Genome Organization
Eukaryotic Transcription
Bacterial Transcription
Eukaryotic Transcription Regulation
Bacterial Transcription Regulation
100

True or false: Telomeres contribute to organized segregation during mitosis.

False (centromeres do this; telomeres are at the end of chromosomes and protect them from degradation)

100

List the three basic steps of transcription.

Initiation, elongation, termination

100

True or false: Bacteria have three types of RNA polymerases, RNA Pol I, RNA Pol II, and RNA Pol III.

False

100

Both core and ____ promoters are necessary for transcription in eukaryotes.

Proximal

100

True or false: DNA supercoiling is one way transcription is regulated in bacteria.

True

200

Histone acetylation results in ___________ (euchromatin, heterochromatin), where nucleosomes are packed _________ (tightly, loosely) and transcription is ___________ (upregulated, downregulated).

Euchromatin, loosely, upregulated

200

Name the polymerase used in eukaryotes to transcribe protein-coding genes.

RNA Pol II

200

Bacteria contain _____, which is a group of multiple linked genes that share one promoter.

Operons

200

Which of these is NOT one mechanism of eukaryotic transcription regulation that bacteria LACK? 

Histone modifications, distal regulatory elements, multiple polymerase types, transcription factors

Transcription factors

200

When tryptophan is abundant, the trp operon is _______ (activated, repressed).

Repressed

300

Describe what a nucleosome consists of.

DNA wrapped around a nucleosome core/histone octamer (2x H2A, 2x H2B, H3, H4)

300

This domain of RNA Pol II consists of multiple repeats of a heptapeptide sequence and undergoes phosphorylation to regulate the transition between different steps of eukaryotic transcription.

C-terminal domain (CTD)


300

The core RNA polymerase complex plus the σ subunit makes up the ________.

Holoenzyme

300

Give 1 example of a disease caused by mutations in a transcriptional regulatory element.

β-thalassemia, hemophilia, hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin, δ-thalassemia, X-linked deafness, asthma and allergies, Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome, α-thalassemia

300

Describe the conditions (stimuli) required for the lac operon to be ON, or transcriptionally active.

Absence of glucose, presence of lactose

400

State the role of H2A, H2B, H3, and H4. (they are all kind of the same).

Assemble to form the histone octamer, the core of the nucleosome, to help compact eukaryotic DNA.

400

Name one possible function of lncRNAs (long noncoding RNAs).

Get processed into small RNAs (e.g. miRNAs), bind proteins to affect their behavior, hybridize with sense RNA to cause alternative splicing or generate siRNAs, affect transcription of other genes

400

Explain the role of the σ subunit.

Increase affinity of the complex to promoters by recognizing their consensus sequences, stabilizing the initiation complex for transcription initiation.

400

Give 3 examples of types of distal regulatory elements in eukaryotes.

Silencers, insulators, locus control regions, enhancers

400

Identify the mistake in this explanation: The lac operon has multiple components. The operator is a protein that binds the lac operon to turn transcription off. The activator is a protein that binds the lac operon to turn transcription on.

The operator is not a protein; it’s a sequence of DNA that the repressor (encoded by lacI) binds.

500

Two part question: Name one protein that packs bacterial DNA and whether they are DNA-bending or DNA-bridging.

IHF - DNA-bending

HU - DNA-bending

H-NS - DNA-bridging

SMC - DNA-bridging

500

Describe the mediator and its role in eukaryotic transcription.

Multi-protein complex that acts as a bridge between TFs bound to regulatory sequences and RNA polymerase. Facilitates RNA polymerase recruitment to the promoter and subsequently transcription initiation

500

Name and briefly describe the two main termination mechanisms in bacteria.

Rho-dependent termination - Rho protein binds the rut sequence and causes RNA polymerase to dissociate 

Intrinsic/sequence-dependent/rho-independent termination - Sequence in the RNA transcript forms a hairpin structure, causing the RNA Pol to pause and the RNA to be released

500

This region controls the expression of multiple globin genes during different stages of erythroid cell development and contains DNase I hypersensitive sites that mark areas accessible to transcription factors.

β-globin locus

500

Which of these describes a mechanism of the ara operon? 

1. The same protein serves as both an activator and a repressor. 2. Ribosome stalling on the leader sequence of its mRNA transcript allows transcription to continue. 3. Transcription is regulated by both a dissociable repressor and an activator.

The same protein serves as both an activator and a repressor.