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Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

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Page 1: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Regulation of Gene expression

by

E. Börje Lindström

This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Page 2: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Introduction• Biosynthetic reactions consume energy: Sophisticated control

mechanisms in bacteria

• Available energy is limited in Nature:

Production of as much cell material per energy as possible

• The environment is important: - the nutrient in the medium is used first

- rapid and drastic changes in the nutrients

- reversible control reactions needed

• Two types of model systems:

- Biosynthetic

- Catabolic

Page 3: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactionsTryptophan is chosen as a model system:

- Tryptophan is an essential amino acid

- Tryptophan is missing in some plant proteins

- of industrial importance

• The bacterial cells are controlling the biosynthesis of tryptophan in three ways:

- feedback inhibition

- end product repression

- attenuation

Page 4: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactions, cont.• Feedback inhibition:

- The biosynthesis of tryptophan occurs in several steps:

Chorismate + glutamine antranilic acid B C D tryptophanE5E4E3E2E1

Mechanism: - enzyme E1 (the first enzyme) is an allosteric protein with

- a binding site for for the substrate

- a binding site for the effectors (inhibitor = try)

• E1 + try [E1-try]-complex that is inactive

• the complete biosynthesis of try is stopped

Page 5: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactions, cont.

• End product repression (EPR):

- In spite of ’end product inhibition’

- loss of energy due to enzymes E2-E5 are still synthesized

- another regulation is needed

- end product repression

Page 6: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactions, cont.Mechanism:

P O att E1 E3E2 E5E4

P = promoter;

O = operator

att = attenuator

E1 – E5 = structural genes for the enzymes E1-E5.

• RNA polymerase binds to P Initiation of mRNA synthesis

• The repressor binds to O Blocks the RNA polymerase movement

• The repressor is an allosteric protein

- inactive without tryptophan (does not bind to the operator)

• tryptophan acts as co-repressor -binds to the repressor

- makes the repressor active

Page 7: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactions, cont.

• Attenuator region: - barrier for the RNA polymerase

1) + try the polymerase removed from the DNA

2) - try the polymerase continues into the structural genes

• EPR inhibits all enzymes in tryptophan biosynthesis

save energy

- however, a slow total inhibition – does not effect already existing enzymes- high specificity – only the tryptophan operon is effected

Page 8: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactions, cont.

Page 9: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactions, cont.

Page 10: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactions, cont.

Page 11: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Biosynthetic reactions, cont.

Page 12: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Catabolic reactions• Catabolic systems are inducible

• Model system – lactose operon in E. coli

• The inducer is the available carbon/energy source

R P O lacAlacYlacZ

• Where:

- gene R : repressor protein – active without the inducer

- blocks mRNA polymerase

- gene lacZ : -galactosidase – splits lactose into glycose + galactose

- gene lacY: permease – transport lactose into the cell

- no attenuator sequence in catabolic systems

Page 13: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Catabolic reactions, cont.

• Mechanism:

+ lactose: - transported into the cell transformed into allo-lactose (inducer)

- allo-lactose + repressor [allo-lactose-repressor]- complex inactive

- RNA polymerase starts transcription of lactose operon

- -galactosidase is produced break down of lactose

- lactose: -[allo-lactose-repressor]- complex disintegrate

- the repressor binds to O and blocks further transcription of the operon

Page 14: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Catabolic reactions, cont.

Page 15: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Catabolic reactions, cont.

Page 16: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Catabolic repression (glucose-effect)

• Works in bacteria and other prokaryotes (here in E. Coli K12)

• Diauxi: - growth on two energy sources glucose + lactose

- two-step growth curve

Log OD

time

glucose

lactose

Growth on lactose

Growth on glucose

Page 17: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Catabolic repression (glucose-effect)

• Mechanism:

-cAMP an important substance

- required for initiation of transcription of many inducible systems

- global regulation

- glucose present [cAMP] (decreases)

- CAP (katabolite activator protein) an allosteric protein

- [cAMP-CAP]-complex binds to the promoter promotes transcription

-production of -galactosidase -1) lactose present

- 2) [cAMP-CAP]-complex present

Page 18: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Catabolic repression (glucose-effect), cont.

• + glucose:

- no [cAMP-CAP]-complex

- no transcription of lactose operon

- no -galactosidase production

• - glucose:

- [cAMP-CAP]-complex present

- transcription of lactose operon

- -galactosidase production

- brake down of lactose

Page 19: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Catabolic repression (glucose-effect), cont.

• Conclusions:

- Katabolite repression – a very useful function in bacteria

- forces the bacteria to use the best energy source first

Page 20: Regulation of Gene expression by E. Börje Lindström This learning object has been funded by the European Commissions FP6 BioMinE project

Other types of Regulations• Constitutive systems:

- Enzymes that are needed during all types of growth

- e.g. those involved in glycolysis

- no regulation

- always present

• mRNA: - Unstable

- half-life ~ 2 min sub-units

- new mRNA

• polycistronic mRNA - one operator for several genes

• monocistronic mRNA - one operator per gene (in eukaryotes)