How many genes in the human genome?
50,000
In any given cell, how many genes are expressed?
10000
How is gene expression regulated in time and space?
Time:Development (i.e. embryos versus adults)In response to hormones, infection, other signals.
Space:Different tissues or cell types express-different genes (i.e. brain versus muscle cells).
Give an example of animal that has abnormalities because of wrong gene expression
Antennapedia- extra pair of legs where antaenna is supossed to be
What is the goal of gene expression?(2)
How does change in promotor region B thalassaemia arise?(2)
How do changes in the intron and exon junctions give arise to B thalassaemia?
Nucleotides AG that promote splicing.
This change means that the intron is not spliceable so the intron remains in the mature mRNA.
It will not form the lariat structure.
How do changes in the 5’ prime UTR give rise to B- thalassaemia?
Mutations in the 5’ prime UTR so RNA is highly unstable and they are degraded quickly
At what level is regulation of gene expression?
At the post transcriptional level
Give examples of environmental influences on gene expression(3)
Where does translation occur on the mRNA?(2)
How do viruses survive in cells?
Viruses inactivate EIF3 and EIF4 because these two recognise the cap and start moving along the mRNA so they inactivate so translation cannot start
What is ferritin and how are they stored?(2)
What happens in the absence of low iron levels?(2)
What happens in the presence of excess of iron in the blood?(3)
How is plasma ferritin used?(2)
What is the role of the 5’ and 3’UTRs?
• The 5’ UTR is not the bit that determines whether a ribosome binds, but it DOES play a major role in determining how efficiently the ribosome initiates translation eg. globin
The 3 UTR sequences cause proteins to bind which protect the RNAs from degradation.There are 4 initiation factors associated with the UTR
How is globin translated and why do they have 3’UTR stability?
Globin (very efficiently translated) RBCs do not have DNA so the only way the RBC can express beta globin is by translating pre mRNAs already in the RBC.Globin 3’UTRs confer stability because RBCs do not have DNA so to produce globin from pre existing RNA is to ensure they are highly stable.
Why do immune stress hormones have unstable UTRs?
They are degraded as soon as they are translated because you don’t want to be stressed all the time. Less stable means less hormones produced
What is miRNA?(4)
• The human genome encodes over 500 small non-coding RNAs that are transcribed by RNA polymerase II- miRNA
2.MicroRNAs are specialized RNA molecules encoded as parts of larger RNA precursors.
What is the role of miRNA?(2)
Control the post-transcriptional regulation of as many as one-third of all human genes
• Any given miRNA can regulated several target genes miRNA have large regions of complementarity
Describe the synthesis of miRNA(5)
1.Each precursor miRNA transcript is processed to form a double-stranded intermediate
→ further processed to form a mature, single-stranded miRNA.
→ This miRNA assembles with a set of proteins into a complex called RISC, which then searches for mRNAs that have a nucleotide sequence complementary to its bound miRNA.
→Depending on how extensive the region of complementarity is, the target mRNA is either rapidly degraded by a nuclease within the RISC (this happens when there is an extensive match)
→or transferred to an area of the cytoplasm where other cellular nucleases destroy it (this happens when there is a less extensive match)
What is RISC protein and how are they involved in degrading RNA?(6)
How do miRNA degrade mRNA molecules?
Cleavage to mRNA means ribosome cannot move along mRNA and eventually degraded.