1 / 83

Gene Regulation

Gene Regulation. Chapter 14. Learning Objective 1. Why do bacterial and eukaryotic cells have different mechanisms of gene regulation?. Prokaryotes. Bacterial cells grow rapidly have a short life span Transcriptional-level control usually regulates gene expression. Eukaryotic Cells.

kgoforth
Download Presentation

Gene Regulation

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. Gene Regulation Chapter 14

  2. Learning Objective 1 • Why do bacterial and eukaryotic cells have different mechanisms of gene regulation?

  3. Prokaryotes • Bacterial cells • grow rapidly • have a short life span • Transcriptional-level control • usually regulates gene expression

  4. Eukaryotic Cells • Have long life span • respond to many different stimuli • One gene • may be regulated in different ways • Transcriptional-level control • and control at other levels of gene expression

  5. KEY CONCEPTS • Cells can synthesize thousands of proteins • but not all proteins are required in all cells • Cells regulate which parts of the genome will be expressed, and when

  6. Learning Objective 2 • What is an operon? • What are the functions of the operator and promoter regions?

  7. Operon • A gene complex • structural genes with related functions • controlled by closely linked DNA sequences • Regulated genes in bacteria • are organized into operons

  8. PromoterRegion • Each operon has a promoterregion • upstream from protein-coding regions • where RNA polymerase binds to DNA before transcription

  9. Operator (1) • Regulatory switch for transcriptional-level control of operon • Repressor protein • binds to operator sequence • prevents transcription

  10. Operator (2) • RNA polymerase • bound to promoter • is blocked from transcribing structural genes • If repressor is not bound to operator • transcription proceeds

  11. Learning Objective 3 • What is the difference between inducible, repressible, and constitutive genes?

  12. Inducible Genes (1) • An inducible operon • such as lac operon • is normally turned off • Repressor protein • is synthesized in active form • binds to operator

  13. Inducible Genes (2) • If lactose is present • is converted to allolactose (inducer) • binds to repressor protein • changes repressor’s shape • Altered repressor • cannot bind to operator • operon is transcribed

  14. The lac Operon

  15. lac operon Repressor gene Promoter Operator lac Z lac Y lac A DNA Repressor protein Transcription mRNA Translation Ribosome Fig. 14-2a, p. 307

  16. lac operon Repressor gene Promoter Operator lac Z lac Y lac A RNA polymerase Transcription mRNA mRNA Translation Transacetylase Inducer (allolactose) Lactose permease β-galactosidase Repressor protein (inactive) Enzymes for lactose metabolism Fig. 14-2b, p. 307

  17. Repressible Genes (1) • A repressible operon (trp operon) • is normally turned on • Repressor protein • is synthesized in inactive form • cannot bind to operator • A metabolite (metabolic end product) • acts as corepressor

  18. Repressible Genes (2) • With high intracellular corepressor levels • corepressor molecule binds to repressor • changes repressor’s shape • Altered repressor • binds to operator • turns off transcription of operon

  19. The trp Operon

  20. trp operon Repressor gene Operator trp E trp D trp C trp B trp A Promoter DNA RNA polymerase Transcription mRNA mRNA Translation Repressor protein (inactive) Enzymes of the tryptophan biosynthetic pathway Tryptophan (a) Intracellular tryptophan levels low. Fig. 14-4a, p. 310

  21. trp operon Repressor gene Promoter Operator trp E trp D trp C trp B trp A DNA Active repressor – corepressor complex mRNA Inactive repressor protein Tryptophan (corepressor) (b) Intracellular tryptophan levels high. Fig. 14-4b, p. 310

  22. Constitutive Genes (1) • Are neither inducible nor repressible • active at all times • Regulatory proteins • produced constitutively • catabolite activator protein (CAP) • repressor proteins

  23. Constitutive Genes (2) • Regulatory proteins • recognize and bind to specific base sequences in DNA • Activity of constitutive genes • controlled by binding RNA polymerase to promoter regions

  24. Learning Objective 4 • What is the difference between positive and negative control? • How do both types of control operate in regulating the lac operon?

