How Are Genes Controlled Flashcards
Fat metabolism
(1) Fatty acid entry into cell
(2) Activation and transesterification (3) Mitochondrial uptake
(4) Formation of ketone bodies
Symptoms of Medium chain Co-A dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD)in babies
l poor feeding l drowsiness l sleepiness
l vomiting
l lethargy
l hyperglycemia l hepatomegaly l seizures
l Coma l Death
Gene regulation in bacteria
-precursor-enzyme1-enzyme 2-enzyme 3-tryptophan
> feedback inhibition can affect the regulation of enzyme activity
Allosteric:
A protein with a structure that is altered reversibly by a small molecule so that its original function is modified
Operon model
Cluster of functionally relearned genes can be coordinately controlled by a single on-off switch
Repressible operons
• The operon can be switched off by a protein repressor
• The repressor prevents gene transcription by binding to the operator and blocking RNA polymerase
• The repressor is the product of a separate regulatory gene, located some distance from the operon itself
• The repressor can be in an active or inactive form, depending on the presence of other molecules
• A corepressor is a molecule that cooperates with a repressor protein to switch an operon off
Inducible operons
The lac operon is an inducible operon and contains genes that code for enzymes used in the hydrolysis and metabolism of lactose
• By itself, the lac repressor is active and switches the lac operon off
• A molecule called an inducer inactivates the repressor to turn the lac operon on
Positive regulation
• Some operons are also subject to positive control through a stimulatory protein, such as cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP), an activator of transcription
• When glucose (a preferred food source of E. coli) is scarce, CRP is activated by binding with cyclic AMP (cAMP)
-Activated CRP attaches to the promoter of the lac operon and increases the affinity of RNA polymerase, thus accelerating transcription
When glucose levels increase, CRP detaches from the lac operon, and transcription returns to a normal rate
• CRP helps regulate other operons that encode enzymes used in catabolic pathways
Operons
• Inducible enzymes usually function in catabolic pathways; their synthesis is induced by a chemical signal
• Repressible enzymes usually function in anabolic pathways; their synthesis is repressed by high levels of the end product
Regulatory genes
• MyoD is a “master regulatory gene” that encodes a transcription factor that commits the cell to becoming skeletal muscle
• Some target genes for MyoD (protein) encode additional muscle-specific transcription factors
DNA to protein
-transcription
-RNA processing and splicing
-transport
-translation
-protein assembly
-Signal Causes chromatin modification(dna unpacking )
-Gene available for transcription
-transcription
-rna processing and splicing
-transport of mRNA from the nucleus to the cytoplasm
-mRNA in cytoplasm is degraded and becomes a polypeptide
-protein processing resulting in an active protein
-degradation of protein
-transport of protein to cellular destination(eg enzymatic activity or structural support)
Regulation of Chromatin structure
• Genes within highly packed heterochromatin are usually not expressed
• Chromatin-modifyingenzymesprovideinitialcontrolof gene expression by making a region of DNA either more or less able to bind the transcription machinery
Epigenetics
-DNA methylation=methyl groups affected to certain dna bases repress gene activity
-histone modification=Molecules that can attach to tails of proteins called histones,they alter tiger activity of the DNA wrapped around them
How does acetylation and methylation affect regulation of chromatin structure
- acetylation=opens up the chromatin structure,
thereby promoting the initiation of transcription
-methylation=can condense chromatin,and reduce transcription
Transcriptional activators
• An activator is a protein that binds to an enhancer and stimulates transcription of a gene
• Activators have two domains, one that binds DNA and a second that activates transcription
• Bound activators facilitate a sequence of protein-protein interactions that result in transcription of a given gene