Utilisateur
To adapt to environmental changes, maximize growth efficiency, and avoid wasting energy by producing proteins only when needed.
They regulate by controlling RNA levels and by on/off regulation (induction or repression) of genes or operons.
Transcriptional, translational, and post-translational regulation, each affecting different stages of gene expression.
Transcription initiation, because it is the most energy-efficient point of control.
Alternative sigma factors, repressors, activators, antisense RNAs, RNA secondary structure, RNA stability, and protein stability/modification.
It binds the operator, often overlaps the promoter, and turns off transcription (negative regulation).
It binds an activator site upstream of −35, helps recruit RNA polymerase, and turns on transcription (positive regulation).
In negative regulation, loss-of-function is constitutive and recessive; in positive regulation, loss-of-function is non-inducible and recessive.
Repressor GOF → non-inducible; Activator GOF → constitutive; both behave dominantly
MacConkey lactose plates (white = Lac⁻, pink = Lac⁺) and X-gal plates (blue for β-gal activity).
They transferred mutations to an F′ lac plasmid via recombination and formed partial diploids by conjugation.
Number of gene products, dominant vs recessive, and cis vs trans nature of mutations.
lacZ (β-galactosidase) and lacY (lactose permease).
Low lacZ/Y expression without lactose and high expression when lactose (inducer) is present.
lacI⁻ (repressor null) and lacOᶜ (operator constitutive).
They are constitutive, recessive, and complemented by lacI⁺ because LacI acts in trans.
They are dominant, cis-acting, and cannot be complemented because the operator is DNA, not a protein.
Structural genes Z/Y/A, promoter lacP, operator lacO, and repressor LacI.
Lactose → allolactose, allolactose binds LacI → LacI dissociates → RNAP transcribes lacZ/Y/A.
lacZ⁻/lacY⁻, lacIˢ (super-repressor), and lacP⁻ (promoter mutant).
They fail to bind inducer or bind it but cannot release from the operator → always repress. Dominant
Third gene lacA, true inducer allolactose, and LacI binding to three operators (O₁, O₂, O₃) enabling DNA looping.
crp⁻ and cya⁻, which produce Lac⁻ and non-inducible phenotypes.
CRP (activator protein), cAMP (effector), and the CRP-binding site upstream of Plac.
Lactose present, LacI inactivated, low glucose, high cAMP → CRP bound.
It activates many sugar operons, and ensures preferred carbon sources (glucose) are used before lactose.
Constitutive expression because lacI⁻ makes no functional repressor, so the operator is always free and lacZ/Y are always transcribed. LacI acts in trans, so only the mutant chromosome is affected.
The merodiploid becomes inducible, showing that LacI protein is diffusible (trans-acting) and can repress both chromosomal and plasmid operons
No — lacOᶜ remains constitutive because the operator is a cis-acting DNA site, not a protein. Only the operon on the mutant DNA is permanently ON.
Inducible, because the only functional lacZ⁺ gene sits next to the normal operator (lacO⁺). The lacOᶜ chromosome has lacZ⁻, so even though it is constitutive, no β-gal is produced.
Operon remains non-inducible because LacIˢ repressor cannot bind inducer (allolactose), so it never dissociates from the operator. Dominant over lacI⁺.
Non-inducible, because RNA polymerase cannot bind the mutated promoter, so transcription cannot occur regardless of repressor state.
Constitutive expression, demonstrating negative regulation, where loss of a repressor = operon always ON (page 9 diagram).
constitutive, because lacOᶜ prevents repressor binding regardless of whether repressor is present. Shows the operator is a cis-dominant DNA element.
No, because CRP is required for positive regulation via CRP–cAMP activation. Without CRP, RNA polymerase cannot efficiently initiate transcription from Plac.
Non-inducible, because cya⁻ cannot make cAMP, so CRP never activates. Repressor may be inactivated by lactose, but transcription remains too inefficient to turn ON.
Mostly OFF, because glucose keeps cAMP levels low → CRP is inactive, so positive regulation cannot occur even though lactose removes LacI. This is catabolite repression.
(1) Allolactose binds LacI → LacI dissociates from operator.
(2) cAMP rises → binds CRP → CRP activates RNAP at Plac. Strong induction only occurs when both conditions are met.
OFF because lactose is absent → LacI remains bound. Even though cAMP is high and CRP active, negative regulation overrides positive regulation.
Low-level, weak induction, because the operon can only rely on repressor inactivation; CRP cannot recruit RNA polymerase without its binding site.
Constitutive expression, because lacOᶜ prevents any repressor (even LacIˢ) from binding. The cis-dominant operator mutation overrides trans-acting changes.
Lac⁻, because lacZ and lacY are both required for lactose transport (Y) and cleavage (Z); lacA alone cannot enable lactose metabolism.
