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The Control of Gene Expression

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In reproductive cloning, the embryo is implanted in a surrogate mother ... Piglet clones might someday provide a source of organs for human transplant ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Control of Gene Expression


1
The Control of Gene Expression
  • Chapter 11

2
Cloning
  • Researchers clone animals by nuclear
    transplantation
  • A nucleus of an egg cell is replaced with the
    nucleus of a somatic cell from an adult
  • In reproductive cloning, the embryo is implanted
    in a surrogate mother
  • In therapeutic cloning, the idea is to produce a
    source of embryonic stem cells
  • Stem cells can help patients with damaged tissues

3
Cloning
4
Gene Regulation
  • The process by which genetic information flows
    from genes to proteins is called gene expression
  • A gene is turned on is being transcribed into
    specific protein molecules, a gene that is turned
    off is not actively being transcribed
  • The turning off and on of transcription is the
    main way in which gene expression is regulated

5
Gene Expression
  • E. coli was first first studied because it does
    not require intercellular gene expression
  • Found that the bacterium changes its gene
    expression according to its environment
  • Gene expression is controlled by several parts
  • Promoter-before the gene, where the RNA
    polymerase attaches and starts transcription
  • Operator- between the promoter and the gene,
    determines whether the RNA polymerase can attach

6
Gene Expression
  • Regulatory Gene- turns off transcription by
    turning off and on the operator
  • Genes for related enzymes are often controlled
    together by being grouped into regulatory units
    called operons
  • Regulatory proteins bind to control sequences in
    the DNA and turn operons on or off in response to
    environmental changes

7
Gene Expression
8
Gene Expression in Eukaryotes
  • Cell differentiation results from selective gene
    expression
  • Different types of cells make different kinds of
    proteins
  • Different combinations of genes are active in
    each type

9
Gene Expression in Eukaryotes
10
Cell Differentiation
  • Most differentiated cells retain a complete set
    of genes
  • In general, all somatic cells of a multi-cellular
    organism have the same genes

11
Cloning
  • Common in plants
  • Manufactured like in the carrot cells
  • Natural like in cuttings or in runners in bamboo
  • The first mammalian clone, a sheep named Dolly,
    was produced in 1997
  • Dolly provided further evidence for the
    developmental potential of cell nuclei

12
Applications of Cloning
  • Piglet clones might someday provide a source of
    organs for human transplant
  • Adult stem cells can also give rise to
    differentiated cells
  • Harder to culture than embryonic stem cells
  • Give rise to only a limited range of cell types,
    in contrast with embryonic stem cells

13
Applications of Cloning
14
Gene Regulation in Eukaryotes
  • A chromosome contains a DNA double helix wound
    around clusters of histone proteins
  • DNA/ histone (8) complex is called nucleosome
  • DNA further supercoils
  • DNA packing tends to block gene expression

15
Chromosome Inactivation
  • In females, one X chromosome per somatic cell is
    inactivated early in embryonic development
  • So coiled it cannot be read
  • The inactivation is inherited by its decedents
  • A female that is heterozygous for genes on the X
    chromosome has cells that express different
    alleles
  • Calico cat

16
Regulation of Eukaryotic Transcription
  • Regulate by making DNA more or less available for
    transcription
  • Regulatory proteins
  • Have more than prokaryotic organisms
  • Each gene has its own promoter and other control
    sequences
  • Transcription factors facilitate correct
    attachment of RNA polymerases
  • Enhancers and silencers bind to DNA
  • Coordinated effort to transcribe RNA

17
Regulation of Eukaryotic Transcription
18
RNA Splicing
  • Once RNA is transcribed, the introns are spliced
    out
  • With-holding splicing or the way an RNA is
    spliced may be a way for regulating gene
    expression
  • Can get more than one polypeptide from one gene

19
Regulation During Translation
  • Breakdown of mRNA
  • Enzymes in the cytoplasm break mRNA down quickly
  • Initiation of Translation
  • There are many proteins involved in the start of
    photosynthesis
  • Protein Activation
  • After translation polypeptides may need
    alteration to become functional (folding etc.)
  • Protein Breakdown
  • Selective breakdown of proteins after translation

20
Gene Regulation
  • Each stage of eukaryotic expression offers an
    opportunity for regulation
  • The process can be turned on or off, speeded up,
    or slowed down
  • The most important control point is usually the
    start of transcription

21
Genetic Control of Embryonic Development
  • Experiments in the embryonic development of fruit
    flies have shown the relationship between gene
    expression and development
  • A cascade of gene expression involves genes for
    regulatory proteins that affect other genes
  • It determines how an animal develops from a
    fertilized egg
  • Problems with gene expression can lead to
    mutations

22
Head-Tail Polarity in the Fruit Fly
23
Signal Transduction Pathways
  • Cell-to-cell signaling
  • Important for development
  • Coordination of cellular activities
  • A signal-transduction pathway that turns on a
    gene
  • The signaling cell secretes the signal molecule
  • The signal molecule binds to a receptor protein
    in the target cells plasma membrane

24
Signal Transduction Pathways
  • Binding activates the first relay protein, which
    then activates the next relay protein, etc.
  • The last relay protein activates a transcription
    factor

25
Signal Transduction Pathways
  • The transcription factor triggers transcription
    of a specific gene
  • Translation of the mRNA produces a protein

26
Developmental Genes
  • Homeotic Genes- A master control gene that
    determines the identity of a body structure of a
    developing organism, by controlling the
    developmental fate of groups of cells
  • Contain nucleotide sequences called homeoboxes
  • Are similar in many kinds of organisms
  • Arose early in the history of life

27
Developmental Genes
  • Fruit flies and mice have similar homeotic genes
    (colored boxes)
  • The order of homeotic genes is the same
  • The gene ordercorresponds toanalogous
    bodyregion

28
The Genetic Basis of Cancer
  • Escape from the control mechanisms that normally
    limit their growth and development
  • Due to changes in genes that affect expression of
    other genes
  • Oncogene-gene that causes cancer
  • Proto-oncogene- a normal gene with the potential
    to become an oncogene
  • A mutation can change a proto-oncogene into an
    oncogene
  • An oncogene causes cells to divide excessively

29
Mutations and Cancer
30
Mutations and Cancer
  • Mutations that inactivate tumor-suppressor genes
    have similar effects
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