Lecture 10 Flashcards

1
Q

Regulating translation initiation:

A
  • Protein binds mRNA regulating initiation at SD/AUG (influencing ribosomal binding)
  • sRNA binds mRNA regulating initiation at SD/AUG
  • Structure in mRNA inhibits initiation at SD/AUG, could be a small MW effector molecule or a ribosome translating an upstream ORF.
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2
Q

Translation:

A
  • Most ORF have their own SD sequence with the initiation codon at the start
  • Each ORF is translated by independent ribosomes
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3
Q

SD sequence:

A
  • Complementary to the 3’ end of the 16s RNA in the ribosome, so it positions the ribosome ready for translation
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4
Q

General mechanisms for regulation translation initiation:

A
  • AN RNA-binding protein prevents translation initiation by blocking the ribosome site
  • A secondary structure in the mRNA prevents translation initiation of the second ORF, so translation of the first ORF disrupts the structure allowing translation.
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5
Q

Ribosomal proteins:

A
  • Large subunit
  • Small subunit
  • Expressed in a series of different operons
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6
Q

Regulation of ribosomal proteins:

A
  • Some ribosomal proteins interact with rRNA forming an integral structure.
  • If rRNA is in excess, proteins will be used.
  • If ribosomal proteins are in excess, protein 2 binds to mRNA preventing translation of protein 1.
  • Translation of ORF2 is inhibited by structure in mRNA
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7
Q

eg) Ribosomal S8 normally binds structure A in the 16S rRNA:

A
  • If in excess, ribosomal protein S8 binds structure B in the mRNA encoding S9 thus inhibiting translation of itself
  • Feedback regulation
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8
Q

Riboswitches:

A
  • can regulate translation initiaition and influence transcription termination
    eg) SAM is a small MW effector molecule that alters the structure of mRNA to block the ribosome binding site, blocking transcription.
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9
Q

Trans-acting small RNAs (sRNAs):

A
  • Can regulate translation initiation positively or negatively
  • sRNA binds to mRNA inhibiting formation of secondary structures, allowing ribosome to initiate at SD/AUG
  • or Preventing translation initiation at SD/AUG
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10
Q

Osmolarity response - involve an sRNA

A
  • The regulator allows one gene to be positively regulated while the other gene is effectively negatively regulated.
  • small RNA response
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11
Q

OmpF

A

a protein that forms pores in the membrane

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12
Q

OmpC

A

A protein that forms pores in the membrane

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13
Q

ompF:

A
  • A porin gene
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14
Q

OmpR:

A
  • positively regulates ompC
  • positively regulates the small RNA gene, micF
  • Inhibits ompF expression
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15
Q

micF

A
  • A negative regulator of ompF

- A small RNA gene, which binds to ompF mRNA inhibitin translation

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16
Q

Regulation of translation termination eg) Translation release factor 2 (RF2) regulates its own expression:

A
  • Excess RF2: ribosomes terminate RF2 translation at codon 26, and expression doesn’t occur
  • Limiting RF2: ribosomes do not terminate RF2 translation, ribosomes shift reading frame, due to an internal SD sequence that repositions the ribosome by 1 base, to translate full ORF
17
Q

How does density effect bacterial gene expression?

A
  • Cells can uniformly change in some way by activating expression of response genes
  • A signal produced reaches a critical threshold which activates a synchronised response
18
Q

Examples of this:

A
  • Disease causing bacteria expressing disease causing genes only once they reach a certain level of population density
  • Biofilms
19
Q
  1. The trp operon is regulated by an attenuation mechanism
  2. Some trpR- mutants are dominant (ie: trpR-D)
  3. Tryptophan is the effector of the trpR regulatory protein
  4. Transcription termination involves the formation of a stem-and-loop in the RNA
A

The trp operator is a region of dyad symmetry. Explain: 2 gives the best reasoning

  1. TrpR is a dimer, so a mutant monomer can interfere with the function of a WT monomer and these are generally mutations in the DNA binding domain.
  2. Region of dyad symmetry, but nothing todo with the operator or the binding of TrpR
20
Q

Unable to undergo lysis or form a lysogen (lethal mutation)

A

N mutant: because N is needed to progress the intermediate early genes, and if this is mutated it is lethal

21
Q

Unable to establish a lysogen

A

cI mutant: because lambda repressor is inactive and PR and PL cannot be repressed

22
Q

Unable to undergo lysis

A

Q mutant: unable to expressed late genes
Xis: could undergo lysis, could undergo lysogeny, could integrate, but wouldn’t be able to excise, so it can’t fully enter the lytic cycle

23
Q

Unable to both undergo lysis OR form a lysogen but lysogen cannot be induced to undergo lytic cycle

A

nutL mutant: required for cIII expression, more likely to undergo lysis, possibly unable to establish a lysogen

24
Q

More likely to form a lysogen than a WT lambda

A

OR3 mutant: overlaps PRM, so it is involved in Cro binding to inhibit cI expression, so more likely to get lysogeny
PRE mutant: repressor establishment, mutation here means it would be similar to a cII mutant, unable to form a lysogen