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Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths • Wessler • Carroll • Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and Company CHAPTER 12 Regulation of Gene Expression in Eukaryotes
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Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

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Page 1: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Introduction to

Genetic AnalysisTENTH EDITION

Introduction to

Genetic AnalysisTENTH EDITION

Griffiths • Wessler • Carroll • Doebley

© 2012 W. H. Freeman and Company

CHAPTER 12Regulation of Gene Expression

in Eukaryotes

Page 2: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

CHAPTER OUTLINE12.1 Transcriptional regulation in eukaryotes: an overview

12.2 Lessons from yeast: the GAL system

12.3 Dynamic chromatin

12.4 Short-term activation of genes in a chromatin environment

12.5 Long-term inactivation of genes in a chromatin environment

12.6 Gender-specific silencing of genes and whole chromosomes

12.7 Post-transcriptional gene repression by miRNAs

Page 3: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

The first cloned mammal

Dolly, the Finn Dorset lamb in 1996 and her surrogate Scottish Blackface mother

Dolly and Bonnie

Page 4: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Dolly in Royal Museum of Scotland

Ian Wilmut

Page 5: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Dolly

Dolly Parton

Page 6: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

globinmyosin

erythrocytemuscle cell

All genes

housekeeping

All cells have the same genome, but each cell expresses only a subset of all genes

Cells differ in gene expression

Page 7: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Overview of transcriptional regulation

nucleus(membrane)

chromatin

Page 8: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Gene regulation at multiple levels

TransportLocalizationModificationComplex formationDegradation

Many regulatory proteins have to import into nucleus

Page 9: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Promoter-proximal elements precede the promoter of a eukaryotic gene

Page 10: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Promoter-proximal elements are necessary for efficient transcription

Point mutations throughout the promoter region were analyzed for their effects on transcription rates. The height of each line represents the transcription level relative to a wild-type promoter or promoter-proximal element (1.0).

Page 11: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Transcription factors need multiple functional domains

1. A domain that recognizes a DNA regulatory sequence (the protein’s DNA-binding site)

2. A domain that interacts with one or more proteins of the transcriptional apparatus (RNA polymerase or a protein associated with RNA polymerase)

3. A domain that interacts with proteins bound to nearby regulatory sequences on DNA such that they can act cooperatively to regulate transcription

4. A domain that influences chromatin condensation either directly or indirectly

5. A domain that acts as a sensor of physiological conditions within the cell

Direct or indirect (by interacting with other proteins)

Page 12: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Model Organism Yeast

Brewer’s yeast Baker’s yeast

Saccharomyces cerevisiaeBudding yeast

Page 13: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

The Gal pathway

Expressed at low level

Induced by galactose

Regulated by Gal4

Page 14: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Transcriptional activator proteins bind to UAS elements in yeast

UAS: Upstream Activation Sequences

Binding site for Gal4

Can be far from promoter

Page 15: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Transcriptional activator proteins are modular

Reporter gene

domain swap

Page 16: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Transcriptional activator proteins may be activated by an inducer

Galactose: inducing signal

Page 17: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Transcriptional activator proteins recruit the transcriptional machinery

Co-activator:Does not directly bind DNA

Specific recognition of target sequenceEnhancer can function

far away from promoter

Enhancer can function upstream or downstream, even far away

Page 18: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Transcriptional complexes

Page 19: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Combinations of regulatory proteins control cell types

Mating type

Combinations of binding partners => different binding specificities

Page 20: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

The structure of chromatin

~150 bp linker DNA

Page 21: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

A nucleosome is composed of DNA wrapped around eight histones

Histone octamer (H2A2H2B2H32H42)

DNA exposed on the outside

Page 22: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

The structure of chromatin

Page 23: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

The structure of chromatin

Euchromatin(loose)

Heterochromatin

•Condensed

•Repetitive sequences

•Late replicating

•Genes silenced

Page 24: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Chromatin remodeling exposes regulatory sequences

Shifting of nucleosome position

Exposes regulatory sequences

Linker DNA: sensitive to nuclease

Nucleosomal DNA: protected from nuclease digestion

Use nuclease sensitivity to determine chromatin state (open/closed) or nucleosome position

