What is the difference in gene regulation between eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells?
Prokaryotes have a single circular chromosome, whereas eukaryotes have many bar-shaped chromosomes. Also, prokaryotes are single-cell organisms (there are some single-cell eukaryotes, but never multicellular prokaryotes). Because multicellular organisms have so many cells, (such as humans), their chromosomes have to contain a lot of information to provide details to the cell so it can carry out its job.
Negative Prokaryotic gene regulation usually comes in the form of feedback inhibition, with the end product of the process either interfering with an enzyme early in the production process or by directly interfering with the operator sequence, acting as a repressor.
There is also positive gene regulation found in prokaryotes. In this case, a repressor is normally attached to an operator in the nucleotide sequence. A protein or a smaller molecule will act as an activator, attaching to the repressor and de-activating it.
In eukaryotic cell DNA there are introns and exons. When a gene is needed to be expressed, the cell must remove the information in the sequence that isn't needed; ie, the introns. It is believed that the same DNA sequence can actually code for more than one gene because of the cells' ability to remove introns and keep exons. for example, the word 'strawberry' contains the code for three words: straw, berry, strawberry. by removing pieces of the word, you are left with information that provides a different set of instructions. Prokaryotes do not have introns and exons.
Eukaryotic genes have a TATA box right before, and enhancers very far upstream from the promoter sequence. When activators attach to the enhancer regions, a group of mediator proteins and some transcription factors will fall into place, allowing RNA polymerase to attach. This forms the transcription initiation complex. Without any of these elements, the gene cannot be transduced. In this way, eukaryotic genes may be regulated.
Choose two (2) of the mechanisms of gene expression regulation in eukaryotic cells denoted by rows shown (7 possible in the Figure below. I will only grade your first to for completeness and will NOT grade any more that you write. If you do an EXTRAODINARY job on your answers, you may ear bonus points For each of your choices answer the following 4 questions using COMPLETE sentences 1. What are the base structural differences between molecules (pink, blue or...
Write down the differences between Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic cells.
A gene-regulation strategy that is unique to eukaryotic cells is
__________. See Section 19.1 ( page 380) .
A. transcriptional regulation
B. mRNA processing
C. post-translational regulation
D. Translational regulation
compare prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells
what is the implication of the differences between prokaryotic cells and eukaryotic cell in regards to the complexity of both cells
3. Prokaryotic and eukaryotic gene expression compared. Below is an incomplete table of prokaryotic and eukaryotic gene expression in comparison. Fill in the blank using PPT slides, notes and the textbook. Prokaryotic gene expression Eukaryotic gene expression Overview Steps Transcription and translation Yes Transcription and translation coupled? Gene structure No introns Epigenetic modification (chromosome remodeling) transcription, translation, RNA processing, protein processing Transcription in the nucleus and translation in the cytoplasm Interrupted gene with exons and introns RNAPI, II, III Which...
Which of the following is found in eukaryotic cells but not in prokaryotic cells? a nucleus a cell membrane DNA enzymes a cell wall
What are some similarities and differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic gene expression (DNA → RNA → protein)? What are the main components of the loc operon, and how is it regulated? What are the main components of the arg operon, and how is it regulated?
Describe the roles of methylases and restriction enzymes in eukaryotic & prokaryotic cells.
State and Describe five major differences and four common features between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.