This lecture discusses regulatory mechanisms in microbial genetics. It covers negative control of transcription through repression and induction, using the trp and lac operons as examples. Positive control is also discussed using the maltose regulon. The lecture describes global regulatory mechanisms like catabolite repression that control many genes simultaneously. It also covers mutations, mutagens, DNA repair mechanisms, and methods for selecting and screening mutants.
This lecture discusses regulatory mechanisms in microbial genetics. It covers negative control of transcription through repression and induction, using the trp and lac operons as examples. Positive control is also discussed using the maltose regulon. The lecture describes global regulatory mechanisms like catabolite repression that control many genes simultaneously. It also covers mutations, mutagens, DNA repair mechanisms, and methods for selecting and screening mutants.
This lecture discusses regulatory mechanisms in microbial genetics. It covers negative control of transcription through repression and induction, using the trp and lac operons as examples. Positive control is also discussed using the maltose regulon. The lecture describes global regulatory mechanisms like catabolite repression that control many genes simultaneously. It also covers mutations, mutagens, DNA repair mechanisms, and methods for selecting and screening mutants.
This lecture discusses regulatory mechanisms in microbial genetics. It covers negative control of transcription through repression and induction, using the trp and lac operons as examples. Positive control is also discussed using the maltose regulon. The lecture describes global regulatory mechanisms like catabolite repression that control many genes simultaneously. It also covers mutations, mutagens, DNA repair mechanisms, and methods for selecting and screening mutants.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 3
Lecture 14: Microbial Genetics II
Overview of regulatory mechanisms
- the expression of a gene can be regulated by: 1) controlling the activity of the enzyme, 2) controlling the amount of enzyme produced (transcriptional control), 3) controlling the transcription of mRNA MOST EFFICIENT Regulation of gene expression in bacteria - constitutive enzymes: always present in cell (ex. genes in glycolysis) - transcriptional control is energy-efficient b/c mRNA and proteins are synthesized only as they are needed Negative control of transcription - repression: decrease amount of mRNA that encodes enzyme v. induction: increase - transcriptional regulation: involves allosteric regulatory proteins that bind to DNA - for negative control repressor protein inhibits mRNA synthesis - corepressors and inducers are collectively called effectors - repression (typically affects anabolic enzymes) o when cells are exposed to a particular end product (corepressor), synthesis decreases o ex. synthesis of tryptophan and arginine in E. coli - induction (typically affects catabolic enzymes) o in the presence of inducers, cells synthesize more enzymes o ex. production of B-galactosidase in presence of lactose Operon model of gene expression - production of enzymes determined by structural genes - in bacteria, grp. of coordinately regulated structural genes w/ related metabolic functions and the promoter and operator sites = operon - repressible trp operon (tryptophan biosynthesis) o regulatory gene codes for repressor that is synthesized in an inactive conformation that wont bind to the operator -> initially genes are transcribed o when corepressor (tryptophan) is present, it binds allosteric site of repressor -> repressor/corepressor complex is active and binds to operator site and block transcription o when sufficient amounts of trp are present, biosynthesis is repressed - inducible lac operon (lactose catabolism) o regulatory gene codes for active repressor that binds operator and blocks transcription initially o when inducer (allolactose) is present, it binds allosteric site of repressor -> inducer/repressor complex is inactive and cant bind to operator site o when lactose is present, catabolic enzymes are induced Global regulatory mechanisms - global control systems regulate the expression of many genes simultaneously - catabolite repression is a global control system, helps cells make most efficient use of carbon surfaces o for cataboliterepressible enzymes, catabolite activator protein (CAP) must bind to an activator binding site on DNA before RNA polymerase can bind o CAP can bind tot eh DNA activator binding site only if the CAP has first bound cAMP, an inducer
Lecture 14: Microbial Genetics II
