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Title: XII. Gene Regulation


1
XII. Gene Regulation
2
- Overview All cells in an organism contain the
same genetic information the key to tissue
specialization is gene regulation reading some
genes in some cells and other genes in other
cells.
3
Also, organisms can respond to their environment
at a genetic level, so there must be a way for
the environment to stimulate or repress the
action of certain genes.
4
And changes occur through time, creating
developmental changes. We will look at how gene
expression is regulated in these cases.
5
  • - Overview
  • Some Terminology
  • some enzymatic genes are only turned on if the
    substrate is present this is an inducible system
    and the substrate is the inducer. Obviously,
    this is highly adaptive, as the cell saves energy
    by only producing the enzyme when it is needed.

6
  • - Overview
  • Some Terminology
  • some enzymatic genes are only turned on if the
    substrate is present this is an inducible system
    and the substrate is the inducer. Obviously,
    this is highly adaptive, as the cell saves energy
    by only producing the enzyme when it is needed.
  • some enzymes are on all the time, and are only
    turned off if a compound (often the product of
    the metabolic process they are involved with) is
    present. This is a repressible system, and the
    compound is the repressor. This is also
    adaptive, and the cell saves on enzymes if the
    product is already present.

7
  • - Overview
  • Some Terminology
  • some enzymatic genes are only turned on if the
    substrate is present this is an inducible system
    and the substrate is the inducer. Obviously,
    this is highly adaptive, as the cell saves energy
    by only producing the enzyme when it is needed.
  • some enzymes are on all the time, and are only
    turned off if a compound (often the product of
    the metabolic process they are involved with) is
    present. This is a repressible system, and the
    compound is the repressor. This is also
    adaptive, and the cell saves on enzymes if the
    product is already present.
  • Constitutive genes are on all the time.

8
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • A. The lac Operon in E. coli

9
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • A. The lac Operon in E. coli
  • When lactose is present, E. coli produce three
    enzymes involved in lactose metabolism. Lactose
    is broken into glucose and galactose, and
    galactose is modified into glucose, too. Glucose
    is then metabolized in aerobic respiration
    pathways to harvest energy (ATP). When lactose is
    absent, E. coli does not make these enzymes and
    saves energy and amino acids. How do they KNOW?
    )

10
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • A. The lac Operon in E. coli

As you remember, an operon was a region of
genes that are regulated as a unit it typically
encodes gt 1 protein involved in a particular
metabolic pathway.
11
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • A. The lac Operon in E. coli

As you remember, an operon was a region of
genes that are regulated as a unit it typically
encodes gt 1 protein involved in a particular
metabolic pathway.
12
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • A. The lac Operon in E. coli

Lac Y - permease increases absorption of lactose
13
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • A. The lac Operon in E. coli

Lac Y - permease increases absorption of
lactose Lac Z B-galactosidase cleaves
lactose into glucose and galactose
14
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • A. The lac Operon in E. coli

Lac Y - permease increases absorption of
lactose Lac Z B-galactosidase cleaves
lactose into glucose and galactose Lac A
transacetylase may code for enzymes that
detoxify waste production of digestion.
15
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • 1960 Jacob and Monod proposed that this was an
    inducible system because the presence of the
    substrate INDUCES transcription.

Promoter
Repressor Gene
Operator
Repressor
RNA Poly
16
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • 1960 Jacob and Monod proposed that this was an
    inducible system because the presence of the
    substrate INDUCES transcription.

LACTOSE
17
The binding of lactose changes the shape of the
repressor (allosteric reaction) and it cant bind
to the operator.
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • 1960 Jacob and Monod proposed that this was an
    inducible system because the presence of the
    substrate INDUCES transcription.

LACTOSE
18
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • Mutant analyses confirmed these results

19
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • Mutant analyses confirmed these results

20
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • Mutant analyses confirmed these results

21
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • Mutant analyses confirmed these results

Curiously, there are only about 10 repressor
molecules in each cell and they were not actually
isolated and identified for 6 years (Gilbert).
22
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • But it is even more complicated if glucose AND
    lactose are present, the operon is OFF. This is
    adaptive, because its glucose the cell needs.
    If glucose is present, there is no need to break
    lactose down to get it. BUT HOW?

