General Bacterial transcriptional regulation
Negative regulation of the lac operon
Negative regulation of the lac operon
Positive Regulation of the lac operon
100

Define negative vs positive regulation

positive- Increasing transcription rate under certain conditions

Negative- Decreasing transcription rate under certain conditions

100

For the negative regulation of the lac operon, the lac operon is controlled by an ____ that is subject to regulation by a the binding of a _____

operator

repressor/inducer

100

What do we mean by operators are cis- acting?

Cis- means on the same DNA molecule

so, cis acting means that an operator can only control the expression of genes that are on the same DNA, physically next to it


100

For positive regulation of lac operon, we have an lac operon activator which is called 

CAP (catabolite activator protein)

200

What is an activator protein vs a repressor and how do each do their job.

Activator protein binds to the binding site and and helps RNA polymerase II start doing its job

Repressor proteins on the other hand prevent transcription, by attaching to the operator. 

200

Why does lactose have to be present in order for the lac operon to be transcribed?

When lactose is present, it is converted into allolactose, which acts as an inducer molecule that binds to the allosteric site of the repressor, causing repressor to change shape, and detach from the operator, so now that the repressor is no the in the way, transcription can occur


**** Effector is a broad term for any molecule that can bind to a repressor or activator, but a inducer is specifically a type of effector that binds to the repressor protein

200

What is the F plasmid that we put into E coli?

Experiemental method where the F plasmid is a circular piece of DNA we put into E coli (bacteria), so this new plasmid and original bacterial DNA can exchange genetic material.

200

What binds to the allosteric domain of the activator CAP

cAMP

300

What is the operator vs the activator binding site

operator is the DNA site downstream of the promoter, where repressor protein binds to inhibit transcription

Activator binding site is the DNA site upstream of the promoter where an activator protein can bind and activate transcription

300

Describe what each letter on the LAC OPERON stands for

P - Promoter: Where rna polymerase binds to start transcription (lacP)

O- Operator: DNA sequence where the lac repressor protein binds (lacO)

Z- lacZ Gene: encodes the protein β-galactosidase (lacZ)

Y - LacY Gene: encodes the protein Permease (lacY)

A - LacA Gene: Encodes protein Transacetylase (lacA





300

What do we mean by operators are cis- acting?

Cis- means on the same DNA molecule

so, cis acting means that an operator can only control the expression of genes that are on the same DNA, physically next to it

Can be demonstrated with E coli and F plasmid experimentation. We inject a the F plasmid into the E coli. In the original E coli DNA, transcription is blocked because repressor is doing its job (Omeans operator is normal)

However, in the F plasmid, repressor cannot do its job because operator is mutated (Oc) so transcription goes on and on when it is not supposed to.

However, operators are CIS acting so that mutated operator in plasmid has no effect on the original DNA because it only affects its own plasmid, it doesnt transfer over

300

How do glucose levels regulate cAMP levels, and how does cAMP affect CAP

When glucose is high, cAMP is not produced

When glucose is low, cAMP is made, which then goes on to bind to the allosteric site of the activator CAP, which is return helps CAP turn on transcription, as it allows the CAP to connect with the RNA Polymerase II

400

what does  the allosteric domain of the repressor and the activator protein do?

A site in the repressor where a allosteric molecule (AKA the effector) comes and binds to, when it binds it changes the change of the repressor in a way that causes it to detach from the repressor causing transcription to occur now that the repressor is not in the way.

In the activator, there is also a site where the effector binds, causing the activator protein to shape change where it can start activating transcription.

400

If no lactose is present, what occurs?

the repressor is still stuck onto the operator, so transcription is blocked.

400

Now, what do we mean by repressors are trans acting?