+ SWI-SNF + ATP

Page 25: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

The SWI-SNF complex for chromatin remodeling

Yeast mutant screen

sugar nonfermenting (snf)

Mating type switch (swi)

swi2=snf2

swi2/snf2 (“switch-sniff”) locus

SWI-SNF complex

Page 26: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Modifications of histone tails results in chromatin remodeling

Histone tails are exposed, can be modified

Modifies Lysine (K) and Arginine (R) (basic aa)

Acetylation: negative charges => repulsion

Page 27: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Histone modifications

Page 28: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Histone modifications

Page 29: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Acetylation of histones

Histone acetyltransferase (HAT)

Histone de-acetylase (HDAC)

Page 30: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Histone modifications

Alternative modifications on the same residue

Histone code

Page 31: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Regulation of gene expression by histone acetylation

Page 32: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Histone deacetylation can turn off gene transcription

HDAC(corepressor)

Page 33: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Inheritance of chromatin states

Epigenetic memory: heritable traits (over rounds of cell division and sometimes transgenerationally) that do not involve changes to the underlying DNA sequence. (e.g. chromatin state)

Page 34: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Methylation of DNA

Page 35: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

A model for the inheritance of DNA methylation

In mammals, 70-80% of CG are methylated genome-wide.CpG island: clusters around gene promoter

hemi-methylated

maintenance

Page 36: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Enhanceosomes help recruit the transcriptional machinery

Page 37: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Enhanceosomes recruit chromatin remodelers

Enhancers contain binding sites for many transcription factors, which bind and interact cooperatively.

Page 38: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Enhancer-blocking insulators prevent enhancer activation

Page 39: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Model for how enhancer-blocking insulators might work

Page 40: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Mating-type switching is controlled by recombination of DNA cassettes

ds break in MAT made by HO endonuclease

=> gene conversion

silent information regulators (SIR)Sir2 (HDAC)

Page 41: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Gene silencing is caused by the spread of heterochromatin

w+ is expressed in some cells => not a mutation in w gene

Clonal => epigenetic memory

Position-effect variegation (PEV)

Page 42: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Heterochromatin in Drosophila chromosomes

~30% of genome

H3K4me2, enriched in euchromatinH3K9me2, enriched in heterochromatin

Page 43: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Some genes enhance or suppress the spread of heterochromatin

Enhancer

Suppresor

Su(var)2-5 = HP1 (heterochromatic protein 1)Su(var)3-9 = histone methylatransferase

Page 44: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Multiple states of Lysine methylation

Page 45: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Heterochromatin may spread farther in some cells than in others

Page 46: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Barrier insulators stop the spread of heterochromatin

Page 47: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Genomic imprinting

Page 48: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Genomic imprinting

Phenotype depends on the parental origin of the genes

Page 49: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Inactivation of genes and chrosomomes

Page 50: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Genomic imprinting

No changes in DNA sequence

mouse/human ~100 imprinted genes

Page 51: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Genomic imprinting requires insulators

DNA methylation

imprinting control region

Page 52: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Unusual inheritance of imprinted genes

Page 53: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Steps required for imprinting

Igf2: maternal imprinting (inactive)H19: paternal imprinting (inactive)

H19Igf2

Page 54: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

X inactivation

Dosage compensation for X chromosome female: XX male: XY

Page 55: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Barr body and Lyon Hypothesis of X inactivation

Murray Barr: discoverer

Mary Lyon

Epigenetic memory

Xi: H3K9me, histone hypoacetylation, DNA hypermethylation~ heterochromatin

Page 56: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Xist

non-coding

Page 57: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Xist RNA covers one of the two copies of the X chromosome

RNA fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH)

metaphase chromosomes

female fibroblast cell line

Xist expression => cis-inactivation

Page 58: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

A model for X-chromosome inactivation

Page 59: Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Introduction to Genetic Analysis TENTH EDITION Griffiths Wessler Carroll Doebley © 2012 W. H. Freeman and.

Possible models for the repression of translation by miRNA