Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.
Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.
Title: Gene Regulation (Biology/Biochemistry)
Description: This notes are a summary of an area of molecular biology - gene regulation, targeting 1st or 2nd year biologists and biochemists. This notes explains the importance of gene regulation, the principles and components behind gene regulation. The architecture and differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes gene regulation and the experimental methods in identifying the cis and trans regulatory elements. The second part focuses on operons, with detailed explanation of the mechanisms involved in the lac, arabinose and tryptophan operons. The last part focuses on other regulatory mechanisms, describing chromosomal remodelling, mRNA splicing and miRNA gene regulation.
Description: This notes are a summary of an area of molecular biology - gene regulation, targeting 1st or 2nd year biologists and biochemists. This notes explains the importance of gene regulation, the principles and components behind gene regulation. The architecture and differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes gene regulation and the experimental methods in identifying the cis and trans regulatory elements. The second part focuses on operons, with detailed explanation of the mechanisms involved in the lac, arabinose and tryptophan operons. The last part focuses on other regulatory mechanisms, describing chromosomal remodelling, mRNA splicing and miRNA gene regulation.
Document Preview
Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above
Gene Regulation
Outline:
•
•
•
•
Gene expression -‐ Central Dogma
Why is Gene Regulation important?
General principles of Gene Regulation
Components of Gene Regulation
o RNA polymerase
o cis-‐acting elements
o trans-‐acting elements
Learning Objectives:
Why is Gene Regulation important?
- Gene expression is costly to the cell
The differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic gene regulation
- Spatial and temporal
- Operons vs Single transcriptional units
- mRNA processing: splicing
Different types of gene regulation
- Positive regulation
- Negative regulation
What are cis and trans elements
- CisàDNA
- TransàProtein
How can you identify cis and trans elements
- DNA footprinting, reporter assays, Gel shift assays, DNA affinity chromatography
Transcription has happened and control the translation of protein at the mRNA level
Why is gene regulation important?
Very costly to have all the genes switch on all they time (use up a lot of energy)
Gene regulation is the way to switch genes on and off
Gene expression – where?
Prokaryote: No nucleus to separate processes of transcription & translation so when bacterial genes
are transcribed into mRNA transcripts they can immediately be translated into protein
Transcription and translation are coupled in the cytoplasm
Eukaryote: Transcription & translation are spatially & temporally separated i
...
transcription occurs
in the nucleus → pre-‐mRNA
Pre-‐mRNA processed (splicing, polA tail, capping) → mature mRNA which exits the nucleus & is
translated in cytoplasm where ribosome can now bind
Transcription happens first before translation
General principles of Gene Regulation
On this gene locus:
Open reading frame – target gene that we want to transcribe an translate into protein
Start and stop codon – encoded in the DNA that initiate transcription and termination
Promoter – stretch of DNA that allows DNA polymerase to bind
Upstream or downstream or within promoter – binding elements call regulatory sequences,
regulatory proteins can have positive or negative effects when bound
Gene Architecture in Prokaryotes: Operons
One promoter that drives several genes at the same time, a very long mRNA that encodes 4-‐5
different proteins
RNA polymerase can bind to the
black sites and transcribe individual
gene (A, B, C, D)
They are all separate entities with
start and stop codons within one set
Hence, they are polycistronic
This is because translation is not
coupled to transcription
•
Genes are contiguous
segments of DNA that are co-‐linear with the mRNA
•
mRNAs are often poly-‐cistronic
Gene Architecture in Eukaryotes: Single transcriptional units
Eukaryotes – every single gene will have its own promoter (monocistronic)
•
Coding sequences are often interrupted by intervening sequences (introns)
Alternative splicing can produce multiple proteins from the same mRNA by different order of
combinations of exons
General principles of Gene Regulation
RNA polymerase can bind to the promoter of a gene, but the binding is not strong for the initiation
to occur to make the mRNA
Therefore, we need an activator, it doesn’t bind to the regulatory sequence until it gets activated by
a signal in the form of molecules/light/phosphorylation etc
Signal binds and induce a conformational change which usually is a dimerization of the regulatory
proteins binding together, then bind to the DNA and influence the strength of the binding of the
polymerase
...
