Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes 0
Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes 0
Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes 0
PART V
Gene Regulation in
Prokaryotes
CHAPTER OUTLINE
diarrheal disease
Bacteria are ingested in contaminated drinking water
Respond to changes in environment by increasing or decreasing
in diarrhea
2)
Fig. 15.2
Posttranscriptional control
Stability of mRNA
Efficiency of translation initiation
Stability of polypeptide
10
11
E. coli grown in
medium containing
both glucose and
lactose,
they prefer glucose.
Fig. 15.3
12
13
14
=alloctase
Fig. 15.5a
15
Fig. 15.2b
16
Induction of the
lac operon in E.
coli
When lactose (or
IPTG) is present:
Inducer binds to the lac
repressor
Repressor changes
shape and cannot bind to
operator
RNA polymerase binds
to the promoter and
initiates transcription of
the polycistronic lac
mRNA
17
18
Constitutive expression of -galactosidase and permease was caused by mutations in the lacI gene
Constitutive mutants (lacI) express the enzymes in the absence and presence of inducer
(irrespective of environmental conditions.)
The existence of these constitutive mutants suggested that lacI encodes a negative regulator, or
repressor.
a mutation in the lacI gene generates a defect in the repressor protein that prevents it from carrying out
this negative regulatory function
19
20
21
If the repressor protein interacts with both the operator and the
inducer, what outcome would you predict for mutations that disrupt
one of these interactions without affecting the other
????
22
Fig. 15.8
23
Fig. 15.9
24
Fig. 15.10
25
Fig. 15.11
26
27
Trans-acting elements:
Can diffuse through the cytoplasm and act at target DNA sites on any
DNA molecule in the cell
Cis-acting elements:
Can only influence expression of adjacent genes on the same DNA
molecule
28
Fig. 15.12
29
Fig. 15.13
30
Fig. 15.14
The lacOC mutation affects expression of genes only on the DNA that
it is located on
31
32
33
Fig. 15.15
34
35
36
Fig. 15.16
37
38
39
40
Fig. 15.18
41
434 repressor binds to an operator in the DNA of the 434 virus that has integrated into the bacterial
genome and prevents transcription and production of viral particles.
Amino acid sequences in the -helix of 434 repressor were modified to have amino acid sequence like
that of P22 repressor
Fig. 15.19
42
43
44
5'TGTGAGTTAGCTCACA3'
3'ACACTCAATCGAGTGT5'
many of the DNA sequences to which a negative or positive regulator
protein binds exhibit rotational symmetry;
that is, their two DNA strands have an almost identical sequence when read
in the 5-to-3 direction on both strands
REGULATORY PROTEINS ARE OLIGOMERS COMPOSED OF TWO TO
FOUR POLYPEPTIDE SUBUNITS
oligomeric protein can bind in a genes regulatory region as clusters,
many contacts can be established between the protein and the regulatory region.
45
Fig. 15.21
46
47
Fig. 15.23
48
49
Fig. 15.24
50
Fig. 15.25
51
52
Fig. 15.26
53
Identifying sets of genes regulated
by the same stimulus
Fig. 15.27
Fig. 15.28a
Fig. 15.28b
Copyright The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required to reproduce or display Hartwell et al., 4th edition, Chapter 15
54
55
56
Fig. 15.29a
57
58
Fig. 15.31
59
60
Fig. 15.32
61
After stress response, a small RNA (dsrA) binds to rpoS mRNA and
allows translation
Fig. 15.33
62
63
diarrheal disease
Bacteria are ingested in contaminated drinking water
Respond to changes in environment by increasing or decreasing
in diarrhea
64
65
66
Fig. 15.34
67
adherence?
Why is there a cascade of regulatory factors (ToxR and ToxT)?
A better understanding of V. cholerae pathogenesis will lead to