-
Lac operon is under the control of catabolite repression + negative regulatory
system - Catabolite repression in the lac operon o Transcription require presence of lactose and absence of glucose o Transcription of structural genes for catabolic enzymes is induced by the absence of glucose cAMP acts a cellular alarm (alarmone) that accumulates in absence of glucose and serves as an inducer for CAP, leading to activation of transcription as glucose accumulates, cAMP synthesis shuts down, cell actively transports cAMP out of cell in presence of glucose, CAP does not bind and transcription is repressed o glucose metabolizing enzymes are produced constitutively + in presence of preferred substrate, metabolism of alternative carbon sources is inhibited by catabolic repression repressors and activators are both allosteric proteins that change conformation when bound in an allosteric site Positive control of transcription - maltose regulon: o positive control of transcription is implemented by activator proteins o activator protein activity is modified by effectors o in presence of effector, effector/activator complex binds to the activatorbinding site on DNA and activates binding of RNA polymerase and transcription of structural genes o for positive control of enzyme induction, effector promotes the binding of activator protein -> stimulates transcription o ex. of positive control: catabolism of maltose w/ maltose acting as the inducer (effector) for maltose activator protein o enzyme for maltose catabolism are encoded by a regulon, multiple operons under a single regulatory protein mutations and mutants mutation: change in the genetic material - a mutation is a heritable change in the DNA seq. that can lead to a change in the product coded for by the mutated gene and a change in phenotype o mutant differs from its parental strain in genotype - many mutations are neutral (silent), some are disadvantageous (or lethal), others are beneficial - types of mutations: o base substitution (point mutation) occurs when one bp in DNA is replaced o also: missense mutation (cause AA substitution) or nonsense (early stop codons) in missense inactive protein, or one w/ reduced activity, is encoded in nonsense incomplete polypeptide is made o frameshift mutation: one or a few bp are deleted or added -> cause more dramatic changes in the DNA and result in complete loss of gene function o spontaneous mutations: occur w/ presence of mutagen
Lecture 14: Microbial Genetics II
frequency of mutation - mutation rate is prob. that a gene will mutate when a cell divides, expressed as 10 to a negative power (typically 10-7 to 10=11 per bp) - mutations occur randomly along a chromosome - RNA genomes typically accumulate mutations at higher frequencies than DNA genomes - Low rate of spontaneous mutation is beneficial, provides genetic diversity Mutagens and mutagenesis - mutagens are chemical, physical or biological agents in envt that cause permanent changes in DNA - chemical mutagens include: bp mutagens, nucleoside analogs, frameshift mutagens - ionizing radiation causes formation of ions and free radicals that react w/ DNA -> cause base substitutions or breakage of sugar-phosphate backbone - UV radiation is non-ionizing, causing thymine dimers Repair of mutated DNA - nucleotide excision repair (aka mismatch repair) can repair by cutting out and replacing the damaged portion o only template DNA strand is methylated o endonuclease recognizes error in nonmethylated strand and makes 2 cuts to remove short sequence w/ error o DNA poly. synthesizes complementary replacement strand o DNA ligase joins replacement strand to original strand - Photoreactivation enzymes (light-repair enzymes; photolyases) can repair thymine dimers - Some DNA damage can lead to cell death if not repaired. Compelx cellular mechanism called SOS regulatory system is activated as a result of some types of DNA damage and initiates DNA repair processes, both error-prone and highfidelity (error-free) Selection and screening of mutants - selectable mutations: give mutant growth advantage -> if selection is possible, mutatns must be identified by screening - identifying mutants: can be detected by selecting for altered phenotype, positive selection involves rejection of nonmutated cells + selection of mutant cells, replica plating is used for negative selection (mutants wont grow) mutagenesis and carcinogenesis: The Ames Test - Ames test: inexpensive and rapid test for possible chemical carcinogens - Assumes that mutant cell can revert to a normal cell in presence of mutagen and that many mutagens are carcinogens - Reversions to the nonmutant state are selected for