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Gene Expression • Expression of different set of genes in each cell type Steps For Regulating Gene Expression • Transcriptional control is most common Components For Regulating Transcription Gene regulatory protein • Short DNA segments of defined sequence • Gene regulatory proteins that bind to a specific sequence Specific Binding of Gene Regulatory Proteins • Structural motifs recognize specific DNA sequences • Amino acids interact with outside of bases Trp Operon • Multiple genes transcribed as one mRNA molecule • Transcribed from a single promoter Regulation Of Tryptophan Operon • On only when tryptophan is absent • Negative regulation by tryptophan repressor • Repressor is active only when tryptophan is bound to it Regulation Of Lac Operon • On only when lactose is present and glucose is absent • Positive regulation by CAP in response to glucose • Negative regulation by lac repressor in response to lactose Transcriptional Control Region Of Eucaryotic Gene • Multiple binding sites for gene regulatory proteins • Regulatory sequences known as enhancers can be thousands of nucleotides from promoter Eucaryotic Gene Activator Proteins General function: promote assembly of RNA polymerase II and general transcription factors at the promoter to allow transcription to begin Can facilitate: • Recruitment of RNA polymerase II holoenzyme complex • Assembly of general transcription factors • Alterations in chromatin structure Recruitment Of RNA Polymerase II Holoenzyme • Gene activators attract holoenzyme complex to promoter Assembly Of General Transcription Factors • Gene activators promote assembly of some general transcription factors Alterations In Chromatin Structure • Recruitment of histone modifying proteins, histone chaperones, and chromatin remodeling complexes • Can make chromatin more accessible to transcription machinery Histone Code • Proteins recognize specific patterns of histone modification • Acetylation promotes activation • Methylation: some residues promote activation some residues promote repression An example of writing and reading the histone code Gene Repressor Proteins TFs in Human Genome 1962 estimated (8% of genome) Gene regulatory proteins, general transcription factors, coactivators, corepressors, chromatin and histone modifiers Common structural classes of gene regulatory proteins Zinc finger (762) Homeobox (199) Basic helix-loop-helix (117) Beta-scaffold (87) Basic-leucine zipper (72) Nuclear hormone receptor (49) Forkhead (40) Ets (31) Examples of TF Classes Zinc finger Basic helix-loop-helix • Classes have common motif for DNA binding • Differences within a class determine specificity Regulating Activity Of Gene Regulatory Proteins • Modulates pattern of gene expression in response to cell’s environment DNA Methylation • Methylation of C at certain CG • Pattern maintained by maintenance methyl transferases Effect Of DNA Methylation • Reinforce inactivation of genes that are not expressed Genomic Imprinting • Expression of few genes occurs only from paternal or maternal allele • Methylation pattern established in germ cells and maintained in offspring CG Islands • CG dinucleotides deficient, preferentially found at promoters of many genes • Many CG lost during vertebrate evolution due to accidental deamination, inefficient repair of methylated CG found at inactive DNA in germ cells • Promoters of active (often housekeeping) genes in germ cells not methylated, deamination repaired accurately, preserved as CG islands Epigenetic Mechanisms • Epigenetic inheritance- daughter cells maintain memory of gene expression pattern of parent cells • Histone modifications, DNA methylation, and positive feedback loops contribute to epigenetic inheritance Epigenetic Mechanisms Histone reader-writers that recognize same histone modification they catalyze Gene regulatory proteins that activate their own expression Coordinating Gene Expression • Decisive event within combinatorial control • Single gene regulatory protein can be decisive, can control set Generate Specialized Cell Types Myogenic helix-loop-helix proteins (MyoD, etc.) and skeletal muscle • Trigger becoming muscle cell • Muscle-specific expression • Coordinately activate muscle genes • Specific for muscle genes Transcription Attenuation Attenuation of trp operon: • Coupled to translation • Depends upon levels of tryptophan Alternative Splicing • Alternative choices for certain splice sites in primary RNA transcript Regulation Of Alternative Splicing • Splicing decision controlled by regulatory protein that binds primary RNA transcript Regulation Of RNA Cleavage In Antibody Genes • First cleavage site encountered is suboptimal and skipped in unstimulated cells • Antigen stimulation increases CstF levels to promote cleavage at first site RNA Editing A to I editing ADAR recognizes RNA structure C to U editing ApoB example HIV Genome • Several products through alternative splicing • Some have introns that normally cannot be exported Regulation Of Nuclear Export Of HIV RNA • Rev directs export of viral RNAs that contain introns • Rev levels sufficient to promote export late in infection Gene Silencing by microRNAs • miRNAs are dsRNAs processed from hairpin precursors • miRNA complex binds 3’ UTR of mRNA targets • Translation repression / mRNA degradation Translational Repressors • Bind specific sequences in 5’ or 3’ UTR of RNA Phosphorylation Of eIF-2 • Activation of specific protein kinases • Reduction of overall protein synthesis by inhibiting eIF-2B-mediated exchange of GDP→GTP on eIF-2 Regulation Of Translation In Reticulocytes • Globin translation coordinated with Heme levels • HRI phosphorylates eIF-2 • HRI active in absence of heme, inactive in presence of heme Mechanisms Of mRNA Decay • Deadenylation-dependent- gradual polyA shortening followed by rapid degradation • Deadenylation-independent- endonucleolytic removal of polyA Iron-Mediated PostTranscriptional Regulation Aconitase: • Protein that binds to ferritin & transferrin receptor mRNAs • Disassociates from RNA when bound to iron • Blocks translation when bound to 5’ UTR of ferritin mRNA • Stabilizes mRNA when bound to 3’ UTR of transferrin receptor