ENG BE 209 Chapter Notes - Chapter 8: Regulatory Sequence, Rna Interference, Gene Expression

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Gene expression: the process by which a gene makes its effect on an cell or organism by directing the synthesis of a protein or an rna molecule with a characteristic activity. Typical eukaryotic cell expresses only a fraction of its genes. The distinct types of cells in multicellular organisms arise because different sets of genes are expressed as cells differentiate. The initiation of transcription for most genes is the most important point of control. Transcription of individual genes is switched on and off in cells by transcription regulators. These act by binding to short stretches of dna called regulatory dna sequences. Most transcription regulators bind to dna using one of a small structural motifs. The precise amino acid sequence that is folded into the dna-binding motif determines the particular dna sequence that is recognized. In bacteria, transcription regulators usually bind to regulatory dna sequences close to where rna polymerase binds. Either activate or repress transcription of the gene.

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