Gene Control in Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes (Chapter 16) Flashcards
What is transcription of a gene controlled by in prokaryotes and eukaryotes?
Transcription factors
What are transcription factrors?
Proteins that bind to a specific DNA sequence and control the flow of information from DNA to RNA by controlling the formation of mRNA
What are structural genes?
Genes that code for proteins required by a cell e.g. because they form part of a cellular structure of act as an enzyme
What are regulatory genes?
Genes that code for proteins that regulate the expression of other genes
What can repressible enzyme synthesis be prevented by?
Binding a repressor protein to the operator region on a bacterium’s DNA
When does inducible enzyme synthesis occur and why?
When its substrate is present - transcription of the gene occurs as a result of the inducer (the enzyme’s substrate) interacting with the protein produced by the regulatory gene
What is an operon?
- A length of DNA making up a unit of gene expression in a bacterium
- It consists of one or more structural genes and control regions of DNA that are recognised by the products of regulatory genes
What enzyme hydrolyses lactose to glucose and galactose?
Beta-galactosidase
How does the number of molecules of beta-galactosidase present in a bacterial cell vary?
- It varies according to the [lactose] in the medium in which the bacterium is growing
- The bacterium has one copy of the gene coding for the enzyme and ∴ to alter its concentration in the cell, it must regulate transcription of the gene
What is the lac operon made up of?
A cluster of 3 structural genes and a length of DNA including operator and promoter regions
What are the 3 structural genes in the lac operon and what do they code for?
1) lacZ - codes for beta-galactosidase
2) lacY - codes for permease which allows lactose to enter cells
3) lacA - codes for transacetylase
What is close to the promoter but not part of the operon?
Its regulatory gene
Explain what happens when there is no lactose present
1) the regulatory gene codes for a repressor protein
2) the repressor protein binds to the operator region, close to the gene for beta-galactosidase
3) in the presence of a bound repressor at the operator, RNA polymerase cannot bind to the promoter of the DNA
4) ∴ no transcription of the 3 structural genes can take place
Why does the binding of lactose affect the repressor protein?
Because the repressor protein has two binding sites (it is allosteric) ∴ when it binds to a molecule at one site, this affects it ability to bind to a different molecules at the other binding site
What are the two separate binding sites of the repressor protein?
One site binds to DNA (operator region) , the other one binds to lactose