Chapter 8 Part Two Flashcards
The regulation of bacterial gene expression
- constitutive genes are expressed at a fixed rate
- housekeeping/ keep cell alive - other genes are expressed only as needed
- Inducible genes
- repressive genes
- catabolism repression
Gene organization
Operon-genes encoding for proteins in pathways organized together
Pre-transcriptional control -> Repression
- inhibits gene expression no decreases enzyme synthesis
- mediated by depressors, proteins that can block transcription
- default position of a repressive gene is on —-
- the structural genes are transcribed until they are turned off (or repressed)
Induction
- induction turns on gene expression
- initiated by an inducer
- default position of an inducible gene is off - where the structural genes are not transcribed unless an inducer is present
- inducer = disables repressor
The Oberon model of gene expression
- in an inducible operon, structural genes are not transcribed unless an inductor is present
- in the absence of lactose, the repress or binds to the operator, preventing transcription
- in the presence of lactose, lactose (inducer) binds to the repressor; the repressor cannot bind to the operator and transcription occurs
The operon model of gene expression
- in repressive operon s, structural genes are transcribed until they are turned off
- excess tryptophan is a corepressor that binds and activates the repressor to bin to the operator, stopping tryptophan synthesis
Genetic diversity
- getting new genetic information to adapt and survive to new environmental conditions
Genetic recombination: exchange o genes between two DNA molecules; creates genetic diversity
Crossing over: two chromosomes break and rejoin, resulting in the insertion of foreign DNA into the chromosomes
Mutations
Original: THE FAT CAT SAT
Point mutation: THA FAT CAT SAT
Insertion: THE FAT CAT SSAT
Deletion: THE FTC ATS AT
Steps of genetic recombination by crossing over
1) DNA from one cell aligns with DNA in the recipient cell. notice that there is a nick in the donor DNA.
2) DNA from the donor aligns with the complementary base pairs in the recipient’s chromosome. This can involve thousands of base pairs
3) RecA proteins catalyzes the joining of the two strands
4) the result is that the recipient’s chromosome contains new DNA. Complementary base pairs between the two strands will be resolved by DNA polymerase and ligaments. The donor DNA will be destroyed. The recipient may now have one or more new genes
Transformation
Genes transferred from one bacterium to another as “naked” DNA
Transduction in bacteria
- DNA is transferred from a donor cell to a recipient via a bacteriophage
- generalized transduction: random bacterial DNA is packaged inside a phage and transferred to a recipient cell
- specialized transduction: specific bacterial genes are packaged inside a phage and transferred to a recipient cell
Conjugation
- plasmids transferred from one bacterium to another (they form a mating bridge to transfer the plasmids
- requires cell-to-cell contact via sex pili
Conjugation in bacteria -> donor cell
- donor cells carry the plasmid (F factor) and are called F^+ cells
- Hfr cells contain the F factor on the chromosome