Chapter 13 Flashcards

1
Q

Mechanisms of gene regulation in eukaryotes before transcription

A
  • Regulatory proteins
  • Regulatory sequences (enhancers, silencers)
  • Chromatin structure
  • Alternative promoters
  • Methylation
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2
Q

Mechanism of gene regulation in eukaryotes after transcription

A
  • Alternative 5’ capping
  • 3’ polyadenylation
  • splicing
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3
Q

Mechanisms of gene regulation in eukaryotes after splicing

A
  • Small RNAs that influence mRNA stability
  • Other factors that influence mRNA transport and stability and the initiation of translation
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4
Q

Mechanisms of gene regulation in eukaryotes in the cytoplasm, after export of the mature mRNA

A
  • Factors that influence the initiation of translation
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5
Q

Mechanisms of gene regulation in eukaryotes in the cytoplasm, after translation

A
  • Posttranslational modifications
  • Binding of regulatory molecules
  • Regulation of protein stability
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6
Q

Variation in cis-element regulator elements

A
  • In single celled eukaryotes, cis regulatory elements are usually upstream and near the start of transcription
  • In multicellular eukaryotes, cis regulatory elements may be upstream, downstream; near or far
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7
Q

Sonic Hedgehog in mammals

A
  • Two enhancers: one for brain cells and one for limb cells
  • the one for brain cells is near the start of transcription
  • the one for limb cells in 1 million bp upstream in the intron of another gene
  • Regulation of SHH is modular and depends on what transcription factors are expressed in each cell
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8
Q

Conservation of enhancer sequences

A
  • Enhancer sequences can be highly conserved among diverse organisms
  • Natural selection
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9
Q

What is a nucleosome

A
  • a segment of DNA wound 2x around 8 histone proteins
  • Not static - can dissociate from DNA, move, translocate to different sections of DNA
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10
Q

Euchromatin

A

region that is more accessible

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11
Q

Heterochromatin

A

region that is less accessible

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12
Q

Facultative heterochromatin

A

Accessible to transcription when there are reversible changes in nucleosomes

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13
Q

What causes variation in accessibility of chromatin

A
  • Cell type
  • Developmental stage
  • Environmental conditions
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14
Q

What influences accessibility of chromatin

A
  • Chemical changes in DNA
  • protein
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15
Q

Important features of epigenetic modification

A
  • chromatin structure change
  • Transmissible during mitosis
  • Reversible
  • Affects transcription
  • Does not alter nucleotide sequence of DNA
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16
Q

Positive effect variegation

A

Change in expression due to change in location of heterochromatic region that partially prevent expression
- no change in sequence

17
Q

Varigated eye

A
  • su(var) - Mutations that reduce heterochromatin partially restore the wildtype phenotype
  • E(var) - Mutations that increase heterochromatin make the mutant phenotype more extreme
18
Q

How are genes made available for transcription in eukaryotes

A
  • Gene may be inside euchromatin where chromatin is open and expression is largely continuous
  • Proteins called chromatin remodelers may change the distribution or composition of histones to make transcription temporarily possible
  • Proteins called chromatin modifiers may add or remove acetyl or methyl groups to make transcription temporarily possible
19
Q

Chemical modification of chromatin

A
  • Proteins that add chemical groups to histones are called writers; those that remove them are called erasers
  • Proteins that bind to these groups are called readers
20
Q

Histone Acetyltransferase

A

chromatin writers that add acetyl groups; addition of acetyl groups makes protein less positive charged and less strongly attracted to DNA

21
Q

Histone deacetylase

A

Erasers that removed acetyl groups

22
Q

Histone methyltransferase

A

Chromatin writers that add methyl groups; methylation can open or close chromatin

23
Q

Histone demethylases

A

Erasers that remove methyl groups

24
Q

DNA methyltransferase

A

Add methyl groups to DNA nucleotides; repressed expression

25
Q

Epigenetic heritability

A
  • Chromatin structure is broken down during DNA replication
  • During mitosis, some histones are repackaged after replication; these influence the epigenetic state of newly translated histones
  • During meiosis, most epigenetic marks are lost - some passed to the next generation
26
Q

Insulator sequence

A

cis-acting sequences that influence the ability of enhancers to initiate transcription

27
Q

Open promoters

A

promoters not bond by histones - nucleosome depleted region
- no TATA box

28
Q

Covered promoters

A
  • Genes with tissue specific, developmental-specific, environmentally induced expression
  • blocked transcription until nucleosome is removed
  • contian TATA boc and other transcription-factor binding sequences
    -active competition between nucleosomes and transcription factors for binding
29
Q

Pioneer factors

A

initiate and recruit activators and repressors to enhancer and silencer respectively

30
Q

Chromatin remodeling

A
  • Genes within facultative heterochromatin are expressed when trans-acting factors cause changes in nucleosome structure, chemistry and composition