Molecular Genetics Chapter 14
Components of lac operon
(1) Structural genes (a) lacZ gene (b) lacY gene (c) lacA gene (2) Regulatory region (a) Promoter region (lacP) (b) Operator region (lacO) (3) Repressor gene (lacI) (4) CAP site: Catabolite Activator Protein binding site
trpR gene
(not part of trp operon) produces repressor that binds to operator region - same as lac i
CAP is involved in:
- CAP facilitates RNA polymerase binding on the promoter -cooperative binding, enhances each other's binding character - CAP is also called cyclic AMP receptor protein
Life cycle of phage λ bacteriophage reproductive cycle
- Lytic cycle - lysogenic cycle
Feedback inhibition in posttranslational regulation:
- final product of the pathway inhibits activity of one or more enzymes in the pathway - enzyme within regulatory/allosteric site as well as catalytic site - binding of the final product to regulatory site changes conformation of enyzme - enzyme cannot bind to substrate
Genetic proofs to support operon model
- repressor gene produces a diffusible cellular product (proteins) - operator region is involved in regulation, but no gene product is known - operator region is adjacent to the structural genes to regulate transcription
Repressors in translational regulation:
- repressor recognition within mRNA - bind to Shine-Dalgarno sequence - binding may cause structural change on mRNA
How many promoters are in an operon? A)1 B)2 C)3 D)It depends on how many genes are present in the operon
A)1
An activator is present and results in the increase in transcription of the target gene. This is an example of _______________. A)termination B)positive control C)negative control D)feedback inhibition
B)positive control
CAP site
Catabolic Activator Protein binding site -DNA sequence recognized by catabolite activator protein - CAP facilitates RNA polymerase binding on the promoter (enhances gene expression) - CAP binding to CAP site is cAMP dependent
Cis-acting elements
DNA sequences in the vicinity of the structural gene that are required for gene expression
O1 site should be functional to repress:
O1 with O2 or O1 with O3
What are the three lac operon sites where lac repressor binds?
O3, O1, O2
Repressor must bind to ___ of the three operator sites to repress transcription.
Two
Regulatory proteins
action by direct binding to DNA - activators - repressors
CAP binding is dependent on ______.
cAMP
DNA that contains instructions for two or more structural genes produces monocistronic mRNA. ⊚true⊚false
⊚false
In the lac operon, the operator is an example of a trans-effect genetic regulation. ⊚true⊚false
⊚false
In the lac operon, the operator site is recognized by an activator protein. ⊚true⊚false
⊚false
Negative transcriptional regulation is conducted by activator proteins. ⊚true⊚false
⊚false
Operons that code for anabolic enzyme systems are typically regulated by inducers. ⊚true⊚false
⊚false
Operons that code for catabolic enzyme systems are typically regulated by repressors. ⊚true⊚false
⊚false
Constitutive genes are those that have constant levels of expression. ⊚true⊚false
⊚true
Repressor proteins are responsible for negative transcriptional regulation. ⊚true⊚false
⊚true
The form of regulation that involves a physical change in the shape of an enzyme is called allosteric regulation. ⊚true⊚false
⊚true
The regulation of the CAP complex using cAMP is an example of inducible genetic regulation. ⊚true⊚false
⊚true
The term enzyme adaptations used to describe an enzyme that appears in a living cell following exposure to a specific substrate. ⊚true⊚false
⊚true
Which of the following encode polycistronic mRNA? (Check all that apply.) A)Lac operon B)Operator site C)Trp operon D)CAP site
A)Lac operon C)Trp operon
Regulation of gene expression may occur at which of the following levels? (Check all that apply.) A)Post translation B)Constitutive expression C)Translation D)Transcription
A)Post translation C)Translation D)Transcription
Riboswitch
Binding of small molecule to a regulatory segment of mRNA causes conformational change and leads to modification of mRNA function - riboswitch of mRNA regulates its own translational activity and enzymatic activities - riboswitches are found in bacteria, archaea, algae, fungi, and plants
A gene is inducible and under negative control. Which of the following pairs will allow expression of this gene? A) Activator + repressor B) Activator + inhibitor C) Repressor + inducer D) Repressor + co-repressor
C) Repressor + inducer
A deletion in an operon removes the terminator. How will that affect the transcript that is produced from the operon? A)The transcript will be produced and normal in length B)The transcript will be produced, but shorter than normal C)The transcript will be produced, but longer than normal D)The transcript will produced, but will contain a deletion E)The transcript will not be produced
C)The transcript will be produced, but longer than normal
Allosteric regulation is accomplished by __________. A)a small molecule that fits into an enzyme's active site B)a large protein that blocks an enzyme's active site C)a small molecule that fits into a site on the enzyme that is not the active site D)a small molecule that covalently modifies a site on the enzyme that is not the active site
C)a small molecule that fits into a site on the enzyme that is not the active site
A deletion in an operon removes the promoter. How will that affect the transcript that is produced from the operon? A)The transcript will be produced and normal in length B)The transcript will be produced, but shorter than normal C)The transcript will be produced, but longer than normal D)The transcript will produced, but will contain a deletion E)The transcript will not be produced
E)The transcript will not be produced
