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The Eukaryotic Genome and Its Expression

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Title: The Eukaryotic Genome and Its Expression


1
The Eukaryotic Genome and Its Expression
2
14 The Eukaryotic Genome and Its Expression
  • 14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
    Eukaryotic Genome?
  • 14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
    Genes?
  • 14.3 How Are Eukaryotic Gene Transcripts
    Processed?
  • 14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
    Regulated?
  • 14.5 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Expression Regulated
    After Transcription?
  • 14.6 How Is Gene Expression Controlled During and
    After Translation?

3
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Key differences between eukaryotic and
    prokaryotic genomes
  • Eukaryotic genomes are larger.
  • Eukaryotic genomes have more regulatory
    sequences.
  • Much of eukaryotic DNA is noncoding.

4
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Eukaryotes have multiple chromosomes.
  • In eukaryotes, translation and transcription are
    physically separated which allows many points of
    regulation before translation begins.

5
Figure 14.1 Eukaryotic mRNA is Transcribed in the
Nucleus but Translated in the Cytoplasm
6
Table 14.1
7
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Eukaryote model organisms
  • Yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • Nematode (roundworm), Caenorhabditis elegans
  • Fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster
  • Thale cress, Arabidopsis thaliana

8
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • The yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) has 16
    chromosomes haploid content of 12 million base
    pairs (bp).
  • Compartmentalization into organelles requires
    more genes than prokaryotes have.

9
Table 14.2
10
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Some eukaryotic genes that have no homologs in
    prokaryotes
  • Genes encoding histones
  • Genes encoding cyclin-dependent kinases that
    control cell division
  • Genes encoding proteins involved in processing of
    mRNA

11
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • The soil nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans, is
    only 1 mm long.
  • A model organism to study development the body
    is transparent, an adult has about 1,000 cells
  • The genome is eight times larger than yeasts.

12
Table 14.3
13
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Drosophila melanogaster has been used extensively
    in genetic studies.
  • Genome is larger than C. elegans, but has fewer
    genes
  • The genome codes for more proteins than it has
    genes.

14
Figure 14.2 Functions of the Eukaryotic Genome
15
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Arabidopsis thaliana is in the mustard family.
  • Has some genes that have homologs in C. elegans
    and Drosophila
  • Also has genes that distinguish it as a plant,
    such as genes for photosynthesis.

16
Table 14.4
17
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Rice (Oryza sativa) genome has also been
    sequencedtwo subspecies
  • Has many genes similar to Arabidopsis.

18
Table 14.5
19
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Eukaryote genomes have two types of highly
    repetitive sequences that do not code for
    proteins
  • Minisatellites 1040 bp, repeated several
    thousand times. Number of copies varies among
    individualsprovides molecular markers.
  • Microsatellites 13 bp, 15100 copies

20
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Moderately repetitive sequences (genes) code for
    tRNA and rRNA
  • These molecules are needed in large quantities
    the genome has multiple copies of the sequence.

21
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Mammals Four different rRNAs
  • 16S, 5.8S, 28S are transcribed as a single
    precursor molecule. Humans have 280 copies of the
    sequence on five different chromosomes
  • and 5S.
  • (S Svedberg unit)

22
Figure 14.3 A Moderately Repetitive Sequence
Codes for rRNA
23
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Other moderately repetitive sequences can move
    from place to place in the genometransposons.
  • Transposons make up 40 percent of human genome,
    only 310 percent in other sequenced eukaryotes.

24
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Four types of transposons
  • SINEs
  • LINEs
  • Retrotransposons
  • DNA transposons

25
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • SINEs (short interspersed elements)500 bp 15
    percent of human DNA. One, Alu, is present in a
    million copies
  • LINEs (long interspersed elements)7,000 bp
    about 17 percent of human DNA some code for
    proteins

26
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • SINEs and LINEs make an RNA copy of themselves
    that is a template for new DNA inserted somewhere
    elsecopy and paste mechanism.

27
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Retrotransposons about 8 percent of human
    genome also make an RNA copy of themselves.
  • DNA transposons move to a new place in the genome
    without replicating.

