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CH. 11 : Transcriptional Control of Gene Expression Jennifer Brown INTRODUCTION Gene expression: the entire process whereby the information in a particular gene is decoded into a particular protein. RNA polymerase is required to initiate transcription mRNA is then synthesized at a certain site, transported from the nucleus to cytoplasm, then translated into protein Ribosomes, tRNA, and translation factors all aid in this process Control of Transcription Initiation This is the first step and most important mechanism for determining whether genes are expressed and how much of encoded mRNAs (proteins) are produced Gene control allows for the correct expression of the correct genes during development Regulation of transcription initiation is most widespread form of gene control Transcription Promoters The promoter is the DNA sequence that specifies where transcription begins Transcription factors may bind upstream or downstream from the promoter This allows for complex control of gene expression RNA Polymerases Eukaryotic cells contain three different RNA polymerases which contain 2 large and 3 small core subunits RNA polymerase I is located in the nucleolus and transcribes genes encoding pre-rRNA which is processed into 28S, 5.8S, and 18S rRNAs RNA polymerase III transcribes genes encoding tRNA, 5S rRNA, and other small stable RNAs RNA Polymerase II Transcribes ALL protein-coding genes and function in production of mRNAs Contains a carboxyl-terminal domain which the other two do not have Carboxyl end of largest subunit contains a stretch of 7 amino acids This sequence Tyr-Ser-Pro-Thr-Ser-Pro-Ser is repeated multiple times Also initiates transcription of genes at the DNA sequence encoding the capped 5’ end of the mRNA Transcription-Control Regions Protein-binding DNA sequences that regulate protein-coding genes Promoter: control elements plus TATAbox or initiator Enhancers: long distance transcriptionalcontrol elements which can occur upstream or downstream from a promoter and are cell-type specific Types of Promoter Sequences in Eukaryotic DNA 3 Types TATA box: this is the most common type found upstream from start site and rapidly transcribes genes Initiators: these have cytosine at -1 position and adenine at start site (+1) CpG Islands: located upstream from start site and have low rate of transcribed genes TATA BOX Transcription Factors Activate or repress expression of proteincoding genes Example is GAL4 which is composed of a Nterminus DNA-binding domain and a Cterminus activation domain Transcription repressors are functionally converse of activators Classes of DNA Binding Proteins Homeodomain Proteins: contain conserved 60residue DNA-binding motif Zinc-Finger Proteins: regions fold around a central Zinc ion and produce compact domain from short polypeptide chain Leucine-Zipper Proteins: contain the amino acid Leucine at every 7th position and bind to DNA as dimers Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Proteins: similar in structure to basic-zipper motif DNA-BINDING PROTEINS Heterodimeric Transcription Factors Allow activation domains of each monomer to be placed together in different combinations Each monomer with different DNAbinding specificity increases number of DNA sequences the family of transcription factors can bind Allows for combinatorial complexity Transcription Initiation by RNA Polymerase II General Transcription Factors: initiation factors that place polymerase molecules at transcription start sites and help template strand enter active site Example in Polymerase II: TFIIA, TFIIB, etc. Required for synthesis of RNA from most genes TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS Regulatory Proteins Act in concert with other proteins to modulate chromatin structure This influences ability of transcription factors to bind to promoters Also interact with large multiprotein complex = mediator This binds with Pol II and directly regulates assembly of transcription preinitiation complexes Regulation of TranscriptionFactor Activity Expression of transcription factor by a cell is regulated Activities of those factors expressed are also controlled indirectly This is done by interaction between proteins on surface of cell and by external hormones and growth factors Nuclear Receptors All have unique N-terminal region Response elements bind several nuclear receptors and can be: Inverted Direct repeats Heterodimeric:located exclusively in nucleus Homodimeric: found in cytoplasm in absence of ligans Mechanisms for Terminating Transcription Differ for each of 3 RNA Polymerases RNA Polymerase I: termination requires polymerase-specific termination factor RNA Polymerase II: terminates after polymerizing a series of U residues RNA Polymerase III: doesn’t terminate until after a sequence is transcribed that directs cleavage and polyadenylation of RNA QUESTIONS???