Dictionary Definition
operon n : a segment of DNA containing adjacent
genes including structural genes and an operator gene and a
regulatory gene
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
operonExtensive Definition
An operon is a functioning unit of key nucleotide sequences
including an operator,
a common promoter, and
one or more structural genes, which is controlled as a
unit to produce messenger RNA (mRNA),
in the process of protein transcription.
Overview
Operons occur primarily in prokaryotes but also in some
eukaryotes, including
nematodes. Although it
may not be located in the operon gene, a "Regulator" gene is
present which codes for the production of a repressor or
corepressor protein. The location and condition of the regulator,
promoter, operator and structural DNA sequences can determine the
effects of common mutations.
The first operon to be described was the
lac-operon in Escherichia coli, by F. Jacob, D. Perrin, C. Sanchez
and J. Monod in the "Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de
l'Académie des sciences" in 1960http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?Db=pubmed&Cmd=ShowDetailView&TermToSearch=14406329&ordinalpos=2&itool=EntrezSystem2.PEntrez.Pubmed.Pubmed_ResultsPanel.Pubmed_RVDocSum.
Operons are related to regulons and stimulons. Whereas operons
contain a set of genes regulated by the same operator, regulons
contain a set of genes under regulation by a single regulatory
protein, and stimulons contain a set of genes under regulation by a
single cell stimulus.
The operon as a unit of transcription
An operon contains one or more structural
genes which are transcribed into one polycistronic mRNA: a single mRNA
molecule that codes for more than one protein. Upstream of the
structural genes lies a promoter sequence which
provides a site for RNA
polymerase to bind and initiate transcription. Close to the
promoter lies a section of DNA called an operator. The operon may
also contain regulatory
genes such as a repressor gene which codes for
a regulatory protein that binds to the operator and inhibits
transcription. Regulatory genes need not be part of the operon
itself, but may be located elsewhere in the genome. The repressor
molecule will reach the operator to block the transcription of the
structural genes.
Promoter
- Main article: promoter.
A promoter is a DNA sequence that
enables a gene to be
transcribed.
The promoter is recognized by RNA
polymerase, which then initiates transcription. In RNA
synthesis, promoters indicate which genes should be used for
messenger RNA creation - and, by extension, control which proteins
the cell manufactures.
Operator
An operator is a segment of DNA which regulates the
activity of the structural genes of the operon that it is
linked to, by interacting with a specific repressor or activator.
It is a regulatory sequence for shutting a gene down or turning it
"on".
Operon gene regulation
Control of operon genes is a type of gene
regulation that enables organisms to regulate the expression of
various genes depending on environmental conditions. Operon
regulation can be either negative or positive.
Negative regulation involves the binding of a
repressor to the
operator to prevent transcription.
- In negative inducible operons, a regulatory repressor protein is normally bound to the operator and it prevents the transcription of the genes on the operon. If an inducer molecule is present, it binds to the repressor and changes its conformation so that it is unable to bind to the operator. This allows for the transcription of the genes on the operator.
- In negative repressible operons, transcription of the genes on the operon normally takes place. Repressor proteins are produced by a regulator gene but they are unable to bind to the operator in their normal conformation. However certain molecules called corepressors can bind to the repressor protein and change its conformation so that it can bind to the operator. The activated repressor protein binds to the operator and prevents transcription.
Operons can also be positively controlled. With
positive control, an activator
protein stimulates transcription by binding to DNA (usually at
a site other than the operator).
- In positive inducible operons, activator proteins are normally unable to bind to the pertinent DNA. However, certain substrate molecules can bind to the activator proteins and change their conformations so that they can bind to the DNA and enable transcription to take place.
- In positive repressible operons, the activator proteins are normally bound to the pertinent DNA segment. However, certain molecules can bind to the activator and prevent it from binding to DNA. This prevents transcription.
The lac operon
- Main article: lac operon.
The lac operon of the model
bacterium Escherichia
coli was the first operon to be discovered and provides a
typical example of operon function. It consists of three adjacent
structural
genes, a promoter,
a terminator,
and an operator.
The lac operon is regulated by several factors including the
availability of glucose
and lactose.
The trp operon
- Main article: trp operon.
Discovered in 1953 by Jacques
Monod and colleagues, the trp operon in E. coli was the first
repressible operon to be discovered. While the lac operon can be
activated by a chemical (allolactose), the tryptophan
(Trp) operon is inhibited by a chemical (tryptophan). This operon
contains five structural genes: trp E, trp D, trp C, trp B, and trp
A, which encodes tryptophan
synthetase. It also contains a promoter which binds to RNA
polymerase and an operator which blocks transcription when bound to
the protein synthesized by the repressor gene (trp R) that binds to
the operator. In the lac operon, lactose binds to the repressor
protein and prevents it from repressing gene transcription, while
in the trp operon, tryptophan binds to the repressor protein and
enables it to repress gene transcription. Also unlike the lac
operon, the trp operon contains a leader peptide and an attenuator
sequence which allows for graded regulation.
Predicting the number and organization of operons
The number and organization of operons has been
studied most critically in E. coli. As a
result, predictions can be made based on an organism's genomic
sequence.
One prediction method uses the intergenic
distance between reading frames as a primary predictor of the
number of operons in the genome. The separation merely changes the
frame and guarantees that the read through is efficient. Longer
stretches exist where operons start and stop, often up to 40-50
bases .
Operon prediction is even more accurate if the
functional class of the molecules is considered. Bacteria have
clustered their reading frames into units, sequestered by
co-involvement in protein complexes, common pathways, or shared
substrates and transporters. Thus, accurate prediction would
involve all of these data, a difficult task indeed.
See also
References
operon in Arabic: مشغل (أحياء)
operon in German: Operon
operon in Spanish: Operón
operon in French: Opéron
operon in Croatian: Operon
operon in Italian: Operone
operon in Hebrew: אופרון
operon in Hungarian: Operon-modell
operon in Dutch: Operon
operon in Japanese: オペロン
operon in Occitan (post 1500): Operon
operon in Polish: Operon (biologia)
operon in Portuguese: Operão
operon in Romanian: Operon
operon in Russian: Оперон
operon in Slovenian: Operon
operon in Serbian: Оперон
operon in Finnish: Operoni
operon in Chinese: 操縱組