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Gene Expression

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Title: Gene Expression


1
Gene Expression
How long you will live
Fears
Weight
  • What determines the mix of proteins in a cell at
    any given time?

How you will respond to stress
2
Can some acquired traits be passed on? If so how?
3
How could acquired traits be passed on and can
they be changed during your life?
  • Basically, you not only pass on your genes to the
    next generation, you pass on some of the signals
    attached to the DNA that control the reading of
    the genes, which can change the expression of a
    trait
  • Some of these signals can be changed throughout
    life
  • Some of these signals are reset in the sperm and
    egg

4
Epigenetics Switching genes on and off
5
Why do cells need to control gene expression?
  • Different stages of development
  • Differentiation
  • Meet demands of the organ
  • Respond to changing environment
  • Respond to outside signals
  • Make sure you are not wasting energy making
    things you dont need

6
Eukaryotic Gene Expression
  • 6 x 109 base pairs 35,000 genes
  • 5-20 of genes expressed/cell
  • 1000-7000 genes transcribed/cell
  • Promoter marks the beginning of each gene, but
    how does cell know what genes to transcribe?
  • What else controls how much protein and which
    proteins are created in a cell and what the final
    protein looks like?

7
You are what you eat?!
Or even what your mother ate
8
Why Genes Arent DestinyExcepts
  • conditions in the womb could affect your health
    not only when you were a fetus but well into
    adulthood.
  • if a pregnant woman ate poorly, her child would
    be at a significantly higher than average risk
    for cardiovascular disease as an adult.
  • kids who went from normal eating to gluttony in
    a single season produced sons and grandsons who
    lived shorter lives. A single winter of
    overeating as a youngster could initiate a
    biological chain of events that would lead ones
    grandchildren to die decades earlier than their
    peers did.

9
Excepts Continued
  • exposed mice with genetic memory problems to an
    environment rich with toys, exercise, and extra
    attention. These mice showed significant
    improvement in long term potentiation (key to
    memory formation). Surprisingly, their offspring
    also showed LTP improvement, even when the
    offspring got no extra attention.
  • sons of men who smoke in prepuberty will be at
    higher risk for obesity and other health
    problems
  • In 2008, the NIH would pour 190 million into
    how and when epigentic processes control genes.

10
Gene Expression Can be Controlled at Any Level of
Protein Production or Activation
11
Control of Eukaryotic Gene Expression
  • Availability of genes to RNA Polymerase and
    transcription factors
  • 1. If DNA is too compact no gene expression
  • Euchromatin normal chromatin gene expression
  • Heterochromatin more condensed no expression
  • Chromosomes extremely condensed no expression

12
Difference in Euchromatin and Heterochromatin
Dark staining areas are heterochromatin, light
are euchromatin more euchromatin more active
the cell is always heterochromatin around the
inside of the nuclear membrane
13
Inactive lymphocyte on leftActivated lymphocyte
on the right
14
Availability of DNA to RNA Polymerase Continued
  • 2. How close DNA is to the nucleosome and if it
    is attached to the nuclear matrix determines
    access of enzymes
  • 3. Acetylation of histone proteins unwinds the
    DNA so enzymes have access
  • 4. Methylation inhibits DNA expression,
    responsible for DNA imprinting (methylation
    patterns are often messed up in cancer cells)

http//learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/epigenetics
/rats/
15
Availability of DNA to RNA Polymerase Continued
16
II. Transcriptional Control
  • 1. Controlled by regulatory proteins and
    transcription factors (Make up transcription
    initiation complex)

17
Eukaryotic Genes Regulatory Elements
Movie of Transcription Initation Complex
Activators or Repressors Bind to distal control
elements
/silencer
Transcription Factors Binds to proximal control
elements AND to the promoter.
DNA Proximal Control Elements Distal
Control Elements Enhancers and
Silencers Proteins Transcription Factors
(general and specific) Activators Repressors
18
Genes of same enzymatic pathway are spread out
all over the genome so how are they all
expressed at the same time?
Each gene has its own promoter but many may have
same proximal and distal control elements so 1
type of transcription factor and activator may
control many genes (in the same enzymatic
pathways)
19
Another Way Transcription Is Controlled
  • Steroid Hormones
  • Steroids bind to a receptor and translocate into
    nucleus.
  • Steroid/receptor complex binds to DNA in upstream
    regulatory elements to switch on genes.

