transcription and regulatory networks Flashcards

1
Q

what is transcription

A

the generation of mRNA from a DNA template.

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2
Q

Where does transcription take place in an Escherichia coli cell?

A

in the cytoplasm

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3
Q

What is meant by translation?

A

The generation of polypeptide chain from an mRNA template

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4
Q

Where does translation take place in an Escherichia coli cell?

A

cytoplasm

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5
Q

What is meant by the “central dogma of molecular biology”?

A

The central dogma of molecular biology states that information cannot be transferred back from protein to either protein or nucleic acid

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6
Q

How does an RNA polymerase molecule floating in the cytoplasm of an Escherichia coli cell reach a gene on its DNA?

A

It binds to a promoter of a gene with the help of a sigma factor

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7
Q

In genetics what is a promoter?

A

A promoter is a region of DNA that helps to recruit RNA polymerase and thereby can initiate transcription of a particular gene

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8
Q

What are typical promoter sequence elements recognised by the housekeeping sigma factor sigma70?

A

-10 TATA box and -35 AT-rich region

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9
Q

What is the function of the -10 TATA box and the -35 AT-rich region?

A

They are AT-rich and therefore can be easily melted upon binding of RNA polymerase to facilitate transcription

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10
Q

What are typical promoter sequence elements recognised by the specialised sigma factor sigma54?

A

-12 TATA box and -24 AT-rich region

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11
Q

What is the approximate speed of transcription in Escherichia coli?

A

30-50 nt/s

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12
Q

How can a misincorporation event by RNA polymerase be repaired?

A

Misincorporations are repaired by additional factors such as GreA, which re-position the magnesium ions in the active centre and allow a short stretch of mRNA to be cut off

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13
Q

How is transcription terminated?

A

There either is a GC hairpin or a recognition sequence for the protein Rho. The hairpin or Rho interact with RNA polymerase and cause transcription to stop

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14
Q

Accuracy of transcription is much lower than accuracy of DNA replication. Why can transcription be less accurate than DNA replication?

A

DNA contains the entire genetic information and needs to be preserved. In contrast, the halflife of mRNA in E. coli is 7 min on average and many mRNA molecules are made, so one mRNA molecule with an error can be tolerated

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15
Q

How does the promoter sequence influence of transcription?

A

The stronger the promoter the more efficiently RNA polymerase is recruited and the higher are transcription levels

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16
Q

How can the sigma factor influence the level of transcription?

A

Different sigma factors recognise different promoter elements and therefore guide RNA polymerase to different sets of genes

17
Q

How is a repressor protein influencing the level of transcription?

A

It shuts transcription off

18
Q

How can a repressor protein downregulate transcription?

A
  • It bends the DNA, thereby masking the promoter and preventing RNA polymerase from binding
  • Steric hindrance; it binds in the promoter region of a gene and blocks access by RNA polymerase
19
Q

How can a transcription activator such as CAP protein help to increase levels of transcription?

A

It binds at or near a promoter and actively recruits RNA polymerase, thereby increasing transcription from a gene

20
Q

What function has β galactosidase, encoded by the lacZ gene?

A

It cleaves lactose in glucose and galactose

21
Q

Where is the repressor gene for the lac operon, lacI, located in relation to the other genes of the lac operon?

A

Outside the lac operon under its own weak promoter

22
Q

Which regulator elements are important to control transcription of the lac operon?

A

Promoter strength, binding sites for the CAP activator, binding sites for the Lac repressor

23
Q

Escherichia coli cells are growing in medium with lactose and glucose. How strongly is the lac operon transcribed?

A

Not repressed but low, because cAMP, a starvation signal, is low and CAP protein does not bind to activate transcription

24
Q

Escherichia coli cells are growing in medium with glucose but no lactose. How strongly is the lac operon transcribed?

A

Repressed because of the absence of lactose. In addition, the starvation signal cAMP is low, resulting in CAP protein not binding to the activator sequence

25
Q

How can the bacterium Vibrio fisheri be beneficial to the squid Euprymna scolopes?

A

The bacterium resides in the light organ of the squid and can be used to mask the squid’s shadow when hunting at night

26
Q

What is the main function of the lux operon in the bacterium Vibrio fisheri?

A

Generating proteins that allow chemiluminescence

27
Q

What is meant by quorum sensing?

A

Quorum sensing enables bacteria to communicate with each other (or even other species) to synchronise certain activities such as expressing pathogenicity factors or chemiluminescence