Operons Flashcards
prokaryotic regulation
takes place at the level of transcription initiation
prokaryotic promoter
- RNA polymerase binds to a recognition sequence in the promoter to begin transcription
- different classes of promoters have different recognition sequences
- contain two sites that RNA polymerase recognizes
sigma factor
- aids RNA polymerase in binding to the recognition sequence
- specific sigma factors have different affinities for binding to different -10 and -35 element sequences
- different promoters have different sigma factors, so transcription of genes depends on presence of sigma factors in the cell
housekeeping genes
- genes that are normally expressed in actively growing cells
- have -10 and -35 elements (refers to how many bases upstream of the transcription start site they are located)
What benefit is provided by having different promoter
recognition sequences for different genes?
allows transcription factors and RNA polymerase to bind selectively enabling the regulation of gene expression
operon
set of structural genes controlled by a single promoter
starts with a promoter followed by an operator
operator
sequence of DNA within an operon to which a molecule can bind to either induce or repress transcription
polycistronic mRNA
genes in an operon are transcribed into a single mRNA
each gene produces different information for translation (recognition sequence, stop and start codon)
lac operon
controls lactose metabolism in e. coli
structural genes LacZ, LacY, LacA encode three enzymes that help the cell use lactose for energy
lacI gene
located close to the lac operon
encodes a protein called the lac repressor protein
absence of lactose
- lac repressor protein binds to the operator and block RNA polymerase from binding to the promoter
- lacZ, lacY, lacA not transcribed
presence of lactose
- allolactose binds to the repressor protein, changing its shape and making unable to bind to the operator
- RNA polymerase able to bind
inducible operon
- transcription does not occur unless a messenger molecule is present in a large enough concentration
- allolactose is the co-inducer
negative regulation
lac operon controlled by a repressor protein
prevents transcription
positive regulation
- inducible operon
- activator protein: cAMP receptor protein (CRP)
- encourages efficient transcription of lac operon
CRP
- inactive when glucose levels are high
- must be activate by cAMP messenger molecule, produced when glucose is low or absent
- cAMP binds to CRP, changes its shape, and binds near the promoter which helps the RNA polymerase bind
repressible operon
transcribes by default
presence of trp must be high enough to bind to trp repressor protein and bind to operator
trp operon
under negative regulation
when trp is present in a high concentration, it binds to the repressor protein which then binds to the operator
catabolite repression
- the preferred energy source reduces other catabolic pathways
- presence of glucose represses the lac operon