20
  • III. Control of RNA Processing
  • Alternative Splicing Dont know what controls
    the splicing spliceosomes bind to ends of
    introns but what identifies what are the
    introns???
  • Some genes have many alternate forms due to
    splicing

21
IV. Control of RNA Degredation
  • Untranslated trailer of mRNA controls if
    translation lasts hrs. or weeks (may be a
    binding site for ncRNAs)
  • ncRNA (non-coding RNAs)
  • a. Micro RNAs
  • Transcribed, folds, piece is cut off by a Dicer
    which also destroys the 2nd strand. Single
    strand combines with protein and then binds to
    and inactivates mRNAs with complementary
    sequences or causes their destruction
  • b. Small Interfering RNA (same as miRNA but
    from longer pieces of RNA)
  • Both mi and si RNA can recruit enzymes to form
    heterochromatin and therefore turn off
    genes

22
How miRNA works
RNAi Video
23
  • Control of Translation
  • Regulatory proteins can prevent mRNA from binding
    to the ribosome must be removed before
    translation occurs
  • Initiation Factor (helps mRNA bind to ribosome)
  • Example fertilization turns on initiation
    factor so get quick translation prevents
    translation until activate the initiation factor

24
VI. Post-Translational Modifications
  • Can prevent correct modifications or transport
  • Can be modified differently by different enzymes
    in the rough ER of different kinds of cells
    (maybe different enzymes in different RER of
    different cell types?)
  • VII. Protein Degredation (Proteosome chops up
    unneeded proteins tagged with ubiquitin) Dont
    know what controls speed of degredation

25
VIII. Gene sequences themselves may affect
expression
  • 1. Multi-Gene Families - may have multiple copies
    of the same gene (can be expressed at once or at
    different times in response to the environment)
  • Examples
  • genes to make rRNA (100-1000 repeats of these
    genes together)
  • Genes to make hemoglobin proteins multiple
    copies are slightly different produced at
    different times during development.

26
2. Transposons Jumping Genes May copy and
move or just move. May jump into a gene and
disrupt it may jump into a regulatory area and
increase or decrease production of that
protein Insertion codes for an enzyme that
cuts it out Complex has other genes
that move too Retrotransposons code for
RNA which is then copied into DNA and inserted
somewhere else in genome
27
(No Transcript)
28
Gene Sequences Controlling Expression Continued
  • 3. Satellite DNA (short sequences repeated many
    times short tandem repeats) Makes up 10-15 of
    genome (telomeres are satellite DNA)
  • Can act as transposons
  • Can be extended causing genes to malfunction
  • 4. Interspersed Repetitive DNA (25-40 of
    genome) 100-1000 b.p spread throughout most
    are transposons

29
Neurofibromatosis
30
Cause of Neurofibromatosis
Neurofibromatosis 1 (1/3000) births Mutation in
the neurofibromin gene on chromosome
17 Neurofibromin is a tumor supressor gene which
inhibits the p21 ras oncoprotein It causes neural
tumors all over the body due to uncontrolled cell
division Have also found cases where the disease
is caused by an Alu sequence jumping gene
jumps into the gene and messes it up
Alu sequence inserted in an intron of the NF1
gene The presence of the Alu sequence caused a
splicing error, which in turn caused one of the
exons to be left out of the transcribed mRNA,
thereby leading to a shift in the reading frame
and production of an abnormal protein.
Researchers have reported a growing number of
Alu-disease associations in disorders ranging
from hemophilia to breast cancer. According to
one estimate, about 0.4 of all human genetic
disorders are caused by or associated with Alu
11 of genome is Alu sequences
31
5. Gene RearrangementsExample antibodies
32
  • 6. Gene Amplification making more copies of a
    gene when needed
  • Example rRNA genes in developing embryo of
    amphibians extra copies are small circular
    pieces that are destroyed after embryonic
    development
  • Example Cancer cells in response to drugs
    (amplify drug resistance genes)
  • 7. Selective Gene Loss in developing embryo
    only in some cells in insects

