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Gene regulation biology 1 lecture 13 • Differential expression of genetic code in prokaryotes and eukaryotes • Regulation at the transcription level • How DNA is read - regulatory proteins • Motifs • Control by polymerase blocking in prokaryotes • Control ‘at a distance’ in eukaryotes • Post-transcriptional control Gene expression is controlled by regulating transcription • Regulation of promoter access • Transcriptional control in prokaryotes is more straight forward • Bacteria configure expression of genes to fit environment; generally reversible – RNA polymerase must bind to promoter – Protein regulators bind to promoter to either • Inhibit binding of RNA polymerase • Facilitate binding of RNA polymerase Regulatory proteins read DNA without unwinding it • Regulatory proteins bind to major groove of DNA helix, reading base pairs outside edge • Several motifs are seen that bind to the DNA molecule – Helix-turn-helix • Homeodomain – Zinc-finger – Leucine zipper Prokaryotes limit transcription by blocking the polymerase • Repressors are off-switches – e.g., tryptophan producing [trp] genes in E.coli: block of trp operon at promoter prevents transcription of 5 genes related to enzymes needed to make tryptophan – Presence of tryptophan shuts down transcription • Activators are on-switches – e.g, catabolite activator protein (cap) of E.coli. – Decrease of glucose leads to increase in cAMP – cAMP binds to CAP, protein changes shape – CAP's helix-turn-helix motif binds to DNA near several promoters – Promoters activates, genes transcribed Switches combine to form complex control systems • • e.g., the lac operon of E.coli produces three proteins that import disaccharide lactose,breaking it into two monosaccharides, glucose and galactose The activator switch – lac operon has two regulatory sites • CAP site adjacent to lac promoter – Ensures genes not transcribed when glucose is present – If glucose absent, high levels of cAMP in cell • cAMP binds to CAP,CAP binds to DNA, promoter functional – If glucose present, levels of cAMP are low • CAP prevented from binding to DNA, lac promoter not functional • The repressor switch – Operator is second regulatory site, adjacent to promoter fig 16.12 – lac repressor binds to operator, only when lactose absent – Repressor covers part of promoter when bound to operator • Result: lac operon only expressed when glucose not present, and lactose present Transcription control in eukaryotes is more complex • Cells prefer constant conditions - gene expression help control homeostasis • Changes in gene expression produce variety of results – Compensate for changes in body's physiological condition – Ensure that correct genes are expressed in development • Changes in gene expression serve needs of whole, not individual cell Control ‘at a distance’ • Eukaryotes make use of transcription factors, complex multi-protein molecules that cause DNA to loop. • Therefore, blocking of regulatory proteins at some distance down a DNA sequence may effect a gene’s expression - may involve ‘enhancers’ • Binding of transcription factor begins at, but is not limited to, the TATA box • Transcription inhibited by – Anything that reduces availability of any factor – Anything that limits its ease of assembly into complex • In vertebrates, methylation may be involved Post-transcriptional control • Gene splicing removes introns • Possible control of transport of mRNA out of nucleus • Translation repressor proteins (prevent binding of ribosome) • Selectively degrading mRNA transcripts (e.g., growth factor transcripts are notoriously unstable)