Control of Gene Expression



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Control of Gene Expression

Control of Gene Expression

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Control of Gene Expression (Learning Objectives) Explain the role of gene expression is differentiation of function of cells which leads to the emergence of different tissues, organs, and organ systems despite the fact that all cells have the same DNA. Recognize the difference between house-keeping genes and cell-specific genes, using the example of the pancreas and its cells Explain the role of gene duplications and transposition in generating families of genes that carry similar but not identical function, using the example of hemoglobin. Define the term pseudogene. Explain the advantage to humans to having members of the globin gene family differentially gene expression during the embryonic, fetal, and adult stages. Learn the five primary levels of control of gene expression by name, sub-cellular location, and mechanism: Chromatin re-modeling or packing, transcription factors, alternative splicing, micro-rnas and RNA interference, and the post translational controls. Recognize the mechanisms and modifications that maximize the number of proteins that can be generated from a more limited number of human genes. 1

Control of Gene Expression (Outline) Same DNA different cells House-keeping genes and cell-specific genes From a stem cell to progenitor cells and their daughters. Example: Pancreatic cells Duplications and transposition- gene families advantageous to organisms Example: Globin genes (embryonic, fetal, and adult) 5 primary levels of control o Nuclear: chromatin, transcription, and post transcription o Cytoplasmic: mrna and protein synthesis, post-translational Maximizing number of proteins produced from a fixed number of genes 2

Gene Expression Through Time and Tissue Changes in gene expression may occur over time and in different cell types This may occur at the molecular, tissue, or organ/gland level 3

Gene Expression Cells express 3-5% of their genes House-keeping genes- all the time Genes turned on or off- internal and external signals Genes turned on only in some cell types not others while others are permanently shut down (Highly specialized nerves or muscle) 4

Pancreas The pancreas is a dual gland - Exocrine part releases digestive enzymes into ducts - Endocrine part secretes polypeptide hormones directly into the bloodstream 5

Figure 11.3 Figure 11.4 6

Transposition A genomic event: certain sequences jump about the genome Transposons is a single jumping sequence 7

Hemoglobin Each globin surrounds an iron-containing heme group Figure 11.1 8

Hemoglobin Adult hemoglobin has four globular polypeptide chains - Two alpha (α) chains = 141 amino acids - chromosome 11 - Two beta (β) chains = 146 amino acids - chromosome 16 9

Organization of Globin Genes in the human genome ᵋ 10

Pseudogenes have accumulated too many mutations and produce no functional proteins They are transcribed but are not translated 11

Members of both the α and β families are expressed during the developmental stages: embryonic, fetal and/or adult The embryonic and fetal hemoglobins have higher affinity for oxygen than do adult forms, ensuring transfer of oxygen from mother to developing fetus. 12

Globin Chain Switching Subunits change in response to oxygen levels Subunit makeup varies over lifetime - Embryo = Two epsilon (ε) + two zeta (ζ) - Fetus = Two gamma (γ) + two alpha (α) - Adult = Two beta (β) + two alpha (α) - The adult type is about 99% of hemoglobins by four years of age 13

Globin Chain Switching Figure 11.2 14

Control of Gene expression 5 primary levels Nuclear levels Chromatin packing Transcriptional level Post-transcriptional level Cytoplasmic levels Translational level Post-translational level Figure 11.8 15

Control of Gene Expression Nuclear level controls 1) Chromatin remodeling = On/off switch 2) Transcription Factors 3) Alternative splicing Dimmer switch includes micrornas to silence gene expression 16

Chromatin Remodeling Nucleosomal beads of chromatin: DNA and histones Beads on a string Chromatin packing is the degree of nucleosome coiling Histones play major role in gene expression Expose DNA when it is to be transcribed shield it when it is to be silenced 17

Chromatin Remodeling Specific Chemical modifications that bind to histones and DNA are: - Acetyl group- histones - Methyl groups- histones and DNA - Phosphate groups- histones 18

Chromatin Remodeling 19

20

Maximizing Genetic Information Alternate splicing help to greatly expand the gene number Figure 11.9 21

MicroRNAs : class of noncoding RNAs 21-22 bases long MicroRNAs The human genome has about 1,000 distinct micrornas regulate expression of at least 1/3 rd of the proteinencoding genes Interfere with gene expression by binding to a specific mrna - Degradation - Blocking translation 22

23

RNA interference block gene expression Protein complex Degradation of mrna Dicer OR mirna Target mrna Hydrogen bond Blockage of translation24

Maximizing Genetic Information Figure 11.8 Figure 11.11 25

Maximizing Genetic Information Post-translational modifications - Protein cleavage to get two products - Addition of sugars and lipids to create glycoproteins and lipoproteins 26

Post-translational modifications To produce functional proteins - enzymatic cleavage - chemical modifications - transport to the appropriate destination Improperly modified proteins are promptly degraded 27

Maximizing Genetic Information Dentinogenesis imperfecta - Caused by a deficiency in the two proteins DPP and DSP - Both are cut from the same DSPP protein 28

Maximizing Genetic Information Figure 11.8 Figure 11.11 29