Chapter 10 Flashcards
Regulatory proteins
- sense changes and alter gene expression
- activity may be changed by the binding of a small ligand molecule or by covalent modification such as phosphorylation
Repressors
bind to regulatory sequences in the DNA and prevent transcription
Activators
bind to regulatory sequences in the DNA and stimulate transcription
Two-component signal transduction systems sense the external environment
(1) Sensor kinase in the cell membrane
- Binds to environmental signal, which causes autophosphorylation
(2) Response regulator in the cytoplasm
- Transcription factor that binds DNA and regulates genes
- Takes phosphate from sensor to turn target gene(s) either on or off depending on the specific regulator
Microbes control gene expression at several levels
- Alterations of DNA sequence
- Control of transcription
- Control of mRNA stability
- Translational control
- Posttranslational control of protein function or stability
the Lactose Operon
- in Escherichia coli, enzymes used to metabolize lactose were inducible, while those for glucose were constitutive
- Lactose Induces Expression of the lacZYA Operon
lacZYA operon
- LacI binds to the operator region.
- It represses the lac operon by preventing transcription by RNA polymerase.
- b-galactosidase (LacZ), when at low levels, cleaves and rearranges lactose to make the inducer allolactose.
- Allolactose binds to LacI, reducing its affinity to the operator and thus allowing induction of the operon
lacO
-operator sequence at the beginning of the operon where transcription factors can bind
Activation of Transcription by cAMP-CRP
- Maximum expression of the lac operon requires cAMP (cyclic AMP)
- increases only in the absence of glucose, and cAMP receptor protein (CRP).
- CRP is a transcription activator
- cAMP-CRP complex binds to the promoter, and interacts with RNA pol to increase the rate of transcription initiation
Glucose and the lac Operon
- Glucose Represses the lac Operon
- E. coli utilizes glucose first
- as glucose goes up, cAMP and lacZ go down
- as glucose goes down, cAMP and lacZ go up
catabolite repression
-an operon enabling the catabolism of one nutrient is inhibited by the presence of a more favorable nutrient (commonly glucose)
diauxic growth
-biphasic curve of a culture growing on two carbon sources
repressing anabolic pathways
- down-regulate if the end product is available
- Don’t make something you don’t need more of
aporepressor
- transcription factor protein alone is an inactive
- The end product molecule acts as a corepressor
holorepressor
- complex can bind to the operator sequence upstream of the target gene or operon
- Blocks RNA polymerase, and transcription is off