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Freeman 1e: How we got there

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... 1957 Illustration humoristique des cours par une s rie de dessins de F. Lavall L gendes de Georges Cohen * Figure: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Freeman 1e: How we got there


1
Signal transduction
???? ???????
2
Signal transduction and cell division
3
Signal transduction
in prokaryotes
4
Regulation of Enzyme Activity 
Feedback Inhibition
5
  • An allosteric enzyme has two binding sites, the
    active site, where the substrate binds, and the
    allosteric site, where the inhibitor (called an
    effector) binds reversibly

6
glucose
7
glucose
8
These sugars must be proceeded before entering in
glycolysis
glucose
arabinose
lactose
galactose
maltose
9
Induction of lac operon (negative regulation)
(beta galactosidase)
10
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12
Expression of arginine biosynthetic pathway
(Operon)
(Arginine)
13
trp arg
aporrepresor correpresor
14
Maltose operon regulation (positive)
(Absence of inducer - maltose)
(maltose)
15

16
Constitutive mutant (Oc)
17
Constitutive mutant (I-)
18
mutant non inducible (Is e Iq)
19
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20
Lac operator
21
IPTG
22
An Overview of Gene Regulation
23
Negative Control of Transcription Repression and
Induction
24
  • This transcriptional regulation involves
    allosteric regulatory proteins that bind to DNA.
    For negative control of transcription, the
    regulatory molecule is called a repressor protein
    and it functions by inhibiting mRNA synthesis.

25
Positive Control of Transcription
  • Positive control of transcription is implemented
    by regulators called activator proteins. They
    bind to activator-binding sites on the DNA and
    stimulate transcription. As in repressors,
    activator protein activity is modified by
    effectors.

26
  • For positive control of enzyme induction, the
    effector promotes the binding of the activator
    protein and thus stimulates transcription

27
Operon
  • bacterial operons allows the bacteria to
    regulate its transcription/translation machinery
    using the environment
  • operons participate in metabolic control
  • turned on or off based on the metabolic
    requirements of the bacteria
  • operon a functioning unit of genomic DNA
    containing a cluster of genes under the control
    of a single regulatory signal or promoter. The
    genes are transcribed together into an mRNA
    strand and. The result of this is that the genes
    contained in the operon are either expressed
    together or not at all. Several genes must be
    both co-transcribed and co-regulated to define an
    operon
  • e.g. trp-operon, lac-operon
  • promoter controls transcription of multiple
    downstream genes that code for enzymes that
    synthesize a specific metabolic component (e.g.
    amino acid)
  • these downstream genes are called a transcription
    unit
  • also contains an operator region on/off switch
    that ultimately controls the promoter and the
    downstream genes

28
resumen
29
In eukaryotes nuclear receptors are always bound
to operator response element
  • No inducer ? recruits repressors
  • With inducer ? recruits activators

30
What does bacterium have to do
?
31
diauxie
32
Global Regulatory Mechanisms  
33
  • Global control systems regulate the expression
    of many genes simultaneously. Catabolite
    repression is a global control system, and it
    helps cells make the most efficient use of carbon
    sources.

34
  • The phenomenon of catabolite repression has been
    observed in operons other than the lac operon. In
    fact, the expression of many operons that play
    roles in sugar metabolism and amino acid
    metabolism is affected by the presence of
    glucose. Examples are the arabinose (ara)
    operon the maltose (mal) operon and, the
    histidine utilization (hut) operon. This is a
    GLOBAL CONTROL MECHANISM.
  • The global nature of the catabolite repression
    phenomenon makes sense. As long as glucose is
    present, it will be the preferred substrate for
    growth, so there will be no need for any of the
    other substances to be used and, consequently,
    for their operons to be expressed.
  • Catabolite repression is mediated through the
    effects that glucose transport into the cell has
    on the internal concentration of cyclic AMP
    (cAMP). The following "cartoon" shows how this
    works
  • If glucose is abundant in the growth medium it
    will be transported in to the cell by the action
    the glucose transport system. As it is being
    transported, glucose is phosphorylated with the
    phosphate group being donated by a component of
    the transport system.The same component also
    activates the enzyme, adenylate cyclase. As long
    as the component is participating in glucose
    transport, it is not able to activate adenylate
    cyclase.The result is that as glucose is
    transported into the cell, the concentration of
    cAMP falls (because adenylate cyclase is not
    being activated to synthesize any more).
  • If there is little or no glucose in the growth
    medium, the glucose transport system is not
    operational. The phosphate donor component is now
    free to activate aadenylate cyclase.The result
    is that in the absence of glucose, the
    concentration of cAMP rises.
  • Thus there is an inverse relationship between
    glucose and cAMP. As one rises, the other
    falls.

35
cAMP and CAP(catabolite activator protein)
36
High glucose ? low cAMP ? no CAP binding to DNA
? no activation
Low glucose ? high cAMP ? cAMP-CAP binding to DNA
? activation
37
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39
  • The lac operon is under the control of
    catabolite repression as well as its own specific
    negative regulatory system

40
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41
The Stringent Response
  • is a global control mechanism triggered by amino
    acid starvation.

?
42
The alarmones ppGpp and pppGpp are produced by
RelA, a protein that monitors ribosome activity.
43
ppGpp
??-??-???-??-??
44
Other Global Control Networks
  • Cells can control several regulons by employing
    alternative sigma factors. Alternative signal
    factors in Escherichia coli are shown in Table
    8.2.

