Study Questions Set 6 Flashcards
You have discovered base changes in the promoter region of the operon in a bacterial chromosome. Would you expect these changes to act in trans on another copy of the operon? Explain your reasoning.
- Mutations in promoters are not trans factors; the mutation can results in constitutive expression (always present) but should not act on other promoters
What are cis- elements? What are trans- factors? Give an example from the Trp operon (or form the Ara-operon).
- cis element region of DNA/RNA that regulates expression of genes located on the same strand (e.g., trpO)- trans factor a molecule which regulates expression of genes distant from the gene that originally created it (e.g., repressor dimer)
Draw the diagram of the lac operon that illustrates negative control
http://walkthemoonvevo.tumblr.com/image/163641843442
You have isolated a protein that binds to DNA in the region upstream of the promoter sequence of the gene of interest. If this is a positive regulator (activator) which would be true:A) Loss of function mutation in the gene encoding this DNA binding protein would cause constitutive expressionB) Loss of function mutation in the gene encoding this DNA binding protein would result in lower or no expression.Explain your reasoning.
B –> since the molecule activates expression, loss of function mutation would result in lower expression
Discuss why are lac Oc mutants cis-acting.
Oc is dominant over O+ so it results in bacteria always producing structural genes (constitutive) so bacteria always cleave lactose
* Cis acting since it is a mutation in the promoter O that results in the repressor being unable to bind
Discuss why are lac I- mutants trans-acting.
- I- is a constitutive mutations that results in structural genes always being expressed
- Trans acting since mutated repressor that cannot bind to the promoter, therefore con
Discuss positive and negative regulation of L-ara operon.
- The initiator region contains ara I, which codes for enzymes that act on arabinose
- ara C encodes the activator protein AraC
- When there is no arabinose, the AraC binds to ara O2 and ara I1 and bends DNA, hiding the promoter from RNA polymerase so enzymes are not synthesized
- Where arabinose is present, it binds to AraC, changing the conformation of the protein, so AraC binds to ara I1 and ara I2 making the promoter accessible to RNAP
Regarding the regulation of Trp operon, what do we call the amino acid tryptophan? Why?
- Tryptophan is co-repressor
- It is necessary to activate the aporepressor protein that then binds to the promoter to negatively regulate synthesis of the structural genes
What is meant by polycistronic mRNA? Give an example.
• mRNA that contains genes for more than one protein product (e.g., the lac operon)
What is catabolite repression? What is the role of Catabolite Activator Protein? Explain its action. (remember the # of operons it activates!)
- Catabolite repression – the negative control of the expression of enzymes involved in catabolism of energy sources other than glucose; the “glucose effect”
- The Catabolite Activator Protein (CAP) or cyclic AMP (cAMP) will induce or active the pathway for synthesis of lactose by complexing with RNAP when cell is starving from lack of glucose
- cAMP binds to CAP, which binds to CAP binding site upstream from RNAP binding site, stimulating transcription
- called pleiotropic or general activator
Define: repressor, co-repressor, aporepressor and inducer.
- Repressor – trans factors that bind to decrease the rate of transcription
- Co-repressor – activate aporepressors that are then capable of binding to decrease the rate of transcription
- Aporepressor – a repressor that cannot combine with an operator gene until it has combined with a corepressor
- Inducer – trans factors that inactive repressors thereby inducing transcription
Define effector and inducer. Give example
- Effector – small molecules that change the conformation of repressors by binding; either inducers or corepressors
- Inducer – trans factors that inactive repressors thereby inducing transcription
What are activators? What are enhancers?
- Enhancers – cis elements that, upon binding of an activator, recruits transcription factors that enhance the binding of RNA polymerase, thereby increasing the rate of transcription
- Activators – trans factors that act on enhancers
What is the role of auxiliary operators?
- Multiple operators (auxiliary operators) can increase or decrease the level of transcription dramatically (e.g., 20-fold to 500-fold with 2 other operators in lac operon)
- Can increase the local concentration of the repressor or cause DNA looping as repressor binds to many operators which prevents binding of RNA polymerase
Discuss the type of regulation of gene expression by two-component regulatory systems in bacteria?
- Sensor-transmitter protein monitors specific changes in the environment (e.g., level of nutrients, pH, solvent concentrations, osmolarity, etc.); spans the cell membrane with kinase on the inner part of the cell; kinase autophosphorylates upon receiving signal
- Response regulator protein obtains the phosphate from the kinase, causing change in conformation and activation of the effector domain
Glutamine and arginine in DNA-binding proteins tend to make what kind of bonds with DNA?
• Hydrogen bonds with the nitrogenous bases of DNA
What type of control is a repressor?
Negative control
How does an auxiliary operator express control mechanisms?
additional repressor binding sites
How does an effector express control mechanisms?
binding changes repressor conformation
How does an activator express control mechanisms?
positive control
How does an enhancer express control mechanisms?
binding sites for an activator
How does a regulator express control mechanisms?
can express positive or negative regulation
How does a two-component regulatory system express control mechanisms?
sensor-transmitter regulation