23
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • But it is even more complicated if glucose AND
    lactose are present, the operon is OFF. This is
    adaptive, because its glucose the cell needs.
    If glucose is present, there is no need to break
    lactose down to get it. BUT HOW?
  • This involves a repressible pathway.

24
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • Within the promoter, there is a binding site for
    Catabolic Activating Protein basically a
    transcription factor. CAP needs to bind in
    order for the RNA Polymerase to bind. Cyclic-AMP
    activates CAP, causing an allosteric reaction so
    it can bind the promoter.

, lactose present
25
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • Within the promoter, there is a binding site for
    Catabolic Activating Protein basically a
    transcription factor. CAP needs to bind in
    order for the RNA Polymerase to bind. Cyclic-AMP
    activates CAP, causing an allosteric reaction so
    it can bind the promoter. So, the binding of CAP
    stimulates transcription.

, lactose present
26
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • When Glucose is present, the concentration of
    c-AMP declines, it does not bind to CAP, and CAP
    does not bind to the Promoter so the RNA Poly
    does not bind either and the genes are off.

, lactose present
27
CAP
REPRESSOR
28
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • When Glucose is present, the concentration of
    c-AMP declines, it does not bind to CAP, and CAP
    does not bind to the Promoter so the RNA Poly
    does not bind either and the genes are off.
  • So, the lac operon is regulated first by the
    presence/absence of glucose the needed
    nutrientand then by the presence of lactose,
    which could be metabolized to produce glucose if
    necessary.

29
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • B. The trp Operon in E. coli

30
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • B. The trp Operon in E. coli
  • Tryptophan is an amino acid that can be
    synthesized by tryptophan synthetase. This gene
    and its partners are only ON if tryptophan is
    absent. The presence of tryptophan represses the
    production of these enzymes (repressible system).

31
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
If trp is absent, the repressor cant bind to the
operator transcription proceeds..
32
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
If trp is present, it binds to the repressor,
changing the repressors shape so that it can now
bind to the operator and inhibit RNA poly binding.
33
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
Secondary Regulation
Actually, when trp is present,
34
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
Secondary Regulation
ACTUALLY, TRANSCRIPTION ALWAYS PROCEEDS A LITTLE
BITUP TO THE REGION CALLED THE ATTENUATOR
35
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
Secondary Regulation
ACTUALLY, TRANSCRIPTION ALWAYS PROCEEDS A LITTLE
BITUP TO THE REGION CALLED THE ATTENUATOR
36
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
Secondary Regulation
Two hairpin loops can form in the m-RNA the 3-4
loop causes termination of transcription.
37
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
Secondary Regulation
Two hairpin loops can form in the m-RNA the 3-4
loop causes termination of transcription. Because
translation occurs as soon as m-RNA is produced,
ribosomes jump on and begin to read the strand
there are two trp codons at the beginning of the
sequence.
38
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
Secondary Regulation
Two hairpin loops can form in the m-RNA the 3-4
loop causes termination of transcription. Because
translation occurs as soon as m-RNA is produced,
ribosomes jump on and begin to read the strand
there are two trp codons at the beginning of the
sequence. If trp is present, the ribosome zooms
along (incorporating trp) and it occupies the 2
region region 3 is free to bind with 4 and the
termination loop forms
39
B. The trp Operon in E. coli
Secondary Regulation
Two hairpin loops can form in the m-RNA the 3-4
loop causes termination of transcription. Because
translation occurs as soon as m-RNA is produced,
ribosomes jump on and begin to read the strand
there are two trp codons at the beginning of the
sequence. If trp is present, the ribosome zooms
along (incorporating trp) and it occupies the 2
region region 3 is free to bind with 4 and the
termination loop forms If low trp, then
ribosome stalls region 3 bind to 2, no
termination loop forms, and transcription of the
genes proceeds
Translation of the genes begins at start codons
downstream
40
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • B. The trp Operon in E. coli
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes

41
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • B. The trp Operon in E. coli
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • - higher levels of packaging, intron-exon
    structure, and the need for tissue specialization
    makes regulation in eukaryotes far more complex
    than responding to environmental cues.

