Gene regulation

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Gene regulation

Modulo 3 BPT

Modulo 3 BPT

Nuclear structure
DNA structure
Transcription of DNA
Translation of mRNA
Gene regulation
Epigenetics
Amino acids and protein folding
Protein structure and synthesis
Nucleotide metabolism
DNA replication
Lac operon
DNA damage and repair
Cell cycle
Mitosis and meiosis
DNA mutations
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
Orotic aciduria
Adenosine deaminase deficiency
Xeroderma pigmentosum
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
Bloom syndrome
Fanconi anemia
McCune-Albright syndrome
Acute radiation syndrome
Purine and pyrimidine synthesis and metabolism disorders: Pathology review
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and reverse-transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR)
Gel electrophoresis and genetic testing
ELISA (Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay)
Karyotyping
DNA cloning
Fluorescence in situ hybridization
Mendelian genetics and punnett squares
Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
Inheritance patterns
Independent assortment of genes and linkage
Evolution and natural selection
Down syndrome (Trisomy 21)
Edwards syndrome (Trisomy 18)
Patau syndrome (Trisomy 13)
Fragile X syndrome
Huntington disease
Myotonic dystrophy
Friedreich ataxia
Turner syndrome
Klinefelter syndrome
Prader-Willi syndrome
Angelman syndrome
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
Cri du chat syndrome
Williams syndrome
Alagille syndrome (NORD)
Achondroplasia
Polycystic kidney disease
Familial adenomatous polyposis
Familial hypercholesterolemia
Hereditary spherocytosis
Marfan syndrome
Multiple endocrine neoplasia
Neurofibromatosis
Tuberous sclerosis
von Hippel-Lindau disease
Albinism
Cystic fibrosis
Gaucher disease (NORD)
Glycogen storage disease type I
Glycogen storage disease type II (NORD)
Glycogen storage disease type III
Glycogen storage disease type IV
Glycogen storage disease type V
Hemochromatosis
Mucopolysaccharide storage disease type 1 (Hurler syndrome) (NORD)
Krabbe disease
Leukodystrophy
Niemann-Pick disease types A and B (NORD)
Niemann-Pick disease type C
Primary ciliary dyskinesia
Phenylketonuria (NORD)
Sickle cell disease (NORD)
Tay-Sachs disease (NORD)
Alpha-thalassemia
Beta-thalassemia
Wilson disease
Alport syndrome
X-linked agammaglobulinemia
Fabry disease (NORD)
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency
Hemophilia
Mucopolysaccharide storage disease type 2 (Hunter syndrome) (NORD)
Muscular dystrophy
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
Mitochondrial myopathy
Autosomal trisomies: Pathology review
Muscular dystrophies and mitochondrial myopathies: Pathology review
Miscellaneous genetic disorders: Pathology review
Blood histology
Blood components
Erythropoietin
Blood groups and transfusions
Platelet plug formation (primary hemostasis)
Coagulation (secondary hemostasis)
Role of Vitamin K in coagulation
Clot retraction and fibrinolysis
Iron deficiency anemia
Sideroblastic anemia
Anemia of chronic disease
Lead poisoning
Hemolytic disease of the newborn
Autoimmune hemolytic anemia
Pyruvate kinase deficiency
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
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Vitamin B12 deficiency
Diamond-Blackfan anemia
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Bernard-Soulier syndrome
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Immune thrombocytopenia
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Von Willebrand disease
Disseminated intravascular coagulation
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
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Factor V Leiden
Protein C deficiency
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Antiphospholipid syndrome
Hodgkin lymphoma
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Chronic leukemia
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Polycythemia vera (NORD)
Myelofibrosis (NORD)
Essential thrombocythemia (NORD)
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Mastocytosis (NORD)
Microcytic anemia: Pathology review
Non-hemolytic normocytic anemia: Pathology review
Intrinsic hemolytic normocytic anemia: Pathology review
Extrinsic hemolytic normocytic anemia: Pathology review
Macrocytic anemia: Pathology review
Heme synthesis disorders: Pathology review
Coagulation disorders: Pathology review
Platelet disorders: Pathology review
Mixed platelet and coagulation disorders: Pathology review
Thrombosis syndromes (hypercoagulability): Pathology review
Lymphomas: Pathology review
Leukemias: Pathology review
Plasma cell disorders: Pathology review
Myeloproliferative disorders: Pathology review
Ribonucleotide reductase inhibitors
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Disorders of sex chromosomes: Pathology review
Testicular tumors: Pathology review
Ovarian cysts and tumors: Pathology review
Cervical cancer: Pathology review
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Colorectal cancer
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Colorectal polyps and cancer: Pathology review
Seizures and epilepsy
Dementia: Pathology review
Movement disorders: Pathology review
Demyelinating disorders: Pathology review
Neuromuscular junction disorders: Pathology review
Adult brain tumors: Pathology review
Inflammatory bowel disease: Pathology review
Bowel obstruction

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Our DNA is like a library - found in the nucleus of our cells - with thousands of books.

Some of these books - called genes - are extremely important, because they carry the recipes for every single protein found in the cell.

Some of these proteins are necessary in all the cells - like the cytoskeletal proteins.

But other proteins, like neurotransmitters, are necessary only in certain cell types - like neurons.

