Chapter 18 - Regulation of Gene Expression Flashcards

1
Q

Types of Genes

A

Constituted genes: genes that are vital and expressed all the time

Regulated Genes: genes expressed only when needed

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1
Q

Purpose of Regulation

A
  • Regulates development of organism
  • Responsible for differentiation between cell types
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2
Q

Ways Metabolic Paths can be Controlled

A
  1. feedback inhibition where the first enzyme in a pathway is inhibited by the presence of the pathways end product
    ○ a fairly rapid physiological response relying on the sensitivity of many enzymes to chemical cues that either increase or decrease its catalytic activity
  2. Cells can regulate the expression of the genes encoding for the enzymes at the level of transcription
    ○ A slower but more long term suppression by not allowing the creation of the gene in the first place
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3
Q

Operon

A

a unit of genetic function found in bacteria which consists of a promoter, an operator and a coordinately regulated cluster of genes whose products function in a common pathway

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4
Q

Benefits of Operons

A
  • Coordinately Controlled(all controlled) by a single on-off switch known as an operator
    ○ Positioned within or between promotor and enzyme coding genes and controls access of RNA polymerase to the gene
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5
Q

Regulatory Genes

A

a gene which codes for a protein that controls the transcription of another gene, or group of genes
- E.g. trpR gene codes for trp repressor

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6
Q

Trp Operon

A
  • By itself, the switch is turned on allowing RNA polymerase to bind to the promoter and transcribe the genes
    ○ Turned off when a specific repressor protein, tryptophan, binds to the operator and prevents RNA polymerase from transcribing genes
    • The trp operon is not switched off permanently due to the binding of repressors to operators being irreversible
      ○ Operators alternate between two states; bound by a repressor and unbound
      ○ The trp repressor protein is an allosteric protein with two alternative shapes; active and inactive; based on whether tryptophan has bound to the allosteric site or not
    • The trp genes code for proteins which are responsible for catalyzing the formation of tryptophan
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7
Q

Corepressor

A

a small molecule which binds to the repressor protein and influences its shape and therefore whether the operator is repressed or not.
○ E.g. The more tryptophan present, the greater chance it binds to trp repressor molecule and shuts down the production of tryptophan

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8
Q

Repressible Operon

A

transcription is usually on but can be inhibited when a specific small molecule binds allosterically to a regulator protein
- E.g. Trp Operon

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9
Q

Inducible Operon

A

when transcription is usually off but can be stimulated on when a specific small molecule interacts with a different regulatory(activator) protein
- e.g. lac operon

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10
Q

Process of Lac Operon

A
  • When E.coli metabolise lactose, it begins with hydrolysis of the disaccharide into is glucose and galactose monosaccharides, a reaction catalyzed by B-galactosidase
    • Normally there is only a few B-galactosidase in the cell however that number 1000x folds within 15 mins of lactose in the bacterium’s environment
    • The lacZ gene coding for b-galactosidase is located on the lac operon and the regulatory gene, lacI is located outside the lac operon which codes for the allosteric repressor
    • Unlike trp, lac repressor protein is active by itself and normally inhibits expression of lacZ, therefore an inducer needs to inactivate the repressor for b-galactosidase production.
      • This inducer is allolactose, an isomer of lactose
    • In the presence of allolactose, it binds to the lac repressor, altering its shape and allowing the genes to be expressed, producing b-galactosidase
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11
Q

Inducible Enzyme

A

enzymes functioning in catabolic pathways in which their synthesis is induced by a chemical signal
- E.g. allolactose for b-galactosidase

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12
Q

Repressible Enzyme

A

enzymes which function in anabolic pathways and synthesize essential end products from precursors(raw materials)

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13
Q

negative control of genes

A
  • Regulation of trp and lac operons involve negative control of genes as their operons are switched off by the active form of their respective repressor proteins
    • Gene regulation is only positive when a reg protein interacts to increase transcription.
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14
Q

Negative REgulation of Lac Operon

A
  • Once glucose in the cell increases in concentration, cAMP concentration falls, resulting in CRP detaching
    - This results in RNA polymerase binding less efficiently to the promoter, and transcription of lac operon proceeds at a lower level
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