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Gene Regulation • An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA • Not all genes are expressed by every cell • How does an organism know when to “turn on” or “turn off” a gene?

Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

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Page 1: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Gene Regulation

• An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA

• Not all genes are expressed by every cell

• How does an organism know when to “turn on” or “turn off” a gene?

Page 2: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Typical Gene Regulation• See page 309 in your textbook Figure 12-22

Regulatory sites

promoter

start stop

gene

Promoters- DNA sequence where RNA polymerase will bind

Operator (regulatory sites)- stretches of DNA where proteins can bind to regulate transcription

Start and stop signals- for transcription of gene

Page 3: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Prokaryotic Gene Expression usually uses OPERONS.

OPERONS- are a group of genes that operate together

the Lac operon is a great example!It’s a set of genes needed for E.coli to make proteins so the bacteria can use the sugar lactose as food!

Page 4: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

The Lac operon has 1. a promoter (the nucleotide sequence where

RNA Polymerase binds- green)

2. an operator (segment of DNA used to turn gene expression on or off, repressor protein binds here- dotted/shaded region)

3. Three genes for making proteins involved in breaking down lactose

See

page 310

Fig.12-23

Page 5: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

How the Lac Operon works or operates…. Lac genes turned OFF by the repressor protein and

turned ON by the presence of Lactose

WITHOUT Lactose- DNA binding protein is bound to the OPERATOR (where protein binds) so RNA polymerase CAN’T WORK (can’t make the mRNA)

WITH Lactose- lactose binds to repressor DNA binding protein, this causes the protein to CHANGE SHAPE and FALL OFF the DNA Operator so RNA polymerase CAN WORK (transcribes the gene)

Page 6: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Without Lactose:

Page 7: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

With Lactose:

Page 8: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Lac operon animation

• http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/lacoperon.html

Page 9: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Eukaryotic Gene Regulation: • Most eukaryotic genes are controlled

individually NOT with operons

• Only a few of the available genes will be expressed in the cells of different tissues (cell specialization/differentiation)

• Complex!

Page 10: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

See page 311 in your textbook Figure 12-24

Eukaryotic Gene Regulation

exonexon

enhancer Promoter sequences

TATA Box

exon intron intron

Enhancer sequence- lots of proteins can bind here on different sequences (that’s why eukaryotic gene regulation is more

complex!!)

Promoters- usually just before the TATA Box (where RNA polymerase binds)

TATA Box- helps position RNA polymerase in front of gene

Exons- expressed

Introns- cut out before translation

Page 11: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Proteins that bind to enhancer sequences of a gene can work to:

a. Open up tightly packed chromatin.

b. Attract RNA polymerase.

c. Block access to genes.

Page 12: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Fig. 14.9, p. 229

unit of transcription in a DNA strand

exon intron

mature mRNA transcript

poly-Atail

5’

5’ 3’

3’

(snipped out) (snipped out)

exon exonintron

cap

transcription into pre-mRNA

3’ 5’

RNA Editing

Page 14: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Hox genes

Page 15: Gene Regulation An expressed gene is one that is transcribed into RNA Not all genes are expressed by every cell How does an organism know when to “turn

Development and Differentiation

• Hox genes are master control genes that control the differentiation of cells and tissues in the embryo.

• A mutation in hox gene in fruit flies had a leg growing where antenna should be.