42
  • XII. Gene Regulation
  • The lac Operon in E. coli
  • B. The trp Operon in E. coli
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • - higher levels of packaging, intron-exon
    structure, and the need for tissue specialization
    makes regulation in eukaryotes far more complex
    that responding to environmental cues.
  • Histone Regulation
  • - Core DNA, bound to histones, is OFF. Only
    linker DNA, between histones, is even
    accessible to RNA polymerases. So, binding DNA
    to histones is the first way to shut it off.

43
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Histone Regulation
  • - Three ways to reveal DNA
  • chromatin remodeling

44
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Histone Regulation
  • - Three ways to reveal DNA
  • chromatin remodeling
  • Methylation
  • - highly repetitive sequences
  • - imprinted genes
  • - Barr bodies

45
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Histone Regulation
  • - Three ways to reveal DNA
  • chromatin remodeling
  • Methylation
  • - highly repetitive sequences
  • - imprinted genes
  • - Barr bodies
  • Some proteins bind to the methylated cytosines,
    and may either recruit repressors or interrupt
    transcription factor binding.

46
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Histone Regulation
  • Methylation
  • Promoters
  • - Several consensus sequences (TATA, CAAT,
    GGGCGG) appear in combination in nearly all
    promoters and are required for basal levels of
    transcription

47
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Histone Regulation
  • Methylation
  • Promoters
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Cis-acting elements on the same chromosome, which
    regulate a neighboring gene.
  • They are somewhat like operators, in that they
    are binding sites for transcription factors that
    can up or down regulate transcription.
    However, they function ANYWHERE near the gene
    before, within, or after

48
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Histone Regulation
  • Methylation
  • Promoters
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Cis-acting elements on the same chromosome, which
    regulate a neighboring gene.
  • They are somewhat like operators, in that they
    are binding sites for transcription factors that
    can up or down regulate transcription.
    However, they function ANYWHERE near the gene
    before, within, or after
  • They are not gene specific they will enhance
    their neighbor
  • Silencers tend to reduce binding of the
    polymerase to the promoter.

49
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Histone Regulation
  • Methylation
  • Promoters
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • These are the transcription factors that bind to
    enhancer and silencer regions of the human
    metallothionien IIA gene promoter region!!
  • - What does having all these modifiers allow
    for?

50
Different proteins can silence or enhance DNA
Polymerase II binding. This may involve the
formation of a pre-initiation complex of
proteins that allow the Poly II to bind, and can
even involve sequences far from the promoter that
loop and influence RNA Poly II activity.
51
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Transcription Factors
  • - These are the proteins that bind to DNA and
    influence transcription. They have binding
    domains that bind DNA in particular ways.

52
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Transcription Factors
  • - These are the proteins that bind to DNA and
    influence transcription. They have binding
    domains that bind DNA in particular ways.
  • HTH helix-turn-helix

One class of important HTH TFs contain specific
sequences of AAs called a homeodomain. This is
encoded by a 180 bp region in its gene called a
homeobox. These homeotic genes/proteins are
conserved across all eukaryotes and are critical
to basic animal development.
53
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Transcription Factors
  • - These are the proteins that bind to DNA and
    influence transcription. They have binding
    domains that bind DNA in particular ways.
  • Zinc-Finger Zinc binds to two cysteine and
  • two histidine AAs. The sequence between forms
  • A loop or finger, and the specific AA sequence
  • Binds specific DNA sequences

