Epistasis and pleiotropy as natural properties of transcriptional regulation (Q1914178): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 12:46, 16 December 2024
scientific article
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English | Epistasis and pleiotropy as natural properties of transcriptional regulation |
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Epistasis and pleiotropy as natural properties of transcriptional regulation (English)
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31 July 1996
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A mathematical model of transcriptional regulation in early \textit{Drosophila} embryogenesis is discussed. The model describes the threshold-dependent activation of \textit{hunchback} gene transcription -- \textit{hunchback} is responsible for dividing the embryo into segmental regions -- by a protein called Bicoid. In order to analyze this genetic switch the author extends a model describing a similar switch behavior of bacterial phage lambda by \textit{G.K. Ackers} et al. [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 79, 1129-1133 (1982)]. Model parameters include the number of binding sites for the Bicoid activator in the \textit{hunchback} promoter and DNA-protein as well as protein-protein cooperative binding energies. The model produces response curves presenting the level of gene transcription at a given activator concentration and shows that the sharpness of the threshold depends essentially on the number of binding sites.
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epistasis
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gene transcription