33
Gene Expression and Embryonic Development
  • Cytoplasmic Determinants RNA and proteins
    unevenly distributed in the egg that signal
    development
  • Induction signals from surrounding cells that
    control development
  • Master regulatory genes
  • turn on tissue specific genes
  • to make tissue specific proteins

34
Body Plan Patterning
  • Both cytoplasmic determinants and inductive
    signals help set up positional information
  • Homeotic Genes
  • contain program for development of the body plan
  • Are highly conserved and have same sequences
    within the genes called homeoboxes.
  • Code for transcription factors and are master
    control genes

35
Homeobox Genes
Homeobox 180 nucleotide segment of homeotic
genes. Conserved in all animals part of gene
that codes for part of protein that binds to the
DNA. Hox genes found in clusters on the
chromosomes. Genes are lined up in order of what
part of the body they control the formation of.
36
Mutated Hox Genes
37
Oncogenes
  • Oncogenes cancer causing genes induced by
    viruses
  • Protooncogenes normal genes that become cancer
    causing when they are
  • Mutated
  • Amplified
  • Or move into an area with an active promoter
  • Examples growth factors, cell cycle proteins,
    tumor supressors (inactivated and usually supress
    growth), cell attachment proteins

38
Proto-oncogene Example
  • Ras gene codes for a G-Protein (activated by a
    receptor when messenger binds and sets off a
    series of chemical reactions leading to increase
    in cell division thru the activation of
    transcription factors)
  • Mutated Ras gene G protein is always on even
    when nothing is bound to receptor
  • Found in 20-25 of all human tumors

39
Tumor Supressor Genes
  • Repair damaged DNA
  • Control cell adhesion
  • Inhibit the cell cycle
  • Activate cell suicide if damage is unfixable
  • Example p53 gene (p53 mutation found in over
    50 of human tumors)
  • In response to damage it
  • Halts the cell cycle
  • Turns on DNA repair enzymes
  • Activated apoptosis if damage cannot be repaired

40
Cancer Cells vs. Normal
41
BACTERIAL GENE EXPRESSION
  • Allows bacteria to live in a changing
    environment.
  • Operons a whole gene unit all genes necessary
    for an enzymatic pathway are lined up behind a
    promoter and operator.
  • Promoter Operator Genes Term. Seq.

42
Bacterial Operons
  • Operator controls access to promoter for RNA
    polymerase
  • Operator is always on unless a protein is bound
    to it
  • Repressor binds to operator and blocks RNA
    polymerase from binding specific to the operon.

43
Repressors for Operators
  • For Anabolic Operons
  • Repressible Operon
  • Product shuts off operon by activating the
    repressor
  • For Catabolic Operons
  • Inducible Operon
  • Substrate turns on operon by deactivating the
    repressor

44
Repressor Concept
45
Tryptophan Operon An example of an operon that
codes for enzymes in an anabolic pathway
46
The lac operon an example of an operon coding
for enzymes in a catabolic pathway
47
3-D View of the Lac Repressor
48
Additional ways to activate bacterial genes
  • Proteins bind to the promoter making it easier
    for RNA Polymerase to bind
  • Example only want to make enyzmes to break down
    lactose if lactose is present and if there is low
    glucose available
  • Low glucose high AMP
  • AMP CAP (catabolic activator) together bind to
    the promoter helping polymerase to attach
  • CAP regulates several metabolic pathways
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