54
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Transcription Factors

We didnt really know what they did in vivo.
Biochemists have linked other proteins to them,
however, making Zinc-finger nucleases that cut
DNA at specific sequences.
55
(No Transcript)
56
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Transcription Factors
  • But Feb 18, 2015, Najafabadi et al. found this
  • - Cys2-His2 zinc finger (C2H2-ZF) proteins
    represent the largest class of putative human
    transcription factors (gt 700 proteins)
  • - C2H2-ZF proteins recognize more motifs than
    all other human transcription factors combined.
    (Highly variable, tough to study)
  • - C2H2-ZF proteins bind specific endogenous
    retroelements (EREs), ranging from currently
    active to ancient families. The majority of
    C2H2-ZF proteins, also show widespread binding to
    regulatory regions, indicating that the human
    genome contains an extensive and largely
    unstudied adaptive C2H2-ZF regulatory network
    that targets a diverse range of genes and
    pathways.
  • - They stabilized Endogenous Retroviral
    Elements, and evolved to regulate other genes, as
    well.

Science Daily
READ THIS
Najafabadi et al. 2015
57
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Transcription Factors
  • - These are the proteins that bind to DNA and
    influence transcription. They have binding
    domains that bind DNA in particular ways.
  • bZIPbasic leucine zipper leucine AAs in
  • Different chains dimerize and the leucines zip
  • The other alpha-helices bind specific DNA
    sequences

58
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Enhancers/Silencers
  • Transcription Factors
  • - These are the proteins that bind to DNA and
    influence transcription. They have binding
    domains that bind DNA in particular ways.
  • - Then, the TFs have other binding sites for
  • Proteins (like basal transcription factors) or
  • Other chemicals (like hormones)

59
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Transcription Factors
  • Alternate Splicing Pathways
  • - Many proteins can be made from the same gene,
    by splicing the m-RNA differently. Humans have
    20-30K genes, but several 100,000 proteins!

A calcium regulator in the thyroid
A hormone made in the brain
60
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Alternate Splicing Pathways
  • 7. Controlling m-RNA stability

Existing tubulin units interact with a new
tubulin strand and translation stalls, releasing
RNAse that cleave the m-RNA. So tubulin is only
made when free tubulin units are not present.
61
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Controlling m-RNA stability
  • RNA Silencing
  • - Short pieces of RNA can bind to DNA in the
    nucleus or m-RNA in the cytoplasm and regulate
    gene expression.

62
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Controlling m-RNA stability
  • RNA Silencing/Interference
  • - si-RNA (small interfering RNA)
  • Viral or retrotransopon origin
  • - mi-RNA (micro-RNA)
  • Produced by intronic, sequences, or different
    genes in genome. Have stem-loop structure.

63
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Controlling m-RNA stability
  • RNA Silencing/Interference
  • THEY BOTH are attacked by DICER protein, which
    cuts them into short ds-RNA molecules.
  • These complex with RNA-induced Silencing Complex
    proteins (RISC) that denature the RNA and degrade
    the sense strand.
  • What is left is a strand that is complementary to
    a specific m-RNA molecule.

64
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Controlling m-RNA stability
  • RNA Silencing/Interference
  • If the ss-RNA is exactly complementary to a
    m-RNA, RISC cuts the m-RNA into fragments
    (turning protein synthesis OFF).
  • Or, if not exactly complementary, then the RISC
    complex stays attached, interrupting ribosome
    binding and translation.

65
  • C. Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • Controlling m-RNA stability
  • RNA Silencing/Interference
  • OR!
  • The ds-RNA gets complexed with RNA-induced
    initiation of transcription silencing complex
    (RITS). These denature the RNA, creating ss-RNA
    that binds to DNA promoters or large regions of
    DNA.
  • This binding attracts chromatin remodeling
    proteins that methylates the histones, causing it
    to coil into herochromatin (Turning Genes OFF).

66
The process of Gene Activity in terms of a Gene
Making a Functional Protein can be regulated at
every step of the process, from Gene
availability and chromatin structure Transcriptio
n Transcript Processing Translation Post-transl
ational Modification
Variation in patterns of regulation lead to
differences in expression between cells, and cell
specialization.
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