Polymerase gets
released and start transcription
...
The area which is covered by the protein is where the regulatory sequence is
and cannot be chewed up
...
How to identify cis elements
Reporter Gene Assay: Promoter mapping
Take the regulatory unit of the DNA and with PCR make different size versions of the regulatory DNA
Primer 1+4 gives the entire section of the regulatory unit, cis regulatory unit in green and promoter
region in blue
...
If negatively regulated promoter, we don’t get green fluorescence, but this is not 100%
negative as the repressor protein may sometime falls off (equilibrium between the bound and
unbound state) and the polymerase can quickly bind to promoter and transcribe
...
Therefore, only little transcription
...
By producing lots of cunctation, we slowly reduce the length of the regulatory parts of the gene and
observe the outcomes to map where these regulatory units are
...
Then using low salt wash to clear up unwanted substances that stick to pieces of DNA (ie positively
charge)
Now repeat the procedure but matrix only contains DNA sequence that the protein of interest would
bind to
...
Working out whether protein will bind to DNA or not
Run a PAGE-‐gel without SDS (protein in its native form), load on a sample with just DNA on the first
column
...
If protein binds onto the DNA, there will be a shift
in the gel because the protein will retard the DNA’s speed through the gel
...
3rd column, is accessory protein binds to the already bound
protein on the DNA
...
(Normally use an antibody to check for supershift and protein’s identity)
Learning Objectives
What makes up an operon
- Promoter, Operators, structural genes
Structure and function of RNAP
- Apo RNAP Subunits: β, β’, αi, αii, ω
- Holo RNAP additional subunit: σ
- Closed compex à Open complex
Lac Operon
- Negative regulation
- Activation through catabolite repression
Arabinose Operon
- Negative and positive regulation through AraC binding
- Activation through catabolite repression
- Autoregulation of AraC
Tryptophan Operon
- Negative regulation
- Additional negative regulation through attenuation
Operon architecture
•
Prokaryotic cells have linear sequences of DNA called operons
•
An operon is composed of a promoter sequence, followed by an operator, followed by one
or more structural genes, functional genes that need to be controlled(blueprints for
proteins)
•
Operons are controlled by regulatory genes found elsewhere on the chromosome which
regulates the expression of the structural genes in response to an environmental signal
•
This regulation can be up or down regulate
•
Ribosome binding site (black boxes)
Prokaryotic RNA polymerase
Beta and beta’ can associate with any sequences on the DNA physically
Alpha 1 and 2 recognise upstream promoter elements and interact with the betas
...
Transcription factor binds to the
cis regulatory element, up regulate RNAP, through alpha 1&2
...
Different types of sigma units:
Initiation of transcription by the RNAP-‐σ70 (A) and RNAP-‐σ54 (B) holoenzymes
...
In contrast, the σ54 factor directs the binding of RNAP to conserved −12 (TGC)
and −24 (GG) promoter elements that are part of the wider consensus sequence
YTGGCACGrNNNTTGCW (where uppercase type indicates highly conserved residues, lowercase type
indicates weakly conserved residues, N is nonconserved, Y is pyrimidines, R is purines, and W is A or
T) (10)
...
In order to form
the transcription “bubble,” a specialized activator (a bacterial enhancer binding protein [bEBP]) must
bind and use the energy from ATP hydrolysis to remodel the holoenzyme
...
In the absent of lactose, it will bind to the cis regulatory unit – operator, just upstream of
the promoter
...
(No need to metabolise
lactose when they are not present)
When lactose is imported into the cell, it is converted into allolactose which is the inducer molecule
that binds to the lac repressor protein and stops it from binding to the regulatory element (DNA)
...
High level of glucose
ends up inhibiting adenylate cyclase, so no cAMP being produced
...