Gene regulation is what allows the right cells to make the right proteins at the right time.

Now, on the molecular level, DNA is made up of two strands of nucleotides, so each gene is just a segment of this nucleotide sequence.

And there are four types of nucleotides: adenine, guanine, thymine, and cytosine - or A, G, T, C.

Now, the entire DNA molecule is wrapped around structural proteins called histones that package the DNA into nucleosomes - like when we roll yarn into a ball to keep it compact and organized.

Altogether, the entire yarn with the DNA plus the histones - is called chromatin.

The process of decoding the information stored in the DNA is called gene expression - and it includes transcription and translation.

Transcription is where the enzyme RNA polymerase uses the gene as a template to create a molecule that can leave the nucleus.

This molecule is called messenger RNA or mRNA and it has the same nucleotide sequence as the gene, with one tweak: it has uracil nucleotides - or U - instead of thymine.

This message is encoded so that any 3 nucleotide equate a specific codon which codes for an amino acid or is a stop codon which means that the protein is complete.

In translation, specialized proteins in the cytoplasm - called ribosomes - use the mRNA template to create a string of amino acids that make up the protein.

Gene regulation can occur at the level of transcription, post-transcriptional which is between transcription and translation, or translation.

Let’s start with transcriptional regulation - and to understand that let’s start with a deeper dive into transcription.

Transcription begins with general transcription factors binding to a unique DNA sequence – called the promoter – just upstream from a gene.

General transcription factors help unwind the DNA helix so that RNA polymerase can transcribe the gene.

However, general transcription factors can only bind to the promoter sequence if the DNA is not too tightly packed around the histones.

Usually, genes that the cell uses frequently - like the hemoglobin genes in red blood cells - are packed more loosely and therefore easier to access.

An interesting form of gene regulation, called epigenetics, can also make genes more or less accessible to general transcription factors and RNA polymerase.

Epigenetics refers to chemical modifications that selectively activate or silence certain genes without modifying the nucleotide sequence of the gene.

These changes can occur in the histones, or to the DNA itself.

For histones, this usually happens through acetylation - adding an acetyl group to them -, deacetylation - removing it -, or through methylation - addition of a methyl group.

When an enzyme called histone acetylase adds an acetyl group to histones, this decreases their attraction for DNA, so the genes become more easily accessible for RNA polymerase.

On the other hand, if another enzyme called histone deacetylase removes an acetyl group, it has the opposite effect - increases the attraction between DNA and histones, so DNA wraps more tightly around histones, making the genes less accessible.

Methylation, on the other hand can both increase and decrease transcription, depending on how many methyl groups are added.

If only one methyl group is added, this decreases the attraction between the DNA and the histone, so the genes are easily accessible.

If we add two or three methyl groups to it, however, the histone will repress, or lock down, preventing the transcription of those genes.

Epigenetic changes in DNA, on the other hand, are mostly based on methylation - the addition of a methyl group, usually to a cytosine residue, prevents general transcription factors from binding to the promoter, decreasing gene expression.

As it turns out, DNA methylation also stimulates histone deacetylation - so that further inhibits transcription.

So let’s say that based on the epigenetic modifications, our gene is exposed and ready to be transcribed.

Sometimes cells need to increase or decrease transcription of a certain gene, and here’s where other types of transcription factors called activators or repressors get involved.

Activators kickstart gene transcription through positive regulation.

They bind to a DNA sequence called the enhancer, which is on the same DNA strand as the gene - sometimes it’s near the promoter, but other times it’s further upstream or downstream.

So, if the right stimulus - a ligand - reaches the cell, it gets the activator to move from the cytoplasm into the nucleus, and binds to the enhancer.

Once the activator is bound to the enhancer, it can loop the DNA around in such a way that it makes it even easier for general transcription factors and the RNA polymerase to bind to the promoter region.

In addition, activators help recruit histone acetyltransferases - which also promotes binding of RNA polymerase and transcription.

On the other hand there are repressors which inhibit gene transcription through negative regulation.

Repressors bind to a DNA sequence called the silencer, which is also on the same DNA strand as the gene.

When the repressor is inactive, it’s floating freely in the cytoplasm.

But when the repressor protein is active, it moves into the nucleus, binds to the silencer sequence, and prevents RNA polymerase from binding to the promoter - thus inhibiting transcription.

Repressors can also recruit histone deacetylases, which also inhibit binding of RNA polymerase and transcription.

The thyroid hormone receptor is an interesting example because it can act as a repressor and an activator, depending on the situation.

When there’s no thyroid hormone in the cytoplasm, the thyroid receptor behaves like a repressor.

It is bound to another protein called a co-repressor and they bind to the silencer sequence of DNA and they recruit histone deacetylases - inhibiting transcription.

Key Takeaways

Gene regulation is the process by which a gene's expression is controlled. This control may be either activation or inhibition. Activational gene control occurs when a particular gene is turned on in response to some signal or stimulus. For example, genes that code for insulin production necessary for the body to metabolize sugar will be active (or "turned on") only when blood sugar levels are high.

Inhibitational gene control, on the other hand, happens when a particular gene is turned off in response to some signal or stimulus. For example, genes that code for insulin production will be inactive when blood sugar levels are low.