Войдите в систему

Proteins that regulate transcription can do so either via direct contact with RNA Polymerase or through indirect interactions facilitated by adaptors, mediators, histone-modifying proteins, and nucleosome remodelers. Direct interactions to activate transcription is seen in bacteria as well as in some eukaryotic genes. In these cases, upstream activation sequences are adjacent to the promoters, and the activator proteins interact directly with the transcriptional machinery. For example, in prokaryotes, the catabolite activator protein or CAP directly interacts with the C-terminal domain of the alpha subunit of RNA polymerase to regulate gene expression. Strong evidence for direct interaction is the loss of function mutations in the activation domains of proteins that lead to suppression of transcriptional activity.

However, in some eukaryotic genes, regulation can happen via distal activation. Hence, the regulating elements may not lie in close proximity to the promoter or may not interact directly with the transcriptional machinery. Such interactions can be detected by (a) observing the rate of transcription in the presence or absence of the regulatory protein (b) mutations in the binding site of the regulatory protein that can disrupt gene expression (c) measuring the binding affinity between the regulatory protein and the promoter.

In addition, the transcription machinery also needs nucleosome remodelers to access the DNA within the chromatin. Hence, these nucleosome remodelers are also involved in regulating gene expression.

Теги
RNA Polymerase IIAccessory ProteinsTranscription InitiationGene Expression RegulationEnhancer SequencesTranscriptional Control ElementGene Regulatory ProteinsTranscriptional ActivatorsDNA Binding DomainActivation DomainMediator ComplexUpregulationRepressors

Из главы 8:

article

Now Playing

8.9 : RNA Polymerase II Accessory Proteins

Transcription: DNA to RNA

8.9K Просмотры

article

8.1 : What is Gene Expression?

Transcription: DNA to RNA

25.4K Просмотры

article

8.2 : RNA Structure

Transcription: DNA to RNA

23.1K Просмотры

article

8.3 : RNA Stability

Transcription: DNA to RNA

10.3K Просмотры

article

8.4 : Bacterial RNA Polymerase

Transcription: DNA to RNA

25.9K Просмотры

article

8.5 : Types of RNA

Transcription: DNA to RNA

23.1K Просмотры

article

8.6 : Transcription

Transcription: DNA to RNA

33.9K Просмотры

article

8.7 : Transcription Factors

Transcription: DNA to RNA

19.5K Просмотры

article

8.8 : Eukaryotic RNA Polymerases

Transcription: DNA to RNA

21.2K Просмотры

article

8.10 : Transcription Elongation Factors

Transcription: DNA to RNA

10.5K Просмотры

article

8.11 : Pre-mRNA Processing

Transcription: DNA to RNA

24.2K Просмотры

article

8.12 : RNA Splicing

Transcription: DNA to RNA

16.7K Просмотры

article

8.13 : Chromatin Structure Regulates pre-mRNA Processing

Transcription: DNA to RNA

6.8K Просмотры

article

8.14 : Nuclear Export of mRNA

Transcription: DNA to RNA

7.4K Просмотры

article

8.15 : Ribosomal RNA Synthesis

Transcription: DNA to RNA

12.9K Просмотры

See More

JoVE Logo

Исследования

Образование

О JoVE

Авторские права © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Все права защищены