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D. Cell Specialization: Regulation of Transcription Cell specialization in multicellular organisms results from differential gene expression.

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Presentation on theme: "D. Cell Specialization: Regulation of Transcription Cell specialization in multicellular organisms results from differential gene expression."— Presentation transcript:

1 D. Cell Specialization: Regulation of Transcription Cell specialization in multicellular organisms results from differential gene expression

2 D. CELL SPECIALIZATION: Regulation of Transcription 1.Chromosome, Gene and RNA Architecture 2.Cell-Specific Regulation of Chromosome Structure 3.Cell-Specific Regulation of Transcription Activation

3 1. Review of Chromosome, Gene and RNA Architecture a. Review of Chromatin Structure b. Chromosomal Gene Arrangement c. Single Gene Components d. Nuclear RNA, mRNA and Protein e. Other RNA Molecules f. Fast review of Transcription

4 a. Review of Chromatin Structure Chromatin is a complex of DNA and protein in the eukaryotic nucleus Loosely packed chromatin is called euchromatin Dense packing of the heterochromatin makes it difficult for the cell to express genetic information coded in these regions Histones are proteins that are responsible for the first level of DNA packing in chromatin

5 DNA double helix (2 nm in diameter) Nucleosome (10 nm in diameter) Histones Histone tail H1 DNA, the double helixHistones Nucleosomes, or “beads on a string” (10-nm fiber)

6 Figure 4-65 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

7 Figure 4-11 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) b. Chromosomal Gene Arrangement Humans: 23 chromosome pairs 3 billion bases ~24,000 genes

8 Figure 4-15 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

9 Figure 6-14 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Genes can reside on either strand

10 c. Single Gene Components Anatomy of a gene Exon means sequence that exits the nucleus Intron means sequence that stays inside the nucleus

11 d. Nuclear RNA, mRNA and Protein

12 Figure 6-21 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

13 e. Other RNA Molecules 1. The Translational Apparatus 2. Nuclear Effectors 3. Cytosolic Effectors

14 Table 6-1 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

15 DNA molecule Gene 1 Gene 2 Gene 3 DNA template strand TRANSCRIPTION TRANSLATION mRNA Protein Codon Amino acid Transcription: “To transcribe” to copy in the same language Translation: “To translate” to copy into a new language Templated Polymerization f. Fast review of transcription

16 Figure 6-8a Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) RNA Polymerase II Complex Does it All 12 Protein Subunits in Human

17 As RNA polymerase moves along the DNA, it untwists the double helix, 10 to 20 bases at a time Transcription progresses at a rate of 40 nucleotides per second in eukaryotes The large subunit of RNA Pol II caps and polyadenylates the nascent nRNA The same large subunit of RNA also links to the splicosome to facilitate subsequent processing Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

18 Figure 6-9 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Multiple RNA Pol II molecules can read DNA simultaneously

19 So, how do individual cells regulate which of the genes in their genome they will express? Remember from Intro Bio that prokaryotes regulate expression through repressors/activators Eukaryotes have more complex regulatory mechanisms Histone modification regulates chromatin structure DNA modification regulates promoter accessibility Epigenetic modification can be copied and inherited Transcription factors regulate promoter activation Specialized transcriptional activities

20 2. Nucleosome and Histone Modification Regulates of Chromatin Structure Chromatin is a complex of DNA and protein in the eukaryotic nucleus Loosely packed chromatin is called euchromatin Dense packing of the heterochromatin makes it difficult for the cell to express genetic information coded in these regions Histones are proteins that are responsible for the first level of DNA packing in chromatin

21 Cell-specific control of chromosome structure Eukaryotic cells can systematically control which genes are available for expression. Our DNA is complexed 50:50 with proteins and is very highly regulated by enzymatic alterations of what is open and closed.

22 Figure 4-28 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Spontaneous nucleosome unwrapping

23 Figure 4-29 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) ATP-dependent nucleosome unwrapping

24 Histones are covalently modified to control gene accessibility The methylation and/or acetylation of either histones or the DNA itself determines what promoters are exposed. Different cell types have different enzymes and, thus, different areas of protein and DNA are targeted for alteration

25 Cell-specific control of chromosome structure 3 Stages of Transcription 1. Initiation 2. Elongation 3. Termination Acetylation promotes InitiationMethylation can go either way (lysine amino acid residues)

26 3. The “Histone Code” Hypothesis Combinations of covalent modifications have specific information for the cell – This DNA is newly replicated – This DNA is damaged and needs repair – Express this DNA – Put this DNA into heterochromatin storage

27 Figure 4-43 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

28 Figure 4-45 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

29 Figure 4-46a Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

30 b. Direct covalent modifications of DNA can also control expression from genes in the euchromatin

31 Methylation of globin genes in human embryonic blood cells

32 c. Heritability: Epigenetic Memory OK. So a cell differentiates to become a blood vessel smooth muscle cell or fibroblast...... How come all of its mitotic descendents don’t have to go through differentiation? – Trithorax proteins bind to open nucleosomes and keep them open. – Polycomb proteins methylate uneeded nucleosomes and then bind to them to keep them tight. – These effects can then be directly passed through mitotic cell division to the offspring.

33 Two DNA methyltransferases are important in modifying DNA

34 d. Transcription factors regulate promoter activation – Core promoter made up of TATAbox and CpG islands Site of RNA Pol II recruitment and activation TF II family transcription factors bind RNA Pol II to core – Tissue-specific TF are true transcriptional determinant for the cell type Bind to core promoter elements and distal enhancers Create binding sites for TF II family TF and stabilize Transcription Initiation Complex TS-TF also recruit histone acetyltransferases to expose DNA

35 Tissue-Specific Transcription Factor Families

36 Fig. 17-8 3 Promoter TATA box Start point Template DNA strand 5 3 5 General Transcription factors 5 53 3 RNA polymerase II Cell-Specific Transcription factors 5 5 5 3 3 RNA transcript Transcription initiation complex The Transcription Initiation Complex forms on every gene that gets expressed. Its presence there is really determined by the tissue specific transcription factors that bind to enhancer cis-elements.

37 RNA polymerase is stabilized on the promoter site of the DNA by transcription factors recruited by promoters and enhancers

38 Fig. 17-7b Elongation RNA polymerase Nontemplate strand of DNA RNA nucleotides 3 end Direction of transcription (“downstream”) Template strand of DNA Newly made RNA 3’ 5’ 5

39 Figure 6-3 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) The stability of the initiation complex determines how many transcripts

40 Tissue-specific transcription factors may bind different enhancers The pax-6 gene has four enhancers and is expressed exclusively in those four tissue types.

41 TS TFs can even control differentiation stability A really important idea in cell differentiation is that there must be a molecular mechanism that keeps a cell differentiated. – The pax-6 gene has a Pax-6 site in its enhancer – When it is present the transcription rate is maximal – This mechanism is repeated in several cell types – A rare positive feedback loop

42 e. Specialized transcriptional activities Only about 3-5% of RNA in a cell is mRNA Up to 80% of RNA is ribosomal RNA – As many as 10 million ribosomes per cell – humans have 400 rRNA gene copies on 5 chromosome pairs (frogs have 1200) – 4 eukaryotic subunits: 18S, 5.8S, 28S, 5S – First 3 from one gene with RNA Pol I – 5S is from a separate gene with RNA Pol III

43 Figure 6-42 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

44 Table 6-1 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)

45 RNA Molecules and their RNA Polymerases Most snRNA and miRNA: Pol II tRNA, shRNA, snRNA 6, miRNA: Pol III snoRNA often encoded in introns: Pol II


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