BIOS 10161 Lecture Notes - Lecture 14: Histone Acetyltransferase, Proteasome, Acetyl Group

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During development, certain proteins must be made at specific times in specific cells. Both prokaryotes and eukaryotes use dna-protein interactions and negative positive control to regulate gene expression. There are differences, some dictated by the presence of a nucleus in a eukaryotic cell: physically separates transcription and translation. Eukaryotic promoters contain a sequence called the tata box: here, dna begins to denature/unwind into coding and template strands, promoters also include regulatory sequences recognized by transcription factors (regulatory proteins) Rna polymerase ii can only bind to the promoter after general transcription factors have assembled on the chromosome: tfiid binds to tata box, and then other factors bind to form an initiation complex. Some regulatory sequences are common to promoters of many genes, such as the. Some dna sequences are specific to a few genes and are recognized by transcription factors found only in certain tissues: specific regulatory dnas play important roles in distinct modes of cellular differentiation.

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