28
Figure 14.4 DNA Transposons and Transposition
29
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • The function of the transposons is unclear.
  • They may be cellular parasites.
  • If a transposon is inserted into a coding region,
    a mutation results. If its in a somatic cell,
    cancer can result.
  • Transposons can carry genes to new
    locationsadding to genetic variation.

30
14.1 What Are the Characteristics of the
Eukaryotic Genome?
  • Transposons may have played a role in
    endosymbiosis
  • Genes from the once-independent prokaryotes may
    have moved to the nucleus by DNA transposons.

31
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • Gene characteristics not found in prokaryotes
  • Eukaryote genes contain noncoding internal
    sequences.
  • Form gene familiesgroups of structurally and
    functionally related genes

32
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • Eukaryote genes have a promoter to which RNA
    polymerase binds and a terminator sequence to
    signal end of transcription.
  • Terminator sequence comes after the stop codon.
  • Stop codon is transcribed into mRNA and signals
    the end of translation at the ribosome.

33
Figure 14.5 Transcription of a Eukaryotic Gene
(Part 1)
34
Figure 14.5 Transcription of a Eukaryotic Gene
(Part 2)
35
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • Protein-coding genes have noncoding
    sequencesintrons.
  • The coding sequences are extrons.
  • Transcripts of introns appear in the pre-mRNA,
    they are removed from the final mRNA.

36
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • Nucleic acid hybridization reveals introns.
  • Target DNA is denatured then incubated with a
    probea nucleic acid strand from another source.
  • If the probe has a complementary sequence, base
    pairing forms a hybrid.

37
Figure 14.6 Nucleic Acid Hybridization
38
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • If researchers used mature mRNA as the probe, the
    DNA-RNA hybrid would have loops where base
    pairing did not occurthe introns.
  • If pre-mRNA was used, resulted in complete
    hybridization

39
Figure 14.7 Nucleic Acid Hybridization Revealed
the Existence of Introns (Part 1)
40
Figure 14.7 Nucleic Acid Hybridization Revealed
the Existence of Introns (Part 2)
41
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • Introns interrupt, but do not scramble, the DNA
    sequence that encodes a polypeptide.
  • Sometimes, the separated exons code for different
    domains (functional regions) of the protein.

42
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • About half of the eukaryote genes are present in
    multiple copies.
  • Different mutations can occur in copies, giving
    rise to gene families.
  • Family that encodes for immunoglobulins have
    hundreds of members.

43
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • As long as one member of a gene family retains
    the original sequence, copies can mutate without
    losing original function.
  • This is important in evolution.

44
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • The globin gene family arose from a common
    ancestor gene.
  • In humans
  • Alpha-globin (a-globin)three functional genes
  • Beta-globin (ß-globin)five functional genes
  • Hemoglobin is a tetramer of two a units and two
    ß units.

45
Figure 14.8 The Globin Gene Family
46
Figure 3.9 Quaternary Structure of a Protein
47
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • During development, different globin genes are
    expressed at different times differential gene
    expression.
  • ?-globin is in hemoglobin of human fetusit binds
    oxygen more tightly than adult hemoglobin.

48
Figure 14.9 Differential Expression in the Globin
Gene Family
49
14.2 What Are the Characteristics of Eukaryotic
Genes?
  • Some gene families have pseudogenesresult from a
    mutation that results in loss of function.
  • Pseudogenes may lack a promoter, or recognition
    sites for removal of introns.
  • Designated by ? (psi)

50
14.3 How Are Eukaryotic Gene Transcripts
Processed?
  • In the nucleus, pre-mRNA is modified at both
    ends
  • G-cap added at the 5' end (modified guanosine
    triphosphate)facilitates binding to ribosome.
  • Protects it from being digested by ribonucleases.

51
14.3 How Are Eukaryotic Gene Transcripts
Processed?
  • Poly A tail added at 3' end.
  • AAUAAA sequence after last codon is a signal for
    an enzyme to cut the pre-mRNA then another
    enzyme adds 100 to 300 adeninesthe tail.
  • May assist in export from nucleus important for
    stability of mRNA.