If we have E coli with a mutated lacI gene ( the gene that encodes the lac repressor protein), so we have a mutated repressor protein, so now it cannot bind to that operator so now trancription is constantly on

however, if we inject new plasmid (F) with normal LacI gene, repressor protein is normal, and can bind to operator and block transcription. the effect can TRANSFER OVER to the original DNA, so now this E coli that initially had a problem of constant trancription can be regulated  and stopped appropiately because the effect of the F plasmid transferred over.


400

What happens if you have glucose present, lactose absent?

no lac mRNA

Glucose present means no cAMP, so the activator CAP will not bind to activator binding site, so transcription cannot be turned on

and no lactose means the repressor will stay stuck on the operator, so another reason for transcription to not turn on.

500

What is an operon and why do bacteria have operons?

An operon is a cluster of many genes that is controlled by a single promoter and regulatory sequence (by regulatory sequence I mean operators where repressors bind and activator binding sites where activators bind)

Bacteria are much simpler and have limited energy, thus operons are more effecient in producing multiple proteins all that the same time

500

What happens if there is a mutation in the operator sequence? And how do we label that

It prevents the repressor from binding, so lac operon is always on even in the absence of lactose, so transcription is constantly occuring and cant be stopped

O- meaning operator constitutive


500

what are super repressors?and what is the symbol for it

A super repressor is a different type of mutated form of the lac repressor protein that now causes the repressor to bind constantly to the operator, even when lactose is present, so as a result we have transcription inconveniently stopped. (symbol for super repressor is Is)

They are dominant so, even if we inject F plasmid with normal lacI gene encoding normal repressor, nothing will happen because super repressors are dominant


500

What happens if no glucose is there and lactose is present?

lots of lac mRNA being made

no glucose means cAMP is present, so cAMP can bind to CAP allowing CAP then to bind to the activator sequence allowing for transcription to be on

the effect is further amplified by lactose being present, it gets rid of the repressor protein on the operatoe, so now we have so much mRNA being transcribed


600

what does an inducer do to a repressor protein?

An inducer molecule binds to a repressor protein, causing a conformational change (a change in its shape) that prevents the repressor from binding to its DNA target, the operator

600

Now, what happens if there is a mutation in the repressor protein?


Mutation occured in the gene coding for  this repressor protein, what is that gene called?

Mutated repressor protein is not functioning so it cannot bind to operator, causing transcription to occur constantly even in absence of lactose.

The gene is called lacI 

I is the denoted letter for the gene downstream of the lac operon that codes for that lac repressor protein that goes on to act on that operator of the lac operon later

600

Operators are always ___

Repressors are always ____

cis acting

trans acting (for both versions of mutated repressors

600

What happens if glucose is present and lactose are present?

very little lac mRNA

glucose present means no cAMP so activator cap will not bind to the activating sequence, so it cannot help turn on transcription,

But, lactose is there so it gets rid of the repressor from the operator and allows for transcription to happen 

So a combination of this will lead to low levels of mRNA


700

What is the lac operon?

The lac operon is a cluster of genes that encode proteins for the uptake and metabolism of lactose, it is an primary example we use to describe prokaryotic gene regulation

700

Lets look at Strain 1: All the letters have a plus, meaning they are all wildtype so those O Z Y genes are doing their job as well and are not mutated. a negative sign means they are mutated. So b-galactosidase enzyme and permease is made as normally as the inducer is present 

For strain 2: We notice that there is an F plasmid injected into a bacterial E colu cell that has a mutated Z (because it is negative Z-). the only effect is that the Z-galactosidae protein is mutated from the plasmid but trancription occured as normal.

Strain 3: No plasmid, we just have the DNA of the E. Coli by itself. However, the operator is mutated because it states Oc, so repressor cannot bind and block transcription, so you have transcription occuring when it is not supposed, like when the inducer is not there. That is why there are all pluses.

Strain 4. Plasmid is back and is injected into the E coli. This time we have the F plasmid having a mutated operator, cuasing it to produce b-gala gene even when inducer is not present. However, permease is not express even in the absence of lactose, because it is mutated itself. 

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