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12.1: Introduction

  • Page ID
    16485
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    Cells regulate their metabolism in several ways. We have already that allosterically regulated enzymes monitor the cellular levels of metabolites. Recall that glycolytic intermediates rise and fall in cells based on cellular energy needs, binding to or dissociating from allosteric sites. Allosteric enzymes respond to interaction with allosteric effectors with an increase or decrease in catalytic activity.

    Cells can also control absolute levels of enzymes and other proteins by turning genes on and off, typically by controlling transcription. Transcription regulation usually starts with extracellular environmental signaling. The signals are chemicals in the in the air, in the water, or in the case of multicellular organisms, in blood, lymph or other extracellular fluids. Bacterial and protist genes often respond to environmental toxins or fluctuating nutrient levels. Familiar signal molecules in higher organisms include hormones released at the appropriate time in a sequential developmental program of gene expression, or in response to nutrient levels in body fluids.

    Some signal molecules get into cells binding to specific intracellular receptors to convey their instructions. Others bind to cell surface receptors that transduce their ‘information’ into intracellular molecular signals. When signaling leads to gene regulation, responding cells ultimately produce transcription factors. These in turn recognize and bind to specific regulatory DNA sequences associated with the genes that they control. DNA sequences that bind transcription factors are relatively short. They can lie proximal (close) to the transcription start site of a gene, and/or in the case of eukaryotes, distal to (far from) it. We will see that binding some regulatory DNA sequences are enhancers, turning on or increasing gene transcription. Others are silencers, down-regulating, or suppressing transcription of a gene. Finally, DNA regulatory sequences are hidden behind a thicket of chromatin proteins in eukaryotes. When patterns of gene expression in cells change during development, chromatin is re-organized, cells differentiate, and new tissues and organs form. To this end, new patterns of gene expression and chromatin configuration in a cell must be remembered in its descendants. CMB3e 257

    In this chapter, we look at the path from cell recognition of a signal molecule to the interaction of regulatory proteins with DNA in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. We also consider how eukaryotic cells remember instructions that alter chromatin configuration and patterns of gene expression, topics in the field of epigenetics.

    Learning Objectives

    When you have mastered the information in this chapter, you should be able to:

    1. Compare and contrast transcription factors and so-called cis-acting elements.
    2. Discuss the role of DNA bending in the regulation of gene expression.
    3. Explain the benefits of organizing bacterial genes into operons, and why some bacterial genes are not part of operons
    4. Compare and contrast regulation of the lac and trp operons in E. coli.
    5. Define and describe regulatory genes and structural genes in E. coli.
    6. Discuss why a fourth gene was suspected in lac operon regulation.
    7. Distinguish between gene repression and de-repression and between positive and negative gene regulation, using examples. For example, explain how it is possible to have repression by positive regulation.
    8. Draw and label all functional regions of prokaryotic and eukaryotic genes.
    9. Compare and contrast different mechanisms of gene regulation in eukaryotic cells.
    10. Describe the transcription initiation complex of a regulated gene in eukaryotes.
    11. Define and articulate differences between gene expression and transcription regulation.
    12. Define a gene
    13. Distinguish between the roles of enhancers and other cis-acting elements in transcription regulation.
    14. Compare and contrast the genome and the epigenome.

    This page titled 12.1: Introduction is shared under a CC BY license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Gerald Bergtrom.

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