52
Figure 14.10 Processing the Ends of Eukaryotic
Pre-mRNA (Part 1)
53
Figure 14.10 Processing the Ends of Eukaryotic
Pre-mRNA (Part 2)
54
14.3 How Are Eukaryotic Gene Transcripts
Processed?
  • RNA splicing removes introns and splices exons
    together.
  • Pre-mRNA is bound by small nuclear
    ribonucleoprotein particles (snRNPs).
  • Consensus sequences are short sequences between
    exons and introns. snRNP binds here, and also
    near the 3' end of the intron.

55
14.3 How Are Eukaryotic Gene Transcripts
Processed?
  • With energy from ATP, proteins are added to form
    an RNA-protein complex, the spliceosome.
  • The complex cuts pre-mRNA, releases introns, and
    splices exons together.

56
Figure 14.11 The Spliceosome An RNA Splicing
Machine
57
14.3 How Are Eukaryotic Gene Transcripts
Processed?
  • In the disease beta thalassemia, a mutation
    occurs at the consensus sequence in the ß-globin
    genethe pre-mRNA can not be spliced correctly.
  • Non-functional ß-globin mRNA is produced.

58
14.3 How Are Eukaryotic Gene Transcripts
Processed?
  • Mature mRNA leaves the nucleus through nuclear
    pores.
  • TAP protein binds to the 5' end, TAP binds to
    other proteins that are recognized by receptors
    at the nuclear pore.

59
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Expression of genes must be precisely regulated
    during development.
  • Gene expression can be regulated at several
    points in the transcription and translation
    processes.

60
Figure 14.12 Potential Points for the Regulation
of Gene Expression (Part 1)
61
Figure 14.12 Potential Points for the Regulation
of Gene Expression (Part 2)
62
Figure 14.12 Potential Points for the Regulation
of Gene Expression (Part 3)
63
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Transcriptional regulation and posttranscriptional
    regulation can be determined by examining mRNA
    sequences made in different cell types.

64
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Eukaryote genes are not organized into operons.
  • Regulation of several genes at once requires
    common control elements.
  • Eukaryotes have three RNA polymerases
  • I codes for rRNA III codes for tRNA
  • II transcribes protein-coding genes

65
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Most eukaryotic genes have sequences that
    regulate rate of transcription.
  • Initiation of transcription involves many
    proteins (in contrast to prokaryotes in which RNA
    polymerase directly recognized the promoter).

66
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • In prokaryotes, promoter has two sequences
  • The recognition sequence is recognized by RNA
    polymerase.
  • The TATA box, where DNA begins to denature.

67
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • In eukaryotes, transcription factors (regulatory
    proteins) must assemble on the chromosome before
    RNA polymerase can bind to the promoter.
  • TFIID binds to the TATA box then other
    transcription factors bind, forming a
    transcription complex.

68
Figure 14.13 The Initiation of Transcription in
Eukaryotes (Part 1)
69
Figure 14.13 The Initiation of Transcription in
Eukaryotes (Part 2)
70
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Some sequences are common to promoters of many
    genes recognized by transcription factors in all
    cells.
  • Some sequences are specific to a few genes and
    are recognized by transcription factors found
    only in certain tissues. These play an important
    role in differentiation.

71
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Regulator sequences are located upstream of the
    promoter.
  • Regulator proteins bind to these sequences.
    Resulting complex binds to the transcription
    complex to activate transcription.

72
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Enhancer sequences are farther awayup to 20,000
    bp.
  • Activator proteins bind to enhancer sequences,
    which stimulates transcription complex. Mechanism
    not known perhaps by DNA bending.

73
Figure 14.14 Transcription Factors, Regulators,
and Activators (Part 1)
74
Figure 14.14 Transcription Factors, Regulators,
and Activators (Part 2)
75
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Negative regulatory sequences or silencer
    sequences turn off transcription by binding
    repressor proteins.