45
Sigma factor binds DNA
RNAP holoenzyme binds Sigma factor DNA complex
46
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47
  • These recognize only certain promoters and thus
    allow transcription of a select category of
    genes. Other global signals include cold and heat
    shock proteins that function to help the cell
    overcome temperature stress.

48
  • Table 8.1 shows examples of global control
    systems known in Escherichia coli.

49
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50
Sigma38 changes pol to respond to this
regulation without repressors or activators
Normal Transcription
Osm promoters contain poised polymerases
Osmotic shock
potassium glutamate accumulation, inhibited s70
transcription
Neutral osmolytes restore sigma70 function
Poised polymerases begin transcription
s38 polymerase produces neutral osmolytes
key unresolved question How does the weak acid
salt induce the poised RNAP to escape?
51
CIRCE ???????
Heat shock
N N N N N N N N
N C-G T-A C-G A-T C-G
G-C A-T T-A T-A NNNNN
NNNNN NNNNN NNNNN A-T A-T T-A
C-G G-C T-A G-C A-T
G-C N N N N N N N N
N
N N N N N N N N
N C-G T-A C-G A-T C-G
G-C A-T T-A T-A NNNNN NNNNN
HrcA
TTAGCACTC---NNNNNNNNN---GAGTGCTAA
9
9
9
52
CIRCE ???????
37 C
??????????????? ?????
44 C
53
Quorum Sensing
  • Quorum sensing (Figure 8.22) allows cells to
    survey their environment for cells of their own
    kind and involves the sharing of specific small
    molecules. Once a sufficient concentration of the
    signaling molecule is present, specific gene
    expression is triggered.

54
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55
Other Mechanisms of RegulationAttenuation
56
  • Attenuation is a mechanism whereby gene
    expression (typically at the level of
    transcription) is controlled after initiation of
    RNA synthesis (Figure 8.25).

57
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59
  • Attenuation mechanisms involve a coupling of
    transcription and translation and can therefore
    occur only in prokaryotes.

60
  • Protein splicing (Figure 8.7) is a form of
    posttranslational modification.

Topoisomerase II (GyrA) in Mycobacterium
leprae (Lyprosae disease)
61
Signal Transduction and Two-Component Regulatory
Systems
62
  • Signal transduction systems transmit
    environmental signals to the cell.

63
  • In prokaryotes, signal transduction typically
    involves two-component regulatory systems (Figure
    8.26), which include a membrane-integrated sensor
    kinase protein and a cytoplasmic response
    regulator protein.
  • The activity of the response regulator depends on
    its state of phosphorylation.

64
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65
  • Table 8.3 shows examples of two-component
    regulatory systems that regulate transcription in
    Escherichia coli.

66
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67
Regulation of Chemotaxis
  • Chemotaxis is under complex regulation involving
    signal transduction in which regulation occurs in
    the activity of the proteins involved rather than
    in their synthesis (Figure 8.27).

68
MCP methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins
69
  • Adaptation by methylation allows the system to
    reset itself to the continued presence of a
    signal.

70
RNA Regulation and Riboswitches
  • RNA regulation is a rapidly expanding area in
    both prokaryotic and eukaryotic molecular biology.

71
  • In Escherichia coli, for example, a number of
    small RNAs (sRNAs) have been found to regulate
    various aspects of cell physiology by binding to
    other RNAs or even to small molecules.

72
  • One mechanisms for sRNA activity is found in the
    signal recognition particle. A second mechanism
    is the binding of the sRNA to an mRNA by
    complementary base pairing (Figure 8.28a).

73
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74
  • A unique form of small RNAs are the
    riboswitches. These are mRNAs that contain
    sequences upstream of the coding sequences that
    can bind small molecules (Figure 8.28b).

75
Metabolite binding effects secondary structure of
RNA
76
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77
Covalent Modification of Enzymes
  • Covalent modification is a regulatory mechanism
    for changing the activity of an enzyme. Enzymes
    regulated in this way can be reversibly modified.
    One type of modification is adenylylation (the
    addition of AMP) (Figure 8.6).
  • Others are phosphorylation and methylations

78
Regulation of glutamine synthetase by
adenylation 1. GS inhibition by several a. a. and
compounds involved in nucleotide metabolism 2. GS
(12 identical subunits) is also inhibited by
covalent modification - adenylation
Nitrogen rich medium (Lot of glutamine available)
Nitrogen poor medium
79
DNA-Binding Proteins and Regulation of
Transcription by Negative And Positive Control
  • Certain proteins can bind to DNA because of
    interactions between specific domains of the
    proteins and specific regions of the DNA molecule
    (Figure 8.8).

80
DNA Binding Proteins
homodimers
81
  • In most cases, the interactions are
    sequence-specific. Proteins that bind to nucleic
    acid may be enzymes that use nucleic acid as
    substrates, or they may be regulatory proteins
    that affect gene expression.

82
  • Several classes of protein domains are critical
    for proper binding of these proteins to DNA. One
    of these is called the helix-turn-helix motif
    (Figure 8.9).

83
Lac and trp repressors and lambda repressor (gt250)
84
Cysteine (C) and histidine (H)
  • Another domain is the zinc finger, a protein
    that binds a zinc ion (eukaryotes).
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