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  2. Inducer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inducer

    Activator binds to an inducer and the complex binds to the activation sequence and activates target gene. [2] Removing the inducer stops transcription. [2] Because a small inducer molecule is required, the increased expression of the target gene is called induction. [2] The lactose operon is one example of an inducible system. [2]

  3. L-arabinose operon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-arabinose_operon

    The L-arabinose operon, also called the ara or araBAD operon, is an operon required for the breakdown of the five-carbon sugar L-arabinose in Escherichia coli. [1] The L-arabinose operon contains three structural genes: araB, araA, araD (collectively known as araBAD), which encode for three metabolic enzymes that are required for the metabolism of L-arabinose. [2]

  4. Operon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operon

    A typical operon. In genetics, an operon is a functioning unit of DNA containing a cluster of genes under the control of a single promoter. [1] The genes are transcribed together into an mRNA strand and either translated together in the cytoplasm, or undergo splicing to create monocistronic mRNAs that are translated separately, i.e. several strands of mRNA that each encode a single gene product.

  5. Regulation of gene expression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regulation_of_gene_expression

    Repressor/Inducer: an activation of a sensor results in the change of expression of a gene; negative feedback: the gene product downregulates its own production directly or indirectly, which can result in keeping transcript levels constant/proportional to a factor; inhibition of run-away reactions when coupled with a positive feedback loop

  6. Synthetic biological circuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_biological_circuit

    Toggle switch which operates using two mutually inhibitory genes, each promoter is inhibited by the repressor that is transcribed by the opposing promoter. Toggle switch design: Inducer 1 inactivates repressor 1, which means repressor 2 is produced. Repressor 2, in turn, stops transcription of the repressor 1 gene and the reporter gene. [14]

  7. PBAD promoter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PBAD_Promoter

    The promoter is a part of the arabinose operon whose name derives from the genes it regulates transcription of: araB, araA, and araD. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In E. coli , the P BAD promoter is adjacent to the P C promoter (systematically araCp ), which transcribes the araC gene in the opposite direction.

  8. Enzyme induction and inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enzyme_induction_and...

    Index inducer or just inducer predictably induce metabolism via a given pathway and are commonly used in prospective clinical drug-drug interaction studies. [ 2 ] Strong, moderate, and weak inducers are drugs that decreases the AUC of sensitive index substrates of a given metabolic pathway by ≥80%, ≥50% to <80%, and ≥20% to <50% ...

  9. Adaptive enzyme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_enzyme

    It is also a part of the Operon Model, which illustrates a way for genes to turn "on" and "off". The inducer causes the gene to turn on (controlled by the amount of reactant which turns the gene on). Then there's the repressor protein that turns genes off. The inducer can remove this repressor, turning genes back on.