CMB2001/L02 Activators Flashcards

1
Q

What 3 elements promote efficiency of transcription?

A

Core promoter element
Initiator
Activator binding sites

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2
Q

What is the function of UAS/enhancer elements?

A

Activate transcription (from basal level) for higher efficiency

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3
Q

What is the role of a factor in a common sequence element?

A

Aids binding of common sequence elements to transcription factors/activators

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4
Q

What is the sequence and factor associated with the GC box?

A

GGGCGG
Sp1

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5
Q

What is the sequence and factor associated with the octamer?

A

ATTTGCAT
Oct-1

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6
Q

What is the sequence and factor associated with the CAAT box?

A

GGCCAATCT
NFY

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7
Q

Where are common sequence elements often located?

A

Close to core promoter

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8
Q

When do common sequence elements become active?

A

They are constitutively active (continually)

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9
Q

Name 2 response elements.

A

SRE
HSE

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10
Q

What induces and binds SRE?

A

Induced by growth factors
Binds serum response factor (SRF)

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11
Q

What induces and binds HSE?

A

Induced by heat shock
Binds heat shock factor

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12
Q

Describe combinatorial control of transcription.

A

The type and combination of elements dictates when and at what level a gene is transcribed

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13
Q

What location and orientation do enhancers work in?

A

All locations/orientations

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14
Q

How are activators associated with enhancers/UAS enhancers brought into contact with GTF/DNA poll II at the core promoter?

A

By looping out of the intervening DNA

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15
Q

How many DNA binding domains and activation domains are on a strand of DNA?

A

1 DNA binding domain
Maybe more than 1 activation domain

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16
Q

Give 2 DNA binding domains.

A

Leucine zipper
Homeodomain
Helix loop helix
Zinc finger

17
Q

How are activation domains often characterised?

A

According to amino acid composition

18
Q

Give 3 features of activation domains.

A

Lack of sequence conservation and structural information
Generally thought to be unstructured
Contain multiple short segments that work together in additive fashion
Interact with other proteins in transcriptional machinery

19
Q

How do activation domains promote transcription? (2)

A

Recruit transcription factors and coactivators
Modify chromatin structure to make DNA more accessible for transcription

20
Q

How are activators analysed in vitro by gel shift/electrophoretic mobility shift assays?

A

Activator and radiolabelled probe DNA run on non-denaturing acrylamide gel
Gel separates based on size and mass
Only measure ability to bind DNA, not transcription

21
Q

How are activators analysed in vitro by transcription assays? (2)

A

RNA pol II, GTFs, DNA template, radiolabelled rNTPs assayed
Requires activator to have functional DNA binding domain and activation domain

22
Q

How are activators analysed in vivo? (3)

A

Reporter assays
Plasmid 1 encodes protein X
Reporter gene of plasmid 2 activated by protein X binding
Reporter gene transcripts produced

23
Q

Describe the 5 steps of chromatin immunoprecipitation.

A

Crosslink bound proteins to DNA
Isolate chromatin and shear DNA
Precipitate chromatin with protein-specific antibody
Reverse cross-link and digest protein
Analyse DNA using PCR or sequencing

24
Q

Give 4 ways in which activators work.

A

Cooperative binding- promote binding of additional activator (uncommon)
Stimulate complex assembly (major)
Release stalled RNA pol (stimulate activity)
Modulation of chromatin

25
Which components of the PIC complex do activators interact with to promote assembly? (3)
TFIID (via TAFs) TFIIB Mediator
26
What is the mediator complex?
An additional factor required for transcription activation in minimal in vitro transcription systems
27
Describe the structure of mediator. (3)
22 polypeptides Can exist on its own or associated with RNA pol II through C-terminal domain Composed of 3 domains - head, middle, tail
28
Describe the function of mediator. (2)
Provides a bridge between activators and RNA pol II Mediator-activator interactions aid recruitment of RNA pol II to enhance PIC formation
29
Where can RNA pol II stall?
On or near the promoter
30
Give an example of an activator releasing stalled RNA pol. (3)
Heat shock genes e.g., hsp70 IN absence of heat shock, RNA pol II pauses after -50nts Heat shock activates HSF transcription factor which interacts with RNA pol II Releases it from the pause