Molecular Genetics Ch.14 - Learnsmart
how can an inducer cause transcription to increase?
1. it can bind to a repressor protein and prevent it from binding to DNA 2. it can bind to an activator protein and cause it to bind to DNA
CAP site
DNA sequence recognized by an activator protein
A conformational change that prevents the lac repressor from binding to the lac operator occurs when ___________ binds to the lac repressor.
allolactose
The small effector molecule ________ prevents the lac repressor from binding to the operator site.
allolactose
A regulatory site on a protein that is not the active site is called an __________ site.
allosteric
When lactose is depleted from the environment, the _______________.
concentration of intracellular allolactose becomes lower due to the action of metabolic enzymes
When both lactose and glucose are absent, concentrations of cAMP are ____________.
high
When four molecules of allolactose are bound to lac repressor, and repressor can no longer bind to operator, and RNA polymerase is free to transcribe the operon, the operon has been ___________.
induced
negative control
transcriptional regulation by a repressor
induced
a gene that has been transcriptionally activated by an inducer
repressible genes
a gene that is regulated by a corepressor or inhibitor, which are small effector molecules that cause transcription to decrease
inducible genes
a gene that is regulated by an inducer, which is a small effector molecule that causes transcription to increase
operon
a group of two or more genes that are transcribed from a single promoter
an operon encodes what?
a polycistronic mRNA
lac repressor
a protein that binds to the operator site of the lac operon and inhibits transcription
repressor
a regulatory protein that binds to the DNA and inhibits transcription
inducer
a small effector molecule that increases the rate of transcription.
polycistronic mRNA
an RNA that contains the sequences of two or more genes
The small effector molecule produced by the enzyme adenylyl cyclase is ____________.
cAMP
The somewhat imprecise term that describes how transcriptional regulation is influenced by glucose is ____________.
catabolite repression
Many bacterial species use sugars sequentially. This is called __________.
diauxic growth
The enzyme beta-galactosidase cleaves the sugar lactose into __________ and ___________.
galactose and glucose
The transport of _________ into a cell causes a ________ in the concentration of cyclic-AMP by inhibiting adenylate cyclase.
glucose ; decrease
how does an effector molecule influence gene expression?
it binds to a regulatory protein and affects its ability to bind DNA
in the absence of allolactose, what happens?
lac repressor is bound to the operator site most of the time
The three protein-encoding genes in the lac operon are ________, ___________, and _________.
lacZ, lacY, and lacA
What is the name for a strain of bacteria containing F' factor?
merozygote
A loss-of-function mutation in a gene encoding a repressor protein has the same effect as a mutation in the __________.
operator site
The lacY gene encodes lactose _______________, a membrane protein.
permease
an operon allows a bacterium to do what?
regulate a group of two or more genes that are involved with a common functional goal: the expression of the genes occurs as a single unit
positive control
regulation by an activator protein
activator
regulatory protein that increases the rate of transcription
enzyme adaptation
the phenomenon in which a particular enzyme appears within a living cell after the cell has been exposed to the substrate for that enzyme
allosteric regulation
the phenomenon in which an effector molecule binds to a noncatalytic site on a protein and causes a conformational change that regulates its function
in bacteria, the most common way to regulate gene expression is by influencing
the rate of transcription initiation
corepressor
a small molecule that binds to a repressor protein, thereby causing the protein to bind to the DNA and it reduces the rate of transcription
Would using a merozygote better indicate regulation of a gene by a trans-acting factor or a cis-acting element?
a trans-acting factor
effector molecules
bind regulatory proteins
inhibitor
binds to an activator protein and prevents it from binding to the DNA and it reduces the rate of transcription
allosteric sites
the site on a protein where a small effector molecule binds to regulate the function of the protein
What type of regulatory element does not need to be adjacent to the gene(s) is it regulating?
trans-acting factor