Regulatory proteins involved in phage cycles
Following infection, two promoters are activated: PL and PR - produce 'cro protein' and 'N protein' - N protein has antitermination function (binds to RNA polymerase and prevents termination) Genes activated for lytic cycle - genes are initializing phage synthesis (O and P) - second antiterminator (Q) Genes activated for lysogenic cycle - integration for phage genome into bacterial chromosome (int) - excise gene (xis) - stabilizer for CII protein (cIII)
Possible stem-loop structures of trpL mRNA
No translation on mRNA from trpL gene (eukaryotes) - stable stem-loop formation of attenuator region - no transcription and translation of trp operon No tryptophan present - no charged trp-tRNA present - ribosome stops at trp codons - no stem-loop formation of attenuator region - continuous transcription and translation (tryptophan is produced) Tryptophan present - charged trp-tRNA present - ribosome moves until meets termination codon - stem-loop formation of attenuator region - transcription to trp operon is halted (no tryptophan produced)
Glucose and lactose absent
OFF (CAP and repressor bound)
Glucose present and lactose absent
OFF (repressor bound)
Glucose and lactose present
OFF/(ON but low expression) - CAP and repressor off
Glucose absent and lactose present
ON (CAP bound)
Antisense RNA in translational regulation:
RNA that binds to the complementary RNA or DNA sequence - complementary to mRNA
trp operon
Repressible operon - encodes enzymes involved with biosynthesis of tryptophan (amino acid)
Organization of trp operon
Structural genes: - TrpE, D, C, B, and A gene - transcribes polycistronic mRNA - Genes produce tryptophan synthetase
Repressors form a ______ and _____ _____.
Tetramer, DNA loop
Transcription regulation by riboswitches
Thaimine pyrophosphate (TPP) is an essential coenzyme for the functioning of various enzymes - transcriptional control of thi operon of B subtilis - when TPP is low, transcription is completed - when TPP is high, transcription is stopped
Types of riboswitches
Transcription - formation of rho-independent transcription termination hairpins Translation - inaccessible Shine-Dalgarno sequence (ribosome binding site) RNA stability - formation of self-degradable ribozyme Splicing - conformational change and splicing variant formation
Translation regulation by riboswitches
Translational control of thiMD operon of E. Coli - the thiMD operon encodes two enzymes involved with TPP biosynthesis - when TPP levels are low, translation is completed - when TPP levels are high, no translation
Lytic cycle may be induce by __ exposure.
UV - increases transcription of recA
Constitutive gene
a gene that is transcribed at a relatively constant level regardless of the cell's environmental conditions example: housekeeping genes (HSP90, b-actin)
Operon
a unit of genetic material that functions in a coordinated manner by a single promotor - contains an operator, a promotor, and structural genes - produces a polycistronic mRNA
Positive regulation
activator protein promotes transcription
High tryptophan levels:
active trp repressor - repression occurs - tryptophan is a corepressor or attenuation occurs (prokaryotes) - RNA is transcribed only to the attenuator sequence - stem-loop formation of attenuator sequence causes premature termination of transcription - first two trp codons control ribosomal movement by availability of charged trp-tRNA
cAMP is produced from _____ _____.
adenylyl cyclase
CAP-cAMP complex
binds to the CAP-binding site in the promoter region - enhances transcription - occurs when glucose is absent
λ regulation
cII protein is easily degraded by E. coli cellular proteases - these proteases are abundant if the bacterial growth conditions is favorable - if cII is degraded, λ repressor is not made and the lytic cycle is favored
OR region
contains three operators - acts as a genetic switch between lytic and lysogenic cycles - cro and λ repressor can bind to all three sites - these proteins determine the switch between the lytic and lysogenic cycles - during lysogenic cycle, λ repressor controls the switch - during lytic cycle, cro protein controls the switch
Effector proteins
do not bind directly to DNA, but react with repressors or activators (DNA binding proteins) - effectors cause conformational change in activator or repressor - Inducers, corepressors, and inhibitors
Corepressors
effector molecules that decrease gene expression by binding to repressors
Inducers
effector molecules that increase gene transcription by binding to activators or repressors - genes regulated by inducers are called 'inducible genes'
Inhibitors
effectors that bind to the activator and prevent it from binding to DNA - genes regulated by inhibitors are called 'repressible genes'
lacZ gene
encodes b-galactosidase (converts lactose to glucose and galactose)
trpL gene
encodes leader peptide (14 amino acids) - mRNA determines transcription and translation of trp operon
lacY gene
encodes permease (facilitates entry of lactose into bacterial cell; cotransports H+)
lacA
encodes transacetylase (removes toxic by-products from lactose digestion)
Catabolic repression/CAP inducible system
energy efficient system - glucose is a catabolite of lactose digestion
Posttranslational regulation
feedback inhibition and covalent modification of enzyme
Inducible regulation
gene expression is induced by presence of particular substance (inducer)
Dual control of lac operon
glucose inhibits adenylyl cyclase activity
Low tryptophan levels:
inactive trp repressor, transcription of the entire trp operon occurs
Activators
increase transcription causing positive control - may be naturally active or inactive
Catabolic genes in an operon are usually regulated in an ______ manner.