The complex then binds to the regulatory sequence upstream of the promoter and
interact with the alpha domains of the RNAP
...
• Negative regulation via LacI repressor
•
Lactose binds to and inactivates LacI
•
Catabolite repression via glucose
•
Positive regulation via CAP/cAMP
The arabinose operon
AraB , AraA and AraD are required for the breakdown of arabinose
If glucose and lactose aren’t present, we can use the linear sugar arabinose (carbon source)
AraBAD are the structural genes
Arac is the trans regulatory protein that encodes the regulatory protein AraC
AraO2, araO1 and aral are the regulatory regions and a catabolite binding site CAP cAMP
In the absent of arabinose, AraC binds to two sites, araO2 and aral1
...
There is
therefore no space for the RNAP to bind
...
Instead of binding to I2 and O2, it now binds to I1 and I2
...
Simultaneously, the adenylate cyclase is activated in a low glucose level to form
CAP cAMp that binds to the catabolite site
...
Alter regulation, araC acts as both negative and positive regulator
...
Self-‐regulation: AraC made can binds to the promoter that drives araC and repress the production of
araC
...
Then level of araC in the
system falls
...
Always at a constant level!
When no araC proteins are present, RNAP is free to transcribe the gene that codes for the
production of araC proteins
...
This physically
prevents transcription of the araC gene
...
During
repression, a dimeric form of the araC protein binds I1 and O2 site forming a DNA loop
...
DNA returns to its
linear shape and RNAP can bind
...
Trp recognises the protein and will bind or
dissociate with the repressor depending on the concentration
...
(Lac repressor
protein always bind to the DNA and require the present of allolactose for it to fall of the DNA
...
This gives a 70-‐fold repression between on and off
...
At the beginning of the structural
gene, there is an attenuated sequence gets transcribed as a single piece of mRNA
...
How attenuation works?
Two processes are taking place at the same time, both transcription and translation
...
In part 1, there are two codons that encode for tryptophan
...
Riboseme stalls and the mRNA sequence at position 2 and 3 recognise each other and form a
stem-‐loop
...
Structural genes are being transcribed
...
Ribosome encounters
the Trp codon, but as there are lots of Trp ready to be use, so it just rushes through and doesn’t stall
at position 1
...
Sequence 3 binds to
sequence 4 instead and makes a transcriptional terminator
...
RNAP does not transcribe structural genes
...
Only happen in prokaryotes!
Learning Objectives
Chromatin remodelling
- CpG Islands, methylation/acetylation, Histone binding
Structure and function of Eukaryotic RNAP
- RNAPI/II/III
- TBP, TFIIB, TFIIE, TFIIH, RNAPII bind core promoter
- Many additional transcription factors
mRNA splicing
- Binding of snRNP to splice junctions
- Excision of intron sequences
Gal Pathway
- Activation of expression through GAL4
- Repression of GAL4 activity by GAL80
- Repression of GAL80 repression by GAL3 and galactose
miRNA gene regulation
- RNA:RNA interactions act as post transcriptional control of protein production
Everything is always switch off in
eukaryotes until there is a signal to turn a
gene on
...
When histones are methylated,
they stay positively charged
...
Then promoter becomes
available
...
Acetylation is done by acetyl transferase,
transferring an acetyl group from acetyl
CoA onto the histones
...
Upstream regions that are called CpG islands (Cytosine poly
Guanine Island), this sequence of DNA can be methylated
...
When demethylated, cis acting elements can now reopen
for trans regulatory proteins
...
• Many genes in human genome have upstream CG-‐rich regions (CpG islands)
• Different cell types have different methylation patterns (different gene expression)
DNA is about 2-‐3m long, but only up to about 30cm of the DNA is used to transcribe the 20000 genes
our bodies use
...
Differentiation between different cells come from this, when cells are exposed to different
environments, they cause our DNA to condense in different ways, so different parts of the
chromosome are exposed
...
DNA is methylated, so no transcription takes place, so DNA does not have to be in a relaxed form
...
Histone becomes positively charged and DNA associate with the histones
...
