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11. Regulatory Mechanisms
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What do cells control to respond appropriately and efficiently to environmental controls?
gene expression
- which proteins are made
enzyme activity
- which proteins are on/off
feedback inhibition of a biosynthetic pathway
regulation of enzyme activity
to determine which pathways are active by responding to product or substrate levels
most efficient place is at the
first enzymatic step specific
to that pathway and no others
allosteric regulation
enzyme has two sites:
active site
- binds the substrate and catalyzes reaction
allosteric site
- binds the end product, prevents catalysis at the active site
Eukaryotic vs. Bacterial protein synthesis
Eukaryotic:
transcription - nucleus, translation -cytoplasm
introns are removed
mature mRNA exported from the nucleus
one protein per mRNA
Bacterial:
transcription -
cytoplasm
genes are organized in
operons
, creating polycistronic mRNAs
translation occurs in same compartment and same time as transcription
multiple genes
on one RNA are translated separately
σ factor
helps RNA polymerase core enzyme recognize and bind to the
promoter
region
strong vs. weak promoter
strong promoter - better
match with consensus
sequence, yields more binding by the σ factor and more transcription of gene
weak promoter - worse match with consensus sequence, extra transcriptional activators are often needed to turn on transcription of these genes
accessory transcription factors
promote or repress transcription of specific genes
often contain a DNA-binding domain and a separate regulatory domain that determines when the protein is active
often act as dimers and bind to direct or inverted repeats on DNA
repressor
bind to specific DNA sequences and
block transcription
of downstream genes
ways to control repressor activity
end product of biosynthetic pathways can act as
corepressors
-
arginine
is corepressor that binds repressor to prevent RNA poly from transcribing the operon
specific enzyme substrates can act as
inducers
of transcription by blocking action of repressor
-
lac
repressor stops transcription of lac operon unless lactose present, lactose is inducer that binds and inactivates repressor
activators and how they work
positive regulators recognize specific DNA sequences in the promoters
can increase the affinity of RNA pol for the promoter by providing
extra binding
contacts for RNA pol
-
maltose
operon activation requires maltose activator protein and maltose
can act by
bending
the DNA to allow better contacts with the promoter
can also bind hundreds of bases away and
loop
the DNA around to touch RNA pol at distant promoter
Author
cornpops
ID
104214
Card Set
11. Regulatory Mechanisms
Description
general microbiology midterm 1
Updated
2011-10-05T03:43:57Z
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