Molecular Genetics - Controlling Gene Expression Flashcards
1
Q
Why do organisms regulate the expression of their genes?
A
- Continuous expression of all genes in genome is very inefficient
- The cell would be overloaded with non-essential proteins, while depleting resources needed to make them
2
Q
What are the 4 categories of gene regulation?
A
- Transcriptional: during mRNA synthesis
- Post-transcriptional: during mRNA processing
- Translational: during protein synthesis
- Post-translational: after protein synthesis
3
Q
What is an operon?
A
- A cluster of genes controlled by a single promoter
- Used by prokaryotes to regulate transcription of genes
- The genes are transcribed as single piece of mRNA and translated simultaneously, entire metabolic pathway becomes active at the same time
4
Q
What is an operon made up of?
A
- Promoter: region to which RNA polymerase will bind
- Operator: specialized recognition sequence for a repressor protein (on-off switch)
- Structural genes: genes that code for various proteins/enzymes involved in particular metabolic pathway
5
Q
What is a regulatory gene?
A
- Codes for a repressor protein
- Located upstream from operon
- This gene is always active and produces repressor protein responsible for binding to operator of operon
- By binding to operator, repressor protein prevents RNA polymerase from transcribing the genes
6
Q
What are the 2 types of operons?
A
- Inducible operons: normally turned off but can be activated when needed
- Repressible operons: normally turned on but can be repressed when not needed
7
Q
What is the Lac operon?
A
- Inducible operon
- Usually turned off since lactose is not usual food for bacteria (repressor protein synthesized in its active conformation)
- When bacteria exposed to lactose, operon will be turned on
- Lactose binds to repressor protein, changing its shape so that it “falls off” the operator
- RNA polymerase can now bind to promoter and transcribe operon so that enzymes for lactose metabolism can be produced
- When all lactose used up (including inducer molecules), repressor changes back to active shape, binds to operator + shuts down operon again
8
Q
What is the Trp Operon
A
- Tryptophan is an amino acid needed for protein synthesis, so pathway is usually active (repressor protein synthesized in inactive conformation)
- If tryptophan builds up in cell or available from environment, cell will shut down production (turn of operon)
- Trp molecule binds to repressor protein, changing shape so it can bind to operator (gene can no longer be expressed)
- Trp is corepressor (signal molecule that binds to repressor to reduce expression of operon’s genes)
- When all trp used up (including corepressor molecule), repressor protein returns to inactive shape + falls off operator
- Operator turned back on, trp synthesis can begin again
9
Q
What are the four categories of gene regulation in eukaryotes?
A
- Transcriptional
- Post-transcriptional
- Translational
- Post-translational
10
Q
What is transcriptional regulation + examples?
A
- Allows cells to regulate which genes are transcribed + rate of transcription
- Controlling access to promoter: to turn transcription of gene on or off
- Activating or repressing promotor: to increase/decrease rate of transcription of gene
- Methylation of promoter: methyl groups bond to promoter, prevent binding RNA polymerase (preventing transcription of gene)
11
Q
What is post-transcriptional regulation + examples?
A
- Control availability of mRNA to ribosomes
- Alternative splicing: allows pre-mRNA to be modified into variety of related proteins by varying exons kept in final mRNA
- Masking proteins: bind to mRNA, preventing translation (can be removed when translation is required)
- Regulatory molecules: used to control rate of mRNA degradation (controlling how long it is actively being translated)
12
Q
What is translational regulation + examples?
A
- Controls how often + how rapidly mRNA is translated into proteins
- Altering length of poly-A-tail: increasing or decreasing time required to translate mRNA into protein
13
Q
What is post-translational regulation + examples?
A
- Controls when proteins become fully functional, how long they are functional, + when they degrade (controls availability of functional proteins)
- Processing mechanisms: used by cell to finalize protein structures, can be regulated to control availability of activated/functional proteins
- Chemical modification: addition or removal of chemical groups can activate or inhibit proteins
- Ubiquitination: binding of small protein called ubiquitin, signals protein for degradation (allows cell to control how long protein is active)