Utilisateur
Transcription initiation, elongation, termination, translation initiation, elongation, termination, and protein activity (stability, location, modification).
Transcription initiation, because it prevents waste and energy loss.
Catabolic: induced by substrate, effector = inducer, repressor loses DNA binding when inducer present.
Anabolic: repressed by product, effector = corepressor, repressor gains DNA binding when corepressor present.
Aporepressor (no effector bound, cannot repress) and corepressor-bound repressor (active DNA-binding form).
trpE, trpD, trpC, trpB, trpA encode enzymes of the tryptophan synthesis pathway.
trpR is unlinked (separate part of the genome) and encodes the TrpR repressor protein.
Tryptophan, acting as a corepressor in a negative repression system.
Tryptophan binds TrpR → induces active conformation
TrpR–tryptophan complex binds trpO (overlaps promoter)
Binding physically blocks RNA polymerase from initiating transcription.
TrpR remains an aporepressor and cannot bind DNA, so the operon is ON and full-length mRNA is produced.
trpR⁻ (defective repressor) and trpOᶜ (operator mutation preventing binding).
Transcription begins normally, may be terminated in the leader region, and is controlled by translation-dependent changes in mRNA secondary structure.
trpR⁻ mutants still show partial regulation
Mutations lowering tRNAᵗʳᵖ increase transcription
Deleting the leader region abolishes regulation.
Regions 1, 2, 3, 4 form alternative hairpins: 1:2, 2:3, and 3:4 (terminator).
It encodes a short peptide with two adjacent Trp codons; ribosome stalling here signals low tryptophan, altering hairpin formation.
tRNAᵗʳᵖ abundant → ribosome quickly translates to stop codon
Ribosome blocks region 2
Regions 3 & 4 pair → terminator hairpin forms
Transcription stops early (~140 nt).
tRNAᵗʳᵖ scarce → ribosome stalls at Trp codons
Region 1 blocked but region 2 free
Regions 2 & 3 pair → anti-terminator
Region 4 cannot pair with 3
Transcription continues through structural genes.
Ribosome position on the leader
Region availability
Relative timing of transcription vs translation.
Mutations that prevent 2:3 pairing (favoring 3:4) or mutation of AUG start codon, preventing ribosome loading → persistent 1:2 → terminator forms
Starvation for other amino acids (e.g., Arg) also causes ribosome stalling in corresponding leader peptides → attenuation phenotypes.
Repression at initiation, attenuation, and amino acid–dependent translation rates.
Repression fails, but attenuation still works, so transcription decreases but is not fully OFF.
Constitutive high expression because repression at initiation no longer occurs.
Neither 3:4 (terminator) nor 2:3 (anti-terminator) can form → attenuation control collapses → transcription becomes unregulated.
It continues transcription because 2:3 anti-terminator forms, preventing 3:4 terminator
Ribosome quickly reads Trp codons → 3:4 terminator forms → attenuation despite low Trp.
Ribosome never loads → region 1:2 hairpin stable → constitutive termination (always OFF).
Region 2 cannot pair with 3 → 3:4 always forms → operon always attenuated.
Ribosome catches up → activation of attenuation (more terminator formation).
Ribosome stalls early → 2:3 pairing → transcription continues through operon. (General attenuation mechanism.)
Ribosome quickly finishes leader peptide → blocks 2 → terminator hairpin forms → transcription stops early.
No terminator can form → attenuation abolished → operon always ON unless repressed at initiation.
Operon becomes non-inducible, similar to lacIˢ in the lac operon.
Attenuation disappears → operon controlled only by repression at initiation
tRNAᵗʳᵖ remains uncharged → ribosomes stall → no attenuation, operon strongly ON.
Region 2 always pairs with 3 → anti-terminator always forms → operon constitutively ON.
