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Regulation of Gene Expression Information

Regulation of gene expression (or gene regulation) includes the processes that cells and viruses use to regulate the way that the information in genes is turned into gene products. Although a functional gene product can be an RNA, the majority of known mechanisms regulate protein coding genes. Any step of the gene's expression may be modulated, from DNA-RNA transcription to the post-translational modification of a protein.

Gene regulation is essential for viruses, prokaryotes and eukaryotes as it increases the versatility and adaptability of an organism by allowing the cell to express protein when needed. Although as early as 1951 Barbara McClintock showed interaction between two genetic loci, Activator (Ac) and Dissociator (Ds), in the color formation of maize seeds, the first discovery of a gene regulation system is widely considered to be the identification in 1961 of the lac operon, discovered by Jacques Monod, in which some enzymes involved in lactose metabolism are expressed by the genome of E. coli only in the presence of lactose and absence of glucose.

Furthermore, in multicellular organisms, gene regulation drives the processes of cellular differentiation and morphogenesis, leading to the creation of different cell types that possess different gene expression profiles, and hence produce different proteins/have different ultrastructures that suit them to their functions (though they all possess the genotype, which follows the same genome sequence).

Contents

Regulated stages of gene expression

Any step of gene expression may be modulated, from the DNA-RNA transcription step to post-translational modification of a protein. The following is a list of stages where gene expression is regulated, the most extensively utilised point is Transcription Initiation:

Modification of DNA

In eukaryotes, the accessibility of large regions of DNA can depend on its chromatin structure, which can be altered as a result of histone modifications directed by DNA methylation, ncRNA, or DNA-binding protein. Hence these modifications may up or down regulate the expression of gene. Certain of these modifications that regulate gene expression are inheritable and are referred to as epigenetic regulation.

Chemical

Methylation of DNA is a common method of gene silencing. DNA is typically methylated by methyltransferase enzymes on cytosine nucleotides in a CpG dinucleotide sequence (also called "CpG islands" when densely clustered). Analysis of the pattern of methylation in a given region of DNA (which can be a promoter) can be achieved through a method called bisulfite mapping. Methylated cytosine residues are unchanged by the treatment, whereas unmethylated ones are changed to uracil. The differences are analyzed by DNA sequencing or by methods developed to quantify SNPs, such as Pyrosequencing (Biotage) or MassArray (Sequenom), measuring the relative amounts of C/T at the CG dinucleotide. Abnormal methylation patterns are thought to be involved in oncogenesis.

Structural

Transcription of DNA is dictated by its structure. In general, the density of its packing is indicative of the frequency of transcription. Octameric protein complexes called nucleosomes are responsible for the amount of supercoiling of DNA, and these complexes can be temporarily modified by processes such as phosphorylation or more permanently modified by processes such as methylation. Such modifications are considered to be responsible for more or less permanent changes in gene expression levels.

Regulation of transcription

Main article: Transcriptional regulation 1: RNA Polymerase, 2: Repressor, 3: Promoter, 4: Operator, 5: Lactose, 6: lacZ, 7: lacY, 8: lacA. Top: The gene is essentially turned off. There is no lactose to inhibit the repressor, so the repressor binds to the operator, which obstructs the RNA polymerase from binding to the promoter and making lactase. Bottom: The gene is turned on. Lactose is inhibiting the repressor, allowing the RNA polymerase to bind with the promoter, and express the genes, which synthesize lactase. Eventually, the lactase will digest all of the lactose, until there is none to bind to the repressor. The repressor will then bind to the operator, stopping the manufacture of lactase.

Regulation of transcription thus controls when transcription occurs and how much RNA is created. Transcription of a gene by RNA polymerase can be regulated by at least five mechanisms:

Post-transcriptional regulation

Main article: Post-transcriptional regulation

After the DNA is transcribed and mRNA is formed, there must be some sort of regulation on how much the mRNA is translated into proteins. Cells do this by modulating the capping, splicing, addition of a Poly(A) Tail, the sequence-specific nuclear export rates, and, in several contexts, sequestration of the RNA transcript. These processes occur in eukaryotes but not in prokaryotes. This modulation is a result of a protein or transcript that, in turn, is regulated and may have an affinity for certain sequences.

Regulation of translation

Main article: Translational regulation

The translation of mRNA can also be controlled by a number of mechanisms, mostly at the level of initiation. Recruitment of the small ribosomal subunit can indeed be modulated by mRNA secondary structure, antisense RNA binding, or protein binding. In both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, a large number of RNA binding proteins exist, which often are directed to their target sequence by the secondary structure of the transcript, which may change depending on certain conditions, such as temperature or presence of a ligand (aptamer). Some transcripts act as ribozymes and self-regulate their expression.

