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Section 8.11.2: The Use of Mutants to Study the lac Operon

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    Single mutants of the lac operon

    The lac operon and its regulators were first characterized by studying mutants of E. coli that exhibited various abnormalities in lactose metabolism. Some mutants expressed the lac operon genes constitutively, meaning the operon was expressed whether or not lactose was present in the medium. Such mutant are called constitutive mutants.

    The operator locus (lacO) - One example is Oc, in which a mutation in an operator sequence and reduces or precludes the repressor (the lacI gene product) from recognizing and binding to the operator sequence. Thus, in Oc mutants, lacZ, lacY, and lacA are expressed whether or not lactose is present.

    The lacI locus – One type of mutant allele of lacI (callled I-) prevents either the production of a repressor polypeptide or produces a polypeptide that cannot bind to the operator sequence. This is also a constitutive expresser of the lac operon because absence of repressor binding permits transcription.

    Another type of mutant of lacI called Is prevents the repressor polypeptide from binding lactose, and thus will bind to the operator and be non-inducible.. This mutant constitutively represses the lac operon whether lactose is present or not. The lac operon is not expressed and this mutant is called a “super-suppressor”.

    The F-factor and two lac operons in a single cell – partial diploid in E.coli

    More can be learned about the regulation of the lac operon when two different copies are present in one cell. This can be accomplished by using the F-factor to carry one copy, while the other is on the genomic E. coli chromosome. This results in a partial diploid in E. coli.

    The F-factor is an episome that is capable of being either a free plasmid or integrated into the host bacterial chromosome. This switching is accomplished by IS elements where unequal crossing over can recombine the F-factor and adjacent DNA sequences (genes) in and out of the host chromosome. Researchers have used this genetic tool to create partial diploids (merozygotes) that allow them to test the regulation with different combinations of different mutations in one cell. For example, the F-factor copy may have a IS mutation while the genomic copy might have an OC mutation. How would this cell respond to the presence/absence of lactose (or glucose)? This partial diploid can be used to determine that IS is dominant to I+, which in turn is dominant to I-. It can also be used to show the OC mutation only acts in cis- while the lacI mutation can act in trans- .


    This page titled Section 8.11.2: The Use of Mutants to Study the lac Operon is shared under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Todd Nickle and Isabelle Barrette-Ng via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.