1 / 43

REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION

REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION. WHY REGULATE GENE EXPRESSION??. Adaptation (Energy Conservation) Development and differentiation. GENE EXPRESSION IN DIFFERENT CELLS. Pancreatic cells. Blood cells. Muscle cell. alpha cells beta cells. WBCs RBCs.

donal
Download Presentation

REGULATION OF 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. REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION

  2. WHY REGULATE GENE EXPRESSION?? • Adaptation (Energy Conservation) • Development and differentiation

  3. GENE EXPRESSION IN DIFFERENT CELLS Pancreatic cells Blood cells Muscle cell alpha cells beta cells WBCs RBCs

  4. A PROKARYOTIC AND EUKARYOTIC CELL

  5. REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION - PROKARYOTES

  6. Structural Genes Promoter Gene 2 Gene 3 Gene 1 5’ 3’ AUG UAG UAA AUG UGA AUG Polycistronic mRNA THE OPERON Operon DNA Protein 1 Protein 2 Protein 3

  7. REPRESSORS Regulatory gene mRNA Repressor RNA polymerase Operator Gene 2 Gene 3 Gene 1 Promoter 5’ 3’ No transcription No protein products

  8. REGULATORY MECHANISMS INDUCTION Repressor is INACTIVATED through inducers to INITIATE / INDUCE transcription REPRESSION Repressor is ACTIVATED through corepressors to PREVENT / REPRESS transcription

  9. Transcription Translation INDUCTION Active repressor No transcription, translation Inducer Inactive repressor

  10. REPRESSION Inactive repressor Transcription Translation Corepressors Active repressor No transcription, translation

  11. GENE REGULATION IN EUKARYOTES

  12. Gene Regulation Can Take Place at Many Levels • Chromosome • Transcription • Processing of transcripts • Translation

  13. GENE REGULATION AT THE CHROMOSOMAL LEVEL

  14. Two Types of Chromatin • HETEROCHROMATIN Trancriptionally inactive tightly condensed • EUCHROMATIN Transcriptionally active Relatively relaxed

  15. CHROMATIN STRUCTURE

  16. Control region within nucleosome Control region outside nucleosome EFFECT OF CHROMATIN STRUCTURE ON TRANSCRIPTION GENE IS ACTIVE GENE IS INACTIVE

  17. HAT Histone Acetylation

  18. Histone Acetylation

  19. DNA Methylation

  20. X-Inactivation • Inactive X-Chromosome (Barr body) • Underacetylated at H4 • Hypermethylated

  21. X-inactivation in humans • Red-green color blindness • Males = fully color blind • Females = mosaic retinas • Anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia • Males = absence of teeth, lack of sweat glands • Females = random patterns of tissue with or without sweat glands

  22. Arrangement of DNA

  23. Antibody Diversity • Light chains: • Up to 300 Variable, 4 Joining and 1 Constant region • 300 x 4 = 1, 200 light chains • Heavy chains: • Up to 500 Variable, 4 Joining and 12 Diversity regions and 12 constant regions • 500 x 4 x 12 = 24, 000 light chains 1200 x 24,000 = 28,800,000 antibody molecules

  24. REGULATION AT THE LEVEL OF TRANSCRIPTION

  25. GTFs only produce a basal level of transcription i.e. very low • Gene-specific factors (activators) are further required to regulate the activity of gene expression

  26. Enhancers/Silencers • Upstream or downstream • Close to the promoter or thousands of base pairs away • On either of the two strands of DNA • Act through intermediary or gene specific transcription factors proteins • Enhancers activate transcription • Silencers deactivate transcription

  27. Enhancers/Silencers

  28. Response Elements • Enhancers contain response elements that are responsive to certain metabolic factors • Cyclic AMP response element (CRE) • Glucocorticoid response element (GRE) • Heat shock element (HSE) • REs bind transcription factors produced under certain cell conditions to activate several related genes

  29. cAMP Response Element (CRE) 5’- TGACGTCA -3’ 3’- ACTGCAGT -5’

  30. CREB – the most important protein that you have never heard of • Implicated in • Cell proliferation • Cell differentiation • Spermatogenesis • Release of somatostatin (inhibitor growth hormone) • Development of T lymphocytes • Metabolism of the pineal gland • Adaptation to physical stress • Transcription of metabolic enzymes • Critical in learning and long term memory

  31. Activation of CREB

  32. Glucocorticoid Response Element

  33. GENE REGULATION BY PROCESSING OF TRANSCRIPTS

  34. Alternative Splicing

  35. RNA EDITING

  36. Regulation of Translation byPhosphorylation

  37. mRNA Stability

  38. Regulation of Transferrin Expression

  39. Regulation of ferritin expression

  40. RNA Interference …will be done with therapeutics

  41. The End!

More Related