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Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria and Their Viruses

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1 Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria and Their Viruses
CHAPTER 10 Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria and Their Viruses Copyright 2008 © W H Freeman and Company

2 CHAPTER OUTLINE 10.1 Gene regulation
10.2 Discovery of the lac system: negative control 10.3 Catabolite repression of the lac operon: positive control 10.4 Dual positive and negative control: the arabinose operon 10.5 Metabolic pathways and additional levels of regulation: attenuation 10.6 Bacteriophage life cycles: more regulators, complex operons 10.7 Alternative sigma factors regulate large sets of genes

3 Regulatory proteins control transcription
Figure 10-2

4 Allosteric effectors bind to regulatory proteins
Figure 10-3

5 Repressor protein controls the lac operon
Figure 10-4

6 Lactose is broken down into two sugars
Figure 10-5

7 The lac operon is transcribed only in the presence of lactose
Figure 10-6a

8 The lac operon is transcribed only in the presence of lactose
Figure 10-6b

9 Structure of IPTG Figure 10-7

10 Table 10-1

11 Operators are cis-acting
Figure 10-8

12 Table 10-2

13 Repressors are trans-acting
Figure 10-9

14 Table 10-3

15 The repressor contains a lactose-binding site
Figure 10-10

16 RNA polymerase contacts the promoter at specific sequences
Figure 10-11

17 The operator is a specific DNA sequence
Figure 10-12

18 Glucose levels control the lac operon
Figure 10-13

19 Glucose levels control the lac operon
Figure 10-13a

20 Glucose levels control the lac operon
Figure 10-13b

21 Many DNA binding sites are symmetrical
Figure 10-14

22 Binding of CAP bends DNA
Figure 10-15

23 CAP and RNA polymerase bind next to each other
Figure 10-16

24 Negative and positive control of the lac operon
Figure 10-17

25 Negative and positive control of the lac operon
Figure 10-17a

26 Negative and positive control of the lac operon
Figure 10-17b

27 Negative and positive control of the lac operon
Figure 10-17c

28 Repression and activation compared
Figure 10-18

29 Repression and activation compared
Figure 10-18a

30 Repression and activation compared
Figure 10-18b

31 Map of the ara operon Figure 10-19

32 AraC serves as an activator and as a repressor
Figure 10-20

33 Gene order in the trp operon corresponds to reaction order in
the biosynthetic pathway Figure 10-21

34 The trp mRNA leader sequence contains an attenuator region
and two tryptophan codons Figure 10-22

35 Abundant tryptophan attenuates transcription of the trp operon
Figure 10-23

36 Leader peptides of amino acid biosynthesis operons
Figure 10-24

37 The life cycle of bacteriophage 
Figure 10-25

38 Phage  genome is organized for coordinate control
Figure 10-26

39 The lysogenic-versus-lytic cycle is determined by repressor
occupancy on the OR operators Figure 10-27

40 Helix-turn-helix is a common DNA-binding motif
Figure 10-28

41 Amino acid side chains determine the specificity of DNA binding
Figure 10-29

42  factors control clusters of unlinked genes
Figure 10-30a

43  factors control clusters of unlinked genes
Figure 10-30b


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