76
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • DNA-binding proteins have four structural themes
    or motifs
  • Helix-turn-helix
  • Zinc finger
  • Leucine zipper
  • Helix-loop-helix

77
Figure 14.15 ProteinDNA Interactions (Part 1)
78
Figure 14.15 ProteinDNA Interactions (Part 2)
79
Figure 14.15 ProteinDNA Interactions (Part 3)
80
Figure 14.15 ProteinDNA Interactions (Part 4)
81
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Bases in DNA can form hydrogen bonds with
    proteins, especially in major and minor grooves.
  • Many repressor proteins have helix-turn-helix
    configurationbinding of repressor prevents other
    proteins from binding and initiating
    transcription.

82
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Regulation of genes that are far apart or on
    different chromosomesgenes must have same
    regulator sequences.
  • Example Some plant genes have a regulatory
    sequence called stress response element (SRE).
  • Genes with this sequence encode for proteins
    needed to cope with drought.

83
Figure 14.16 Coordinating Gene Expression (Part 1)
84
Figure 14.16 Coordinating Gene Expression (Part 2)
85
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Transcription can also be regulated by changes in
    chromatin and chromosomes.

86
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Chromatin remodeling
  • DNA is wound around histones to form nucleosomes,
    which block initiation and elongation.
  • One remodeling protein disaggregates the
    nucleosome to allow initiation.
  • The second remodeling protein binds to the
    nucleosomes to allow elongation to proceed.

87
Figure 14.17 Local Remodeling of Chromatin for
Transcription (Part 1)
88
Figure 14.17 Local Remodeling of Chromatin for
Transcription (Part 2)
89
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Histone proteins have tails with positively
    charged amino acidsenzymes add acetyl groups

90
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • This reduces positive charges, and decreases
    affinity of histones for negatively charged DNA.
  • Allows chromatin remodeling

91
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Gene activation requires histone acetyl
    transferases to add acetyl groups.
  • Gene repression requires histone deacetylases to
    remove the acetyl groups.

92
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • The histone codehistone modifications affect
    gene activation and repression.
  • Example Methylation of histones is associated
    with gene inactivation.
  • Whether a gene becomes activated by chromatin
    remodeling may be determined by histone
    modification.

93
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Two types of chromatin
  • Euchromatin contains DNA that is transcribed into
    mRNA.
  • Heterochromatin genes it contains are usually
    not transcribed.

94
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Example of heterochromatin inactive X chromosome
    in mammals.
  • Each female has two copies of genes on the X
    chromosome.
  • Y chromosome gradually lost most of the genes it
    once shared with its X homolog.
  • Female has potential to produce twice as much
    protein from the X-linked genes.

95
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • One X chromosome remains inactive in female
    cells.
  • Can be seen under a light microscope as a clump
    of heterochromatincalled a Barr body
  • Thus, dosage of expressed X chromosome is the
    same in males and females.

96
Figure 14.18 A Barr Body in the Nucleus of a
Female Cell
97
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Methylation of cystosines contributes to
    condensation and inactivation of the DNA.
  • One gene is active Xist (X inactivation-specific
    transcript). RNA that is transcribed binds to the
    chromosome and inactivates itinterference RNA.

98
Figure 14.19 A Model for X Chromosome Inactivation
99
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • An anti-Xist gene, Tsix, codes for RNA that binds
    to the Xist site on the active X chromosome.

100
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Transcription can be increased by making more
    copies of a genegene amplification.
  • Example The genes that code for three of the
    rRNAs in humans are linked and there are several
    hundred copies in the genome.

101
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • Fish and frog eggs have up to a trillion
    ribosomes.
  • Cells selectively amplify the rRNA gene clusters
    to more than a million copies.
  • Transcribed at maximum rate, these genes produce
    the ribosomes for a mature egg in a few days.

102
Figure 14.20 Transcription from Multiple Genes
for rRNA
103
14.4 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Transcription
Regulated?
  • In some cancers, a cancer-causing oncogene is
    amplified.
  • The mechanism of amplification is not well
    understood.

104
14.5 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Expression Regulated
After Transcription?
  • Alternative splicing some exons are selectively
    deleted
  • Different proteins can be generated from the same
    gene.
  • Example The pre-mRNA for tropomyosin is spliced
    five different ways to produce five different
    forms of tropomyosin.

