How do eukaryotes typically achieve co-regulation of functionally related genes, since they do not use operons?
Explanation
Eukaryotic co-regulation relies on a 'regulon' model, where a single transcription factor can act as a master switch to turn on a whole set of genes, scattered throughout the genome, as long as they all contain the appropriate binding site in their regulatory regions.
Other questions
What is the phenotypic outcome of a mutation in the ultrabithorax (Ubx) gene in Drosophila, as described in the text?
According to the text, why did geneticists Eric Wieschaus and Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard primarily study embryonic phenotypes in their search for developmental mutants?
What is the collective term for the various protein factors that bind cooperatively to an enhancer element to regulate transcription?
How many separate enhancers have been identified to control the complex, seven-striped expression pattern of the eve gene in Drosophila?
What is the primary function of DNA elements called insulators in the context of eukaryotic gene regulation?
Which mechanism allows microRNAs (miRNAs) to regulate the expression of target genes?
What is the key difference between a forward genetic screen and a reverse genetic screen?
The eve gene in Drosophila is regulated by activators and repressors that determine the position of its expression stripes. Which of the following is an activator for the eve stripe 2 enhancer?
What is the correct hierarchical order of gene classes that pattern the anterior-posterior axis of the Drosophila embryo, from earliest acting to latest?
What is a syncytium, as described in the context of early Drosophila embryonic development?
What is the function of the homeobox, a common amino acid sequence found in homeotic (Hox) gene proteins?
What is the evolutionary significance of the fact that mammals have four clusters of Hox genes (Hox-A, -B, -C, -D) while Drosophila has two?
What is collinearity in the context of Hox gene clusters?
Mutations in the coding sequence of the human Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) gene are associated with anomalies in which body parts?
What is the approximate size of the ZRS (Zone of Polarizing Activity Regulatory Sequence) enhancer itself?
What is the proposed evolutionary consequence of the 17-base pair deletion found in the ZRS enhancer of all snakes?
In a reporter gene experiment, what would be the expected result if the eve stripe 2 enhancer was fused to a LacZ reporter gene and introduced into a Drosophila embryo?
What is the key characteristic of maternal effect genes like bicoid?
The protein Hunchback acts as both an activator and a repressor for the eve gene. On which stripes does it act as a repressor?
Which class of developmental genes, which includes hunchback, kruppel, and giant, is responsible for establishing broad domains of expression in the early embryo?
What does a mutation in a pair-rule gene like eve cause in a Drosophila embryo?
Which statement accurately describes the relationship between the three vertebrate orthologs of the hedgehog gene?
What is the result of a mutation that prevents transcription from being turned off, according to the chapter on mutations?
Chromatin remodeling proteins can alter the accessibility of DNA to the transcription machinery. Which of the following is an action performed by these remodelers?
What is the key difference between euchromatin and heterochromatin?
Who was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2006 for the discovery of RNA interference?
According to the chapter, why have some of the whimsical or insensitive names for Drosophila genes, like 'Kruppel', been changed for their human orthologs?
What type of molecule is a morphogen, such as the Bicoid protein?
How do transcription factors like Bicoid, present as a gradient in the syncytial embryo, regulate the expression of zygotic genes like eve?
What is the phenotypic result of a loss-of-function mutation in a segment polarity gene like hedgehog?
What is the primary role of the genes in the Ant-C and BX-C clusters in Drosophila?
How does a reverse genetic experiment help researchers understand enhancer function?
What is a key difference in early embryonic development between Drosophila and mammals mentioned in the text?
Why are Hox genes considered to be highly conserved among all species studied?
In the hierarchy of developmental genes, what is the role of segment identity genes like ultrabithorax?
Chromatin remodeling and modification are key aspects of eukaryotic gene regulation. Which of the following enzyme types is responsible for adding acetyl groups to histones?
What are Topologically Associated Domains (TADs)?
Which of the following describes a gain-of-function mutation in the Antennapedia (Antp) gene?
In the context of the eve stripe 3+7 enhancer, which two proteins act as repressors?
What type of molecule is the product of a homeotic gene like Antennapedia or Ultrabithorax?
What is the term for a gene in another species that is similar to a gene in a reference species due to a shared evolutionary ancestor?
What is the role of the mediator complex in eukaryotic transcription?
In the regulatory cascade of Drosophila development, which gene class is immediately downstream of gap genes and regulated by them?
Mutations in the ZRS enhancer are associated with which human phenotype?
When the eve stripe 2 enhancer is mutated to eliminate the binding sites for the repressor Giant (Gt), what is the predicted effect on LacZ reporter gene expression in a reverse genetics experiment?
What type of regulation is exemplified by the action of microRNAs (miRNAs)?
In the early Drosophila embryo, the protein product of the maternal effect gene Nanos has what effect on hunchback RNA?
The gene eve belongs to which class of developmental genes?
What is the general outcome of histone acetylation on chromatin structure and gene expression?