Question 1
Question
Label the following image.
Answer
-
Promoter
-
CAP site
-
transcription start site
-
sigma^70
-
CAP
-
lac repressor
-
lactose
-
cAMP
-
high transcription
-
low transcription
-
no transcription
-
O3
-
O1
-
lacZ
-
O2
-
O3 (right picture)
-
promoter
-
O1 (right picture)
-
lacZ (right picture)
-
O2 (right picture)
Question 2
Question
Most E. coli promoters interact with _____ polymerase,
the major initiating form of the bacterial enzyme.
Answer
-
sigma^90-RNA
-
alpha^70-RNA
-
sigma^70-RNA
-
beta^80-RNA
Question 3
Question
In E. coli, there are [blank_start]6[blank_end] alternative σ-factors in addition to the major “housekeeping”
σ-factor, σ70.
Question 4
Question
One class, represented in E. coli by ___, is unrelated to σ70 and functions differently
Question 5
Question
Transcription of genes by RNA polymerases
containing σ54 is regulated solely by activators whose
binding sites in DNA, referred to as [blank_start]enhancers[blank_end], are generally
located 80–160 bp [blank_start]upstream[blank_end] from the transcription start site.
Question 6
Question
Transcription by σ54-RNA Polymerase Is
Controlled by Activators That Bind close to the
Promoter
Question 7
Question
Even when enhancers are moved more than a kilobase away
from a start site, σ54-activators can activate transcription
Question 8
Question
Electron microscopy studies have shown that phosphorylated
NtrC bound at enhancers and σ54-polymerase bound
at the promoter interact directly, forming a [blank_start]loop[blank_end] in the
DNA between the binding sites (Figure 9-5). As discussed
later in this chapter, this activation mechanism resembles
the predominant mechanism of transcriptional activation
in [blank_start]eukaryotes[blank_end].
Question 9
Question
The best-characterized σ54-activator—the [blank_start]NtrC[blank_end] protein
Question 10
Question
The operator is where the [blank_start]repressor[blank_end] binds.
Question 11
Question
The [blank_start]promoter[blank_end] is where RNA-Polymerase binds.
Question 12
Question
Gene expression in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes is regulated
primarily by mechanisms that control gene [blank_start]transcription[blank_end].
Question 13
Question
The first step in the initiation of transcription in E. coli
is the binding of a [blank_start]sigma[blank_end]-factor complexed with an [blank_start]RNA polymerase[blank_end]
to a [blank_start]promoter[blank_end].
Answer
-
sigma
-
RNA polymerase
-
promoter
Question 14
Question
The ___________ of a promoter determines its
strength, that is, how frequently different RNA polymerase
molecules can bind and initiate transcription per minute.
Question 15
Question
[blank_start]Repressors[blank_end] are proteins that bind to [blank_start]operator[blank_end] sequences that
overlap or lie adjacent to promoters. Binding of a [blank_start]repressor[blank_end] to
an operator inhibits transcription initiation or elongation.
Answer
-
Repressors
-
operator
-
repressor
Question 16
Question
Genes transcribed by σ54-RNA polymerase are regulated
by activators that bind to enhancers located about 100
base pairs [blank_start]upstream[blank_end] from the start site. When the activator
and σ54-RNA polymerase interact, the DNA between their
binding sites forms a [blank_start]loop[blank_end]
Question 17
Question
In [blank_start]two-component regulatory systems[blank_end], one protein acts as
a sensor, monitoring the level of nutrients or other components
in the environment. Under appropriate conditions, the γ-phosphate of an ATP is transferred first to a [blank_start]histidine[blank_end] in the sensor protein and then to an [blank_start]aspartic acid[blank_end] in a second protein,
the response regulator. The phosphorylated response regulator
then performs a specific function in response to the stimulus,
such as binding to DNA regulatory sequences, thereby stimulating
or repressing transcription of specific genes
Question 18
Question
Transcription in bacteria can also be regulated by control
of [blank_start]transcriptional elongation[blank_end] in the [blank_start]promoter-proximal[blank_end] region.
This control can be exerted by ribosome binding to the
nascent mRNA, as in the case of the E. coli trp operon (see
Figure 9-7), or by riboswitches, RNA sequences that bind
small molecules, as for the B. subtilis xpt-pbuX operon (see
Figure 9-8), to determine whether a stem-loop followed by
a string of uracils forms, causing the bacterial RNA polymerase
to pause and terminate transcription.