105
Figure 14.21 Alternative Splicing Results in
Different Mature mRNAs and Proteins
106
14.5 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Expression Regulated
After Transcription?
  • In humans, there are many more mRNAs than
    genesmostly from alternative splicing.

107
14.5 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Expression Regulated
After Transcription?
  • RNA has no repair mechanisms.
  • mRNA can be catabolyzed by ribonucleases in the
    cytoplasm and lysosomes.
  • mRNAs have different stabilitiesa mechanism for
    posttranscriptional regulation.

108
14.5 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Expression Regulated
After Transcription?
  • Specific AU sequences on mRNA can mark them for
    breakdown by a ribonuclease complex called an
    exosome.
  • Signaling molecules such as growth factor are
    only synthesized when needed and break down
    rapidly. Their mRNAs have an AU sequence and are
    unstable.

109
14.5 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Expression Regulated
After Transcription?
  • Micro RNAs (about 20 bases long) bind to mRNA
    before it reaches a ribosome.
  • Causes the mRNA to break down, or inhibits
    translation.

110
14.5 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Expression Regulated
After Transcription?
  • The micro RNAs start as a 70 base-pair double
    strand.
  • The protein complex called dicer cuts the RNA
    strand.
  • Small RNAs are under development as drugs to
    block gene expression of certain genes in human
    diseases.

111
Figure 14.22 mRNA Inhibition by Small RNAs
112
14.5 How Is Eukaryotic Gene Expression Regulated
After Transcription?
  • RNA editing change in sequence after
    transcription and splicing
  • Insertion of nucleotidesstretches of uracil are
    added
  • Alteration of nucleotidesan enzyme catalyzes the
    deamination of cytosine to from uracil.

113
Figure 14.23 RNA Editing
114
14.6 How Is Gene Expression Controlled During and
After Translation?
  • Translation can be modified by the G cap.
  • If the cap is an unmodified GTP, the mRNA is not
    translated.
  • Example The stored mRNA in egg cells of tobacco
    hornworm moth After the egg is fertilized, the
    cap is modified, and translation proceeds.

115
14.6 How Is Gene Expression Controlled During and
After Translation?
  • Cellular conditions can control translation.
  • Example free iron (Fe2) in cells is bound by
    ferritin
  • When Fe2 is low, a repressor binds to ferritin
    mRNA and prevents translation.
  • As Fe2 levels rise, Fe2 binds to the repressor,
    which detaches from the mRNA.

116
14.6 How Is Gene Expression Controlled During and
After Translation?
  • Translational control can keep a balance in the
    amount of subunits of proteins.
  • Example Hemoglobin has four globin and four heme
    units.
  • If there are more heme than globin units, heme
    increases rate of translation of globin by
    removing a block to initiation of translation at
    ribosome.

117
14.6 How Is Gene Expression Controlled During and
After Translation?
  • Most proteins are modified after translation.
  • A protein can be regulated by controlling its
    lifetime in the cell.
  • In many cases, an enzyme attaches a protein
    called ubiquitin to a lysine in a protein
    targeted for breakdown.

118
14.6 How Is Gene Expression Controlled During and
After Translation?
  • Other ubiquitin chains attach to the first one,
    forming a polyubiquitin complex.
  • The whole complex then binds to a proteasome.
  • Ubiquitin is cut off for recycling the protein
    passes by three proteases that digest it.

119
Figure 14.24 A Proteasome Breaks Down Proteins
120
14.6 How Is Gene Expression Controlled During and
After Translation?
  • Concentrations of many proteins are determined by
    their degradation in proteasomes.
  • Cyclins are degraded at the correct time in the
    cell cycle.
  • Transcriptional regulators are broken down after
    use to prevent gene to be always on.

121
14.6 How Is Gene Expression Controlled During and
After Translation?
  • Some viruses can take advantage of this system.
  • Human papillomavirus (causes cervical cancer)
    marks protein p53 for degradation by proteasomes.
    p53 normally inhibits cell division.
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