BIOL 302 Chapter Notes - Chapter 8: Rna Interference, Regulatory Sequence, Eukaryotic Transcription

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Eukaryotic cell expresses only a fraction of its genes. Distinct types of cells in multicellular organisms arise because different sets of genes are expressed as cells differentiate. For majority of genes, initiation of transcription is most important point of control. Transcription of individual genes is switched on and off by transcriptional regulator proteins: bind to short stretches of dna called regulatory dna sequences. In bacteria, transcription regulators bind to regulatory dna sequences close to where rna polymerase binds: binding can either activate or repress transcription of gene. In eukaryotes, regulatory dna sequences are often separated from promoter by many thousands of nucleotide pairs. Eukaryotic transcription factors act in one of two ways: directly affect assembly process that requires rna polymerase and general transcription factors at promoter, locally modify the chromatin structure of promoter regions. In eukaryotes, expression of single gene is generally controlled by combo of different transcription regulators.

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