inducible
lac operon regulation
inducible and negative control system - transcription occurs when the repressor fails to bind to the operator region - gene is off by default
lac operon
inducible operon - encodes enzymes for lactose digestion - mRNA contains sequences for multiple proteins/enzymes
Repressors
inhibit the transcription process causing negative control - may be naturally active or inactive
Lactose present
lactose (allolactose) binds to repressor - binding leads to the conformational change in repressor - repressor cannot bind to operator region -then, the genes expressed
Gene regulation
level of gene expression can vary under different conditions - may occur at any stage of gene expression
Mutation on operator region (O-)
mutation blocks the passage of RNA polymerase -genes are always turned off
Genome of phage λ
normal λ phage genome is linear - linear genome turned into circular when it is injected into the host bacteria - various group of genes are responsible for lytic and lysogenic cycles lytic cycle: genes needed for new viral particle formation are expressed lysogenic cycle: integrase is expressed
Covalent modification of enzyme in posttranslational regulation:
permanent modifications - proteolytic processing (protein is degraded) - disulfide bond formation (strong bond) - attachment of prosthetic groups: sugars, functional groups, or lipids reversible modifications - phosphorylation - acetylation - methylation
Lysogenic cycle
phage genome integrates into bacterial chromosome, forming 'prophage' (integrated phage DNA) - prophage is not harmful to infected bacteria (temperate phage) - when bacteria (lysogen) is in a stressed condition, prophage escapes and follows lytic cycle
Lytic cycle
phage particles are multiplied from infected bacterial cell - bacterial cells undergo lysis
Promoter region (lacP)
polymerase binding site
Repressible regulation
presence of a particular molecule inhibits gene expression (repressor)
Repressor gene (lacI)
produces repressor (trans-acting factor) - no a part of the operon
Trans-acting elements
proteins that bind to the cis-acting sequences to control gene expression
trpR
regulatory gene of trp operon - codes for trp repressor that is active when the effector is bound and attaches to DNA
Anabolic genes in an operon are usually regulation in an _____ manner.
repressible
Operator region (lacO)
repressor binding site (cis-acting element)
No lactose present
repressor binds to operator region and no gene expression
Mutation on operator region (Oc)
repressor cannot bind on operator region - genes are always turned on
Mutation on repressor gene/protein (I-)
repressor cannot bind to the operator region -genes are always turned on
Negative regulation
repressor protein prevents transcription
Translational regulation
repressors and antisense RNA
Lactose
serves as an inducer of the genes expression
Mutation on repressor protein (Is)
superresprsessor - repressor protein lacks lactose binding site -operon is permanently repressed regardless of lactose present
Facultative gene
transcribed only when needed, constitutive genes are expressed continuously - the way majority of genes are regulated example: metabolism-related enzymes, responses to environmental stress, cell division related proteins 'enzyme adaptation' - the expression of a gene depends on the presence of a particular particle example: b-galactosidase production is dependent on the presence of lactose in media
Lysogenic cycle determinants
when cII-cIII complex accumulates to sufficient levels lysogenic cycle is favored - cII protein activates genes that encode λ repressor (cI) and integrase (int) - these two proteins promote lysogenic life cycle - integrase and λ repressor inhibit lytic cycle - starvation conditions favor lysogenic cycle
Lytic cycle deterinants
when cro protein level is high lytic cycle is favored - cro protein inhibits transcription from PRM, PrR, and PL related genes (inhibits λ repressor production) - cro protein also allows for the transcription of the O, P, and Q genes (involved in replication of λ DNA - when activity of cro protein exceeds that of CII protein, lytic cycle prevails
Jacob and Monod model (1961) on adaptive gene expression
worked with lactose metabolism in E. coli 1) Exposure to lactose causes a 1,000 to 10,000-fold increase in lactose metabolic enzymes 2) This is due to an increase in enzyme synthesis 3) Removal of lactose dramatically terminated enzyme production 4) Mutations indicated that separate genes are responsible for each enzyme
A riboswitch only affects translation of an operon. ⊚true⊚false
⊚false