  25. Negative Control • Repressible and inducible operons are under negative control • When repressor protein binds to operator • transcription of operon is turned off

  26. Positive Control (1) • Some inducible operons are under positive control • Activator protein binds to DNA • stimulates transcription of gene

  27. Positive Control (2) • CAP activates lac operon • binds to promoter region • stimulates transcription by tightly binding RNA polymerase • To bind to lac operon • CAP requires cyclic AMP (cAMP) • cAMP levels increase • as glucose levels decrease

  28. Positive Control

  29. Promoter CAP- binding site RNA polymerase – binding site Repressor gene Operator lac Z lac Y lac A DNA mRNA RNA polymerase binds poorly CAP (inactive) Allolactose Repressor protein (inactive) (a) Lactose high, glucose high, cAMP low. Fig. 14-5a, p. 311

  30. Promoter CAP- binding site RNA polymerase – binding site Repressor gene Operator lac Z lac Y lac A DNA RNA polymerase binds efficiently Transcription mRNA mRNA CAP Translation Galactoside transacetylase cAMP Lactose permease β -galactosidase Allolactose Enzymes for lactose metabolism Repressor protein (inactive) (b) Lactose high, glucose low, cAMP high. Fig. 14-5b, p. 311

  31. Binding CAP

  32. DNA cAMP CAP dimer Fig. 14-6, p. 312

  33. Learning Objective 5 • What are the types of posttranscriptional control in bacteria?

  34. Posttranscriptional Controls in Bacteria • Translational control • regulates translation rate of particular mRNA • Posttranslational controls • include feedback inhibition of key enzymes in metabolic pathways

  35. KEY CONCEPTS • Prokaryotes regulate gene expression in response to environmental stimuli

  36. KEY CONCEPTS • Gene regulation in prokaryotes occurs primarily at the transcription level

  37. Learning Objective 6 • Discuss the structure of a typical eukaryotic gene and the DNA sequences involved in regulating that gene

  38. Eukaryotic Genes • Are not normally organized into operons • Regulation occurs at levels of • Transcription • mRNA processing • Translation • Modifications of protein product

  39. Transcription • Requires • Transcription initiation site • where transcription begins • Promoter • to which RNA polymerase binds • In multicellular eukaryotes • RNA polymerase binds to promoter (TATA box)

  40. Transcription

  41. TATA box Transcription initiation site T T TATA A UPE A A pre-mRNA (a) Eukaryotic promoter elements. Fig. 14-9a, p. 316

  42. TATA box Transcription initiation site T T TATA A UPE A A pre-mRNA (b) A weak eukaryotic promoter. Fig. 14-9b, p. 316

  43. Transcription initiation site TATA box T T TATA A A A UPE UPE UPE UPE pre-mRNA (c) A strong eukaryotic promoter. Fig. 14-9c, p. 316

  44. TATA box Transcription initiation site T T TATA A Enhancer UPE UPE A A pre-mRNA (d) A strong eukaryotic promoter plus an enhancer. Fig. 14-9d, p. 316

  45. Regulated Eukaryotic Gene • Promoter • RNA polymerase-binding site • short DNA sequences (upstream promoter elements (UPEs) or proximal control elements) • UPEs • number and types within promoter region determine efficiency of promoter

  46. Enhancers (1) • Located far away from promoter • control some eukaryotic genes • Help form active transcription initiation complex

  47. Enhancers (2) • Specific regulatory proteins • bind to enhancer elements • activate transcription by interacting with proteins bound to promoters

  48. Enhancers

  49. Enhancer Target proteins RNA polymerase TATA box DNA (a) Little or no transcription. Fig. 14-11a, p. 317

  50. Enhancer Activator (transcription factor) TATA box DNA (b) High rate of transcription. Fig. 14-11b, p. 317

More Related