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Regulation of eukaryotic genes

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Regulation of eukaryotic genes Gene silencing Enhancers Activators Functional domains of activators – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Regulation of eukaryotic genes


1
Regulation of eukaryotic genes
  • Gene silencing
  • Enhancers
  • Activators
  • Functional domains of activators

2
Idea for another extra credit project
  • Explore DNA binding domains of proteins.
  • Go to a web site with a Chime tutorial, e.g. GAL4
    or Cro
  • Or use Kinemages
  • Write a roughly 2 page report on how a particular
    protein recognizes a DNA sequence

3
States of eukaryotic genes
  • Inactive
  • Closed chromatin
  • Open chromatin, but repressors or lack of
    activators keep frequency of initiation low.
  • Open chromatin, transcription has initiated, but
    polymerases will not elongate.
  • Active
  • Open chromatin, basal transcription requires
    TATA Inr
  • Open chromatin, activated transcription requires
    enhancer or upstream activator sequences

4
Silent and open chromatin
5
Transcription initiation and pausing
6
Basal and activated transcription
7
Silencing Mechanism
8
Silencer
  • Cis-acting sequences that cause a decrease in
    gene expression
  • Similar to enhancer but has an opposite effect on
    gene expression
  • Gene repression - inactive chromatin structure
    (heterochromatin)
  • Examples
  • Telomeric silencing
  • a or ? genes - silent loci of mating type
    switching in yeast

9
Silencer binding proteins
  • Silencer binding protein serve as anchors for
    expansion of repressed chromatin
  • Rap1 protein binds to silencer elements
  • SIR proteins (Silent Information Regulators)
  • Nucleates assembly of multi-protein complex
  • hypoacetylated N-terminal tails of histones H3
    and H4
  • methylated N-terminal tail of H3 (Lys 9)
  • Experiments Condensed chromatin
  • Resistant to DNaseI digestion
  • Delete silencer - genes are derepressed

10
Gene Silencing
11
Silencing Mechanism
12
Enhancers
  • Cis-acting sequences that cause an increase in
    expression of a gene
  • Act independently of position and orientation
    with respect to the gene.
  • Can act to
  • Increase the rate of initiation at a promoter
  • Increase the fraction of cells in which a
    promoter is active

13
SV40 Control region
  • Origin of replication
  • Promoter and upstream activator sequences for
    early transcription
  • Promoter for late transcription
  • Enhancer

14
SV40 map
15
Many regulatory DNA sequences in SV40 control
region
16
Stimulation of transcription by enhancer is
independent of orientation and position
SV40
Early
Late
T-Ag
pos
T-Ag
wt
Enhancer
orien
T-Ag
Enh-
T-Ag -
17
Enhancers also regulate cellular genes
18
Enhancer contains multiple binding sites for
transcriptional activators
SV40
Early
Late
Enhancer
T-Ag
high level
A
C
B
wt
low level
C
B
deletion
high level
revertant
C
B
C
An enhanson
19
Enhancers can occur in a variety of positions
with respect to genes
Transcription unit
P
Enhancer
Enhancer
Upstream
Adjacent
Downstream
Internal
Distal
20
Activator proteins
21
Modular nature of activator proteins
  • DNA binding domain recognition and binding to
    specific DNA sequences
  • Multimerization domain allows formation of homo-
    or hetero-multimers
  • Activation domain
  • Needed for increase in expression of responding
    gene
  • Targets are still under investigation
  • General transcription factors
  • Histone modifying enzymes
  • Nucleosome remodeling complexes, etc

22
Modular structure of GAL4
148
1
98
196
768
881
N
C
Activation
Activation
DNA binding
GAL80 binding
Dimerization
23
Induction by galactose exposes an activation
surface
  • In the presence of galactose, GAL4 activates
    several genes whose products are required for
    galactose metabolism.
  • GAL4 binds to a DNA sequence called UASG.
  • In the absence of galactose, GAL80 blocks GAL4
    activation.
  • Binding of the sugar causes GAL80 to move.
  • This exposes the activation domain of GAL4.

24
Induction of GAL4
25
Domain swap experiments show the domains are
interchangeable
  • Fuse an DNA-binding domain (DBD) from one
    transcription factor to the activation domain
    (AD) of a different one.
  • DBD from LexA (E. coli)
  • AD from GAL4 (yeast)
  • Now a target gene can be placed under control of
    the DNA binding site for the first factor
  • GAL1 gene with oLex (LexA binding sites) can be
    activated by the fusion protein.
  • Basis for 2-hybrid screen for any interacting
    proteins

26
Domain swap experiments Diagram 1
27
Domain swap experiments Diagram 2
28
Two Hybrid Screens (Interaction Cloning), part 1
29
Two Hybrid Screens (Interaction Cloning), part 2
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