AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

Chapter 18: Regulation of Gene Expression

Campbell Biology: 9th (Global) Edition

Terms : Hide Images
240691129operatorIn bacterial and phage DNA, a sequence of nucleotides near the start of an operon to which an active repressor can attach. The binding of the repressor prevents RNA polymerase from attaching to the promoter and transcribing the genes of the operon.
240691130operonA unit of genetic function found in bacteria and phages, consisting of a promoter, an operator, and a coordinately regulated cluster of genes whose products function in a common pathway.
240691131repressorA protein that inhibits gene transcription. In prokaryotes, these bind to the DNA in or near the promoter. In eukaryotes, these may bind to control elements within enhancers, to activators, or to other proteins in a way that blocks activators from binding to DNA.
240691132regulatory geneA gene that codes for a protein, such as a repressor, that controls the transcription of another gene or group of genes.
240691133corepressorA small molecule that binds to a bacterial repressor protein and changes the protein's shape, allowing it to bind to the operator and switch an operon off.
240691134inducerA specific small molecule that binds to a bacterial repressor protein and changes the repressor's shape so that it cannot bind to an operator, thus switching an operon on.
240691135cyclic AMP (cAMP) (cyclic adenosine monophosphate)A ring-shaped molecule made from ATP that is a common intracellular signaling molecule (second messenger) in eukaryotic cells. It is also a regulator of some bacterial operons.
240691136activatorA protein that binds to DNA and stimulates gene transcription. In prokaryotes, these bind in or near the promoter; in eukaryotes, these generally bind to control elements in enhancers.
240691137differential gene expressionThe expression of different sets of genes by cells with the same genome.
240691138histone acetylationThe attachment of acetyl groups to certain amino acids of histone proteins.
240691139DNA methylationThe presence of methyl groups on the DNA bases (usually cytosine) of plants, animals, and fungi.
240691140epignetic inheritanceInheritance of traits transmitted by mechanisms not directly involving the nucleotide sequence of a genome.
240691141control elementA segment of noncoding DNA that helps regulate transcription of a gene by serving as a binding site for a transcription factor. A multiple of these are present in a eukaryotic gene's enhancer.
240691142enhancerA segment of eukaryotic DNA containing multiple control elements, usually located far from the gene whose transcription it regulates.
240691143alternative RNA splicingA type of eukaryotic gene regulation at the RNA-processing level in which different mRNA molecules are produced from the same primary transcript, depending on which RNA segments are treated as exons and which as introns.
240691144proteasomeA giant protein complex that recognizes and destroys proteins tagged for elimination by the small protein ubiquitin.
240691145microRNA (miRNA)A small, single-stranded RNA molecule, generated from a hairpin structure on a precursor RNA transcribed from a particular gene. It associates with one or more proteins in a complex that can degrade or prevent translation of an mRNA with a complementary sequence.
240691146RNA interference (RNAi)A technique used to silence the expression of selected genes. It uses synthetic double-stranded RNA molecules that match the sequence of a particular gene to trigger the breakdown of the gene's messenger RNA.
240691147small interfering RNA (siRNA)One of multiple small, single-stranded RNA molecules generated by cellular machinery from a long, linear, double-stranded RNA molecule. It associates with one or more proteins in a complex that can degrade or prevent translation of an mRNA with a complementary sequence. In some cases, it can also block transcription by promoting chromatin modification.
240691148differentiationThe process by which a cell or group of cells become specialized in structure and function.
240691149morphogenesisThe cellular and tissue-based processes by which an animal body takes shape.
240691150cytoplasmic determinantA maternal substance, such as a protein or RNA, that when placed into an egg influences the course of early development by regulating the expression of genes that affect the developmental fate of cells.
240691151inductionThe process in which one group of embryonic cells influences the development of another, usually by causing changes in gene expression.
240691152determinationThe progressive restriction of developmental potential in which the possible fate of each cell becomes more limited as an embryo develops. At the end of this process, a cell is committed to its fate.
240691153pattern formationThe development of a multicellular organism's spatial organization, the arrangement of organs and tissues in their characteristic places in three-dimensional space.
240691154positional informationMolecular cues that control pattern information in an animal or plant embryonic structure by indicating a cell's location relative to the organism's body axes. These cues elicit a response by genes that regulate development.
240691155homeotic geneAny of the master regulatory genes that control placement and spatial organization of body parts in animals, plants, and fungi by controlling the developmental fate of groups of cells.
240691156embryonic lethalA mutation with a phenotype leading to death of an embryo or larva.
240691157maternal effect geneA gene that, when mutant in the mother, results in a mutant phenotype in the offspring, regardless of the offspring's genotype. These were first identified in Drosophila melanogaster.
240691158egg-polarity geneA gene that helps control the orientation (polarity) of the egg.
240691159bicoidA maternal effect gene that codes for a protein responsible for specifying the anterior end in Drosophila melanogaster.
240691160morphogenA substance, such as Bicoid protein in Drosophila, that provides positional information in the form of a concentration gradient along an embryonic axis.
240691161oncogeneA gene found in viral or cellular genomes that is involved in triggering molecular events that can lead to cancer.
240691162proto-oncogeneA normal cellular gene that has the potential to become an oncogene.
240691163tumor-suppressor geneA gene whose protein product inhibits cell division, thereby preventing the uncontrolled cell growth that contributes to cancer.
240691164ras geneA gene that codes for Ras, a G protein that relays a growth signal from a growth factor receptor on the plasma membrane to a cascade of protein kinases, ultimately resulting in stimulation of the cell cycle.
240691165p53 geneA tumor-suppressor gene that codes for a specific transcription factor that promotes the synthesis of proteins that inhibit the cell cycle.

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!