UNIT 3 - AOS1 - CH 1.5 & 1.6 - Structure of genes & Gene Regulation Flashcards

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1
Q

Coding region

A

part of a gene that contains the coded info for making a polypeptide chain

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2
Q

flanking regions

A

regions located either downstream or upstream of the coding region of a gene

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3
Q

Intron

A

regions in eukaryotes of non-coding DNA that do not contribute to the final polypeptide (removed during RNA modification)

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4
Q

Extrons

A

Regions in eukaryotes and prokaryotes of coding DNA, that do contribute to final protein structure.

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5
Q

Promoter

A

5’ prime end (upstream) & is TATAA box for eukaryotes

is the binding side for RNA polymerase.

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6
Q

Termination sequence

A

Eukaryotes 3’ prime end (downstream flanking region)

DNA sequence that determines the end of transcription

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7
Q

Leader region

A

Prokaryotes

Contains attenuators = formation of hairpin loops and the stalling and detachment of RNA polymerase when the structural genes don’t need to be transcribed & translated.

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8
Q

Operator region

A

Prokaryotes

OPERATOR = a region that serves as a binding site for repressed proteins to inhibit transcription

REPRESSOR = a protein produced by a regulatory gene that can bind to the operator to prevent RNA polymerase from binding to the promoter

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9
Q

Gene regulation definition

A

The conservation of energy through the process of either inhibiting or activating gene expression.

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10
Q

prime ends for template, coding strand and mRNA

A

Coding strand = 5’ - 3’

Template strand = 3’ - 5’

mRNA = 5’ - 3’

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11
Q

Structural genes

A

“produce proteins that are involved in the structure or function of cell”

e.g transport proteins

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12
Q

Regulatory genes

A

“produce regulatory proteins that control the activity of other genes”.

e.g repressor protein

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13
Q

opening definition

A

“cluster of adjacent structural genes in bacteria controlled by a single promoter and operating as a coordinated unit”

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14
Q

Summary of trp operon

A

“ a series of structural genes within certain species of bacteria (e.g ecoli ) that encode for the production of tryptophan”

  • when trp is present = operon is switched off and trp is not produced
  • when trp is absent = operon is switched on and trp is produced
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15
Q

Summarise how the trp operon is regulated through repression in the presence of tryptophan.

A

STEP ONE:
Tryptophan binds to repressor protein which caused conformational change (active repressor)

STEP TWO:
Active repressor binds to operator.

STEP THREE:
RNA polymerase cannot bind to the promoter

STEP FOUR:
Transcription does not occur & operon is turned off

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16
Q

Summarise how the trp operon is regulated through repression in the absence of tryptophan

A

STEP ONE:
Repressor cannot bind to operator because it is inactive because tryptophan is not present.

STEP TWO:
RNA polymerase can bind to the promoter

STEP THREE:
Transcription of structural genes does occur & operon is turned on.

17
Q

Summarise how the trp operon is regulated through attenuation in the presence of tryptophan

A

STEP ONE:
Transcription & translation of the trp operon begin & occur simultaneously

STEP TWO:
Ribosome arrives at attenuator sequence that codes for the two tryptophan amino acids. The tRNA-bound tryptophan in cell adds to the leader peptide causing the ribosome to continue and reach the ‘stop’ codon.

STEP THREE:
This causes the mRNA leader sequence to create a terminator hairpin loop. (Domain 3&4)

STEP FOUR:
The folding of the mRNA terminator hairpin loop causes the attenuator sequence to break and seperate from he DNA.

STEP FIVE:
RNA polymerase is flicked off the DNA, causing transcription to stop before any structural genes are transcribed.

18
Q

Summarise how the trp operon is regulated through attenuation in the absence of tryptophan

A

STEP ONE:
Transcription & translation of the trp operon begin & occur simultaneously

STEP TWO:
Ribosome arrives at the attenuator sequence (in the leader) that codes for the two tryptophan amino acids. Due to no tRNA-bound tryptophan in the cell, the ribosome will pause and wait.

STEP THREE:
This causes the mRNA attenuator sequence to create a anti-terminator hairpin loop (domain 2&3)

STEP FOUR:
The anti-terminator hairpin loop does not cause the mRNA to separate from the DNA at the attenuator sequence because it has moved further along past T’s and A’s. (Cs and Gs have a stronger bond)

STEP FIVE:
RNA polymerase continues to read the DNA template strand, transcribing the structural genes for proteins involved in the synthesis of tryptophan.

19
Q
A