Transcript
Molecular Biology Chapter 18 Control of Gene Expression in Bacteria
Gene Expression
Some genes are constitutively expressed
Which genes might fall into this category?
All genes are not expressed all of the time
Cells can control if a gene is expressed
Cells can control how much it is expressed
Gene regulation in Arabidopis thaliana
Some genes regulate other genes
About 27,000 genes total
About 1,200 regulatory
Why are genes regulated?
Cell differentiation
All cells have the same genome, do all cells need the same genes expressed?
Genes can be expressed only during certain stages of development
Why have different versions of hemoglobin?
Gene expression can change due to environmental variation
DNA mRNA Protein
Control can occur between any of these steps
(Arrow 1) Transcriptional control: RNA polymerase is prevented from binding to the promoter
Why would this be a good place for regulation?
(Arrow 2) Translational control: mRNA is degraded at a different rate or translation is not initiated
Why would this be a good place for regulation?
(Protein) Post-Translational control: protein is not properly folded to its functional conformation
Why would this be a good place for regulation?
Ecology of E.coli
Successful growth and reproduction requires efficient use of energy
Also good to exploit a wide variety of energy sources
Exploiting an energy source isn’t free
Transport proteins, enzymes
Different energy sources need different metabolic machinery
Different enzymes for glucose, lactose, sucrose, etc…
Glucose is preferred
Lactose metabolism
Disaccharide made of glucose and galactose
E.coli uses ?-galactosidase to break the lactose down into glucose and galactose
Do you think ?-galactosidase is a constitutive gene?
Experiment: Grow E.coli on media with glucose or media with lactose
Which is more likely to make ?-galactosidase?
Identifying mutants in E.coli
To study the proteins involved in lactose metabolism, identify mutants that can’t use lactose
Make ‘em yourself! (Monod)
Also used indicator plates
Colonies with ?-galactosidase turn yellow
Colonies with ?-galactosidase deficiency are white
3 mutations in lactose metabolism
Cells cant break apart lactose into glucose and galactose
Gene= lacZ, mutant= lacZ
Cells don’t import lactose
Gene= lacY, mutant= lacY, protein= galactoside permease
Cells express the lacZ and lacY genes all the time, even when lactose isn’t present
Gene= lacI, mutant= lacI
Constitutive mutant
2 mutations in functional genes
1 mutation in a regulatory gene
Functiona; genes (lacZ and lacY) are linked together in on operon
Operon= group of genes under the transcription control of 1 promoter
mRNA is polycistronic, includes code for multiple proteins
lac operon
RNA polymerase attaches to the lac operon promoter, mRNA is made for lacZ, lacY, and lacA as a single molecule
lacA= transacetylase, exports sugars when they are too abundant
Why express these 3 genes together?
lacI is controlled by its own promoter
Protein= repressor
Repressor binds to operator
Operator is between the promoter and the lacZ, lacY, and lacA genes
Physically stops RNA polymerase from transcribing the lac genes
Negative control: regulatory protein stops transcription
Do you think lacI is a constitutively expressed gene?
Need to regulate the behavior of the repressor protein
What would be a good signal to tell the repressor to let go of the operator?
Repressor protein has 4 subunits
Each subunit can bind a lactose molecule
Allosteric regulation
The new conformation doesn’t fit operator anymore, repressor lets go
RNA polymerase is free to transcribe the lac genes
Lactose = inducer
Enzymes that break down lactose are made
Lactose concentration in the cell drops
Less lactose to bind to repressor returns to its original form, binds to operator
Key points about negative control
Physical interaction between repressor and the RNA polymerase
Changes in the level of negative control happen post-translation
Repressor is always made, its structure is altered
Allows for rapid change in the expression of the lac genes
lacI and repressor aren’t the only mechanism for control
Upstream of the lac promoter is the CAP binding site
CAP= catabolite activator protein
Transcription is enhanced when CAP binds to the CAP binding site
Lac promoter is weak
Promoters may not cause RNA polymerase to transcribe at the maximum possible rate
CAP exerts positive control; causes transcription rate to increase
What controls CAP?
Cyclic AMP (cAMP)
cAMP binds to CAP
allosteric regulation
Allows CAP to bind to the CAP binding site
So..... what’s controlling cAMP
cAMP production
cAMP is produced from ATP by the enzyme adenylyl cyclase
What controls adenylyl cyclase?
Glucose!
Lac operon
High levels of glucose= low levels of cAMP
Low levels of cAMP= low binding of CAP to the binding site
Low binding of CAP to the binding site= reduced transcription of the lac genes
High glucose slows transcription of the lac operon
Why would this be adaptive
Control of the lac operon
Combination of positive and negative control allows for E.coli to quickly change their metabolism to exploit the best food sources