Chapter 18.2 - Eukaryotic Gene Expression Flashcards

1
Q

Regulation of gene expression (4)

A
  1. Similar to prokaryotes, eukaryotic cells must regulate the expression of their genes
  2. Turn genes on or off in response to environmental or developmental signals
  3. Essential for cell specialization in multicellular organisms
  4. Can be “up-regulated” or “down-regulated”
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2
Q

Chromatin structure can affect transcription (2)

A
  1. Histone proteins bind to DNA via positively charged amino acids (chromatin)
  2. DNA wound around histones (nucleosomes)
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3
Q

Heterochromatin

A

Regions of chromatin that are packed tightly. Genes are not expressed

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4
Q

Euchromatin

A

Regions of chromatin that are less compacted. Genes are expressed here.

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5
Q

Two ways that chromatin structure can affect transcription (Epigenetic Modifications)

A
  1. Chemical modification of histone proteins

2. DNA methylation

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6
Q

Chemical modification of histones (2)

A
  1. Acetylation

2. Methylation

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7
Q

Acetylation (3)

A
  1. Acetyl Groups are attached to positively charged lysines in histone tails
  2. Loosens chromatin structure
  3. Promotes transcription
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8
Q

Methylation (5)

A
  1. Methyl groups added to histones
  2. Causes chromatin to pack tightly (dynamic)
  3. Decreases transcription of genes
  4. Methyl Groups added to certain bases in DNA
  5. Catalyzed by enzyme DNA methyltransferase
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9
Q

DNA methylation Reduces Transcription (2)

A
  1. Inhibits binding to transcription factors

2. Recruits specific methyl-bonding proteins that induce formation of heterochromatin

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10
Q

DNA Methylation can Silence genes (2)

A
  1. Can cause long term inactivation of specific genes (gene silencing)
  2. In female mammals, one of the two copies of the X chromosome is heavily methylated
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11
Q

Can modifications be inherited?

A

Yes, methylation patterns can be transmitted to daughter cells during DNA replication

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12
Q

Epigengic Inheritance (3)

A
  1. Chromatin modifications do not alter DNA sequence
  2. But can be passed to future generations of cells
  3. Inheritance of traits transmitted by mechanisms not directly involving the nucleotide sequence
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13
Q

Control Elements (3)

A
  1. Segments of noncoding DNA that serve as binding sites for transcription factors that help regulate transcription
  2. Control elements and transcription factors that bind are critical to the precise regulation of gene expression in different cell types
  3. There are two types
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14
Q

Two types of control elements

A
  1. Proximal Control Elements

2. Distal Control Elements

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15
Q

Proximal Control Elements

A

Close to the promoter

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16
Q

Distal Control Elements

A

Enhancers - May be far away from a gene or in an intron

17
Q

Eukaryotic Transcription Factors

A

Proteins that bind to a control element.

1) activators: stimulate transcription
2) repressors: reduce transcription

18
Q

Mechanisms of Post-Transcriptional Regulation (3)

A
  1. Transcription alone does not control gene expression
  2. Regulatory mechanisms can operate at various stages after transcription
  3. Allow a cell to fine-tune gene expression rapidly in response to environmental changes