8s, 18s
and 28s rRNA
Small ribosomal RNA that are part of the
ribosome structure that are responsible for
recognising specifics sequences on the
ribosome binding site
RNAP III is responsible for 5s rRNA, all the
tRNAs and snRNA
tRNAs: recognises codons and charge with
an amino acid to build polypeptide chain
snRNA: small RNA that recognises splice
junctions
General transcription
factors have to bind in
order to initiate
transcription
Pol II is made up of 12
domains, additional
transcription factors have
to bind DNA in a hierarchal
order for polymerase to
bind
All initiation transcription
factors work in concert doing the same job as the sigma subunit in prokaryotes (recognition of the
promoter sequences for POL to bind)
On top of that, there are transcription factors (activators or repressors) that bind to enhancer
element and very often more than 1 factors to combined and form co-‐activators
Top sequence shows the promoter region and we can see how these proteins are binding different
parts of the DNA, meaning it will have to fold according to the binding sites of these proteins
First in search for the TATA box within the promoter region, TBP recognises the TATA box and binds
to it, it kinks the DNA into a right angle conformation that allows TFIIB to bind
...
It then acts as a recruiter for TFIIF which associate
with the polymerase (piggy bag)
...
TFIIE clamps the polymerase into the DNA to secure it
...
dNTPs and
ATP being converted to ADP are required to start the process
...
When the process has
kicked start and Pol starts travelling along DNA, all the transcription factors dissociate apart from
TBP to keep DNA bent
...
There are however many activation molecules and they all need to bind at their own regulatory
sequence at the same time
...
Once all bound, it then bind to the polymerase and start transcription
...
They recognise the 3’ and 5’ splice site
...
A reaction takes place
and form a lariat structure
...
Every gene has its own promoter, but the promoters may be affected by the same transcription
factor
...
By having different promoters for separate genes, at different activator binding sites will give
different levels of transcription
...
All the GAL genes have different set ups in terms of where
the GAL4 binding sites are
...
GAL patheway – genes are always switched off but activator protein is always bound to the cis
regulatory element (UAS) switching on gene expression
...
GAL 80 binds onto a region on GAL4 protein, switching it off
...
Gal80 is a repressor
of GAL4 that stays in the nucleus (absent of galactose)
...
Present of galactose cause a conformational change in Gal3 and somehow it binds to
Gal80 (nucleus/shuttling back and forth?), but Gal3 and Gal80 end up in the cytoplasm
...
Gene Regulation by micro RNA (miRNA) Post transcriptional regulation
Regulate translation, stop mRNA being read
to make proteins
Primary transcripts of mRNA that fold into a
2nd structure (stem-‐loops)
...
Protein dicer chop these double strands into
separate strand
...
Micro RNA binds onto RISC
protein 1) recognise mRNA sequence that is not fully complementary, so close the mRNA with
loosely bound fragments and stops ribosome binding
...
Title: Gene Regulation (Biology/Biochemistry)
Description: This notes are a summary of an area of molecular biology - gene regulation, targeting 1st or 2nd year biologists and biochemists. This notes explains the importance of gene regulation, the principles and components behind gene regulation. The architecture and differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes gene regulation and the experimental methods in identifying the cis and trans regulatory elements. The second part focuses on operons, with detailed explanation of the mechanisms involved in the lac, arabinose and tryptophan operons. The last part focuses on other regulatory mechanisms, describing chromosomal remodelling, mRNA splicing and miRNA gene regulation.
Description: This notes are a summary of an area of molecular biology - gene regulation, targeting 1st or 2nd year biologists and biochemists. This notes explains the importance of gene regulation, the principles and components behind gene regulation. The architecture and differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes gene regulation and the experimental methods in identifying the cis and trans regulatory elements. The second part focuses on operons, with detailed explanation of the mechanisms involved in the lac, arabinose and tryptophan operons. The last part focuses on other regulatory mechanisms, describing chromosomal remodelling, mRNA splicing and miRNA gene regulation.