Examples of gene regulation

Developmental biology

Main article: morphogen

A large number of studied regulatory systems come from developmental biology. Examples include:

Circuitry

Main article: Gene regulatory network

Up-regulation and down-regulation

Up-regulation is a process that occurs within a cell triggered by a signal (originating internal or external to the cell), which results in increased expression of one or more genes and as a result the protein(s) encoded by those genes. On the converse, down-regulation is a process resulting in decreased gene and corresponding protein expression.

Inducible vs. repressible systems

Gene Regulation can be summarized by the response of the respective system:

Theoretical circuits

Methods

For DNA and RNA methods, see nucleic acid methods. For protein methods, see protein methods.

In general, most experiments investigating differential expression used whole cell extracts of RNA, called steady-state levels, to determine which genes changed and by how much they did. These are, however, not informative of where the regulation has occurred and may actually mask conflicting regulatory processess (see post-transcriptional regulation), but it is still the most commonly analysed (QPCR and DNA microarray).

When studying gene expression, there are several methods to look at the various stages. In eukaryotes these include:

See also

References

  1. ^ Austin S, Dixon R (June 1992). "The prokaryotic enhancer binding protein NTRC has an ATPase activity which is phosphorylation and DNA dependent". EMBO J. 11 (6): 2219–28. PMC 556689. PMID 1534752. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC556689/.
  2. ^ Dequéant ML, Pourquié O. Segmental patterning of the vertebrate embryonic axis. Nat Rev Genet. 2008 May;9(5):370-82. PMID 18414404
  3. ^ Gilbert SF (2003). Developmental biology, 7th ed., Sunderland, Mass: Sinauer Associates, 65–6. ISBN 0-87893-258-5.
  4. ^ Cheadle C, Fan J, Cho-Chung YS, Werner T, Ray J, Do L, Gorospe M, Becker KG (2005). "Control of gene expression during T cell activation: alternate regulation of mRNA transcription and mRNA stability". BMC Genomics 6: 75. DOI:10.1186/1471-2164-6-75. PMC 1156890. PMID 15907206. //www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=1156890.
  5. ^ Jackson DA, Pombo A, Iborra F (2000). "The balance sheet for transcription: an analysis of nuclear RNA metabolism in mammalian cells". FASEB J. 14 (2): 242–54. PMID 10657981. http://www.fasebj.org/cgi/content/abstract/14/2/242.
  6. ^ Schwanekamp JA, Sartor MA, Karyala S, Halbleib D, Medvedovic M, Tomlinson CR (2006). "Genome-wide analyses show that nuclear and cytoplasmic RNA levels are differentially affected by dioxin". Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1759 (8–9): 388–402. DOI:10.1016/j.bbaexp.2006.07.005. PMID 16962184.

Further reading

External links

Gene expression
Introduction to genetics

General flow: DNA > RNA > Protein

special transfers (RNA > RNA, RNA > DNA, Protein > Protein)

Genetic code
Transcription

(Transcription factors, RNA Polymerase, promoter) Prokaryotic / Archaeal / Eukaryotic

post-transcriptional modification (hnRNA,5' capping,Splicing,Polyadenylation)
Translation

(Ribosome,tRNA) Prokaryotic / Archaeal / Eukaryotic

post-translational modification (functional groups, peptides, structural changes)
Gene regulation

epigenetic regulation (Genomic imprinting)

transcriptional regulation

post-transcriptional regulation (sequestration, alternative splicing, miRNA)

translational regulation

post-translational regulation (reversible, irreversible)
Molecular biology
Computational biologyDevelopmental biologyFunctional Biology
Overview
Dogma History of molecular biologyDNA Replication (DNA), Transcription (RNA) - Translation (protein)
Element (Genetic • Heredity) Promoter (Pribnow box, TATA box) • Operon (gal operon, lac operon, trp operon) • IntronExonTerminatorEnhancerRepressor (lac repressor, trp repressor) • SilencerHistone methylation
Linked Life Cell BiologyBiochemistryComputational BiologyGenetics
Engineering
Concept mitosiscell signallingPost-transcriptional modification and Post-translational modificationDry Lab/Wet lab
Technique

Cell culturemodel organisms (such as C57BL/6 mice) • method (Nucleic acidProtein) • Fluorescence, Pigment & Radioactivity

High-throughput Technique (-omics): DNA microarrayMass spectrometryLab-on-a-chip
Gene regulation Epigeneticgeneticpost-transcriptionalpost-translational regulation
Glossary

Categories:

 

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Matching Results for Regulation of Gene Expression:

downregulation
The process, in the regulation of gene expression, in which the number, or activity of receptors decreases in order to decrease sensitivity

misregulation
Faulty regulation (of gene expression)


from: Wiktionary: regulation of gene expression,
Fri Jun 1 22:34:17 2012