://www.llnl.gov/str/June03/gifs/Stubbs1.gif

  6. Turning “on” Different than Prokaryotes • Beyond a promotor are 2 sections of DNA • Introns-DNA section that is transcribed but not translated. • Exons –DNA section that is transcribed AND translated.

  7. Control After Transcription • In eukaryotic nucleus: -Pre-mRNA is made - it’s a large molecule of both introns & exons. -Splicing of introns results in mRNA • mRNA leaves nucleus & goes into cytoplasm where transcription takes place. Section 1 Review Questions p. 222

  8. http://gremlin1.zool.iastate.edu/~volker/img/ps-fig.jpg

  9. II. Gene Expression in Development & Cell Division • All multicellular, sexually reproducing organisms begin life as a zygote (fertilized egg). • Cell Differentiation- the development of cells that have specialized functions. • Morphogenesis- the development of form in an organism.

  10. Homeotic Genes • Regulatory genes that determine where certain anatomical structures, such as appendages, will develop in an organism during morphogenesis. • Considered “master genes” of development. • How they work: • Make regulatory proteins- • switch on certain genes- • controls growth rate in specific areas • Produces structural development.

  11. *Throughout an organism’s life: • Genes are switched on & off • Only a fraction of genes are expressed in any 1 cell. *DNA chip- tool used to track gene expression. -DNA fragments are “tagged” with a florescent compound & when mRNA is studied- look for “light-up” segments. -useful especially in medicine, cancer study.

  12. III. Cancers • Tumor- abnormal proliferation of cells. • Benign Tumor- growth of cells that remains within a mass. (doesn’t spread) • Cancer- uncontrolled growth of cells that can invade other parts of the body.( spreads- more dangerous, deadly)

  13. 2 ways to suppress uncontrolled cell growth. • Tumor suppressor genes – code for proteins that prevent uncontrolled cell division. • Proto-oncogenes- code for proteins that help regulate cell division. • are genes which regulate cell growth. • Ensure events occur properly. A mutation can causes changes in proto-oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes - turns them into Oncogenes. Onogene- gene can cause uncontrolled cell growth.

  14. Metastasis- spread of cancer cells beyond original site. • Carcinogen- any substance that can induce or promote cancer. • Mutagen- agents that cause changes in the cell.

  15. Types of cancers • Carcinoma- growth in the skin, tissues that line the organs of the body. • Sarcomas- grow in bone, muscle tissue. • Lymphomas- solid tumors in lymphatic system tissue. • Leukemia- uncontrolled production of white blood cells.

  16. http://www.cancer-info.com/cancer.gif

More Related