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Gene Expression and Regulation • There are 23 pairs of CHROMOSOMES in a human body cell. • On each chromosome, there are thousands of GENES. • Each gene codes for one type of PROTEIN. GENE EXPRESSION = DNARNAproteins GENE EXPRESSION REGULATION • In a multicellular organism, most of its cells have the same DNA. So how do cells become different? (skin cells, liver cells, etc.) • An organism begins life as a mass of stem cells (unspecialized cells). These cells can potentially become any type of cell. At some point in development, cells become specialized. • Although the DNA is the same, genes can be “turned on and off”. For example, the gene that codes for melanin is activated/expressed or “turned on” in skin cells but not for liver cells. This is called gene regulation. • Because only certain genes are “turned on” in certain cells, this leads to cell differentiation. • Cell differentiation is irreversible. For example, a heart cell cannot be changed back to a stem cell. • The cell’s environment can control its gene expression, causing the cell to produce only certain proteins and/or certain amounts of protein. For example, exposure to UV light can cause a skin cell to produce more melanin, resulting in darker skin (a tan). • If injury occurs, the gene regulation might allow overproduction of certain proteins that speed up healing. http://www.schremppstudio.com/cutfinger.html • However, sometimes things go wrong with gene regulation: – Unintended overproduction of protein (example: can cause a cell to have uncontrolled cell division leading to tumors which may lead to cancer) – Underproduction or no production of protein (example: insulin – diabetes) – Production of protein at the wrong time – these things are usually caused by DNA mutations Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes • Example – lac operon An operon is a segment of DNA that contains a promoter, operator, and genes. http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/lacoperon.html