Regulation of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Gene Expression - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Regulation of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Gene Expression

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Title: Regulation of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Gene Expression


1
Regulation of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Gene
Expression
2
  • A bacterium can tune its metabolism to the
    changing environment and food sources
  • This metabolic control occurs on two levels
  • Adjusting activity of metabolic enzymes
  • Regulating genes that encode metabolic enzymes

3
LE 18-20
Regulation of enzyme production
Regulation of enzyme activity
Precursor
Feedback inhibition
Enzyme 1
Gene 1
Enzyme 2
Gene 2
Regulation of gene expression
Gene 3
Enzyme 3
Enzyme 4
Gene 4
Gene 5
Enzyme 5
Tryptophan
4
Operons The Basic Concept
  • In bacteria, genes are often clustered into
    operons, composed of
  • An operator, an on-off switch
  • A promoter
  • Genes for metabolic enzymes

5
LE 18-21a
trp operon
Promoter
Promoter
Genes of operon
DNA
trpE
trpC
trpB
trpA
trpR
trpD
Operator
Stop codon
RNA polymerase
Regulatory gene
Start codon
3
mRNA 5
mRNA
5
D
B
E
C
A
Protein
Inactive repressor
Polypeptides that make up enzymes for tryptophan
synthesis
Tryptophan absent, repressor inactive, operon on
6
LE 18-21b_1
DNA
mRNA
Protein
Active repressor
Tryptophan (corepressor)
Tryptophan present, repressor active, operon off
7
LE 18-21b_2
DNA
No RNA made
mRNA
Protein
Active repressor
Tryptophan (corepressor)
Tryptophan present, repressor active, operon off
8
Two Types of Negative Gene Regulation
  • A repressible operon
  • Is usually on
  • binding of a repressor to the operator shuts off
    transcription
  • The trp operon is a repressible operon
  • An inducible operon
  • Is one that is usually off
  • a molecule called an inducer inactivates the
    repressor and turns on transcription
  • the lac operon is an inducible operon, which
    contains genes coding for enzymes in hydrolysis
    and metabolism of lactose

9
LE 18-22a
Promoter
Regulatory gene
Operator
lacl
lacZ
DNA
No RNA made
3
mRNA
RNA polymerase
5
Active repressor
Protein
Lactose absent, repressor active, operon off
10
LE 18-22b
lac operon
DNA
lacl
lacZ
lacY
lacA
RNA polymerase
3
mRNA
mRNA 5
5
Permease
Transacetylase
?-Galactosidase
Protein
Inactive repressor
Allolactose (inducer)
Lactose present, repressor inactive, operon on
11
  • Inducible enzymes usually function in catabolic
    (breakdown) pathways
  • Explain to a neighbor why this makes sense.
  • Repressible enzymes usually function in anabolic
    (synthesis) pathways
  • Explain to a neighbor why this makes sense.
  • Regulation of the trp and lac operons involves
    negative control of genes because operons are
    switched off by the active form of the repressor

12
Positive Gene Regulation
  • Some operons are also subject to positive control
    through a stimulatory activator protein, such as
    catabolite activator protein (CAP)
  • When glucose (a preferred food source of E. coli
    ) is scarce, the lac operon is activated by the
    binding of CAP
  • When glucose levels increase, CAP detaches from
    the lac operon, turning it off

13
LE 18-23a
Promoter
DNA
lacl
lacZ
RNA polymerase can bind and transcribe
Operator
CAP-binding site
Active CAP
cAMP
Inactive lac repressor
Inactive CAP
Lactose present, glucose scarce (cAMP level
high) abundant lac mRNA synthesized
14
LE 18-23b
Promoter
DNA
lacl
lacZ
CAP-binding site
Operator
RNA polymerase cant bind
Inactive CAP
Inactive lac repressor
Lactose present, glucose present (cAMP level
low) little lac mRNA synthesized
15
Summarize
  • Explain to a neighbor why bacteria regulate gene
    expression
  • Give an example of how bacteria regulate gene
    expression

16
Eukaryotic Gene Regulation
17
  • Every cell in a multi-cellular eukaryote does not
    express all its genes, all the time (usually only
    3-5)
  • Long-term control of gene expression in tissue
    differentiation
  • How to prevent expression?
  • Regulation at transcription
  • Regulation after transcription

18
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19
Chromatin Regulation
  • Chromatin remodeling allows transcription
  • Chromatin DNA proteins
  • Chromatin coiled around histones nucleosomes
  • Allows DNA to be packed into nucleus, but also
    physically regulates expression by making regions
    available or not

20
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21
  • Chromatin regulation can be small-scale (gene) or
    large scale (chromosome)
  • Non-expressed heterochromatin (condensed)
  • Expressed euchromatin (relaxed)

22
Changes to Chromatin (DNA)
  • Methylation
  • Methylating (adding methyl groups) to DNA bases,
    keeping them tight and closed inaccessible
    to transcription.
  • Histone Acetylation
  • Acetylating histones (adding acetyl groups)
    promotes loose chromatin and permits transcription

23
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24
Transcription Regulation
  • What we know from prokaryotes
  • Several related genes can be transcribed together
    (ie. lac operon)
  • Need RNA Polymerase to recognize a promoter
    region
  • Why eukaryotes are different
  • Genes are nearly always transcribed individually
  • 3 RNA Polymerases occur, requiring multiple
    proteins to initiate transcription

25
Transcription Regulation Cont
  • Typical prokaryotic promoter
  • recognition sequence TATA box -gt
  • RNA Polymerase -gt transcription
  • Typical eukaryotic promoter
  • recognition sequence TATA box transcription
    factors -gt RNA Polymerase -gt transcription

26
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27
  • RNA polymerase interacts w/promoter, regulator
    sequences, enhancer sequences to begin
    transcription
  • Regulator proteins bind to regulator sequences to
    activate transcription
  • Found prior to promoter
  • Enhancer sequences bind activator proteins
  • Typically far from the gene
  • Silencer sequences stop transcription if they
    bind with repressor proteins

28
Now, Can You
  • Explain why gene expression control is necessary
    in a eukaryotic cell?
  • Describe how expression is regulated in before
    during transcription?
  • Tell me what differentiation is? Euchromatin? A
    silencer sequence?
  • Explain how gene expression regulation is
    different in eukaryotes/prokaryotes?

29
Post-Transcription Regulation
  • Have mRNA variation
  • Alternative splicing shuffling exons
  • Allows various proteins to be produced in
    different tissues from the same gene
  • Change the lifespan of mRNA
  • Produce micro RNA that will damage mRNA,
    preventing translation
  • Edit RNA change the polypeptide produced
  • Insert or alter the genetic code

30
Translation Regulation
  • mRNA present in cytosol does not necessarily get
    translated into proteins
  • Control the rate of translation to regulate gene
    expression
  • How?
  • Modify the 5 cap
  • Feedback regulation (build up of products less
    translation)

31
Translation Regulation Cont
  • Modify the lifespan of proteins
  • Attach ubiquitin target for breakdown via
    proteasome (woodchipper)

32
So
  • What are the ways that a cell can regulate gene
    expression AFTER transcription?
  • How can the process of RNA splicing allow one
    pre-mRNA to produce 5 different proteins in 5
    different tissues?
  • And

33
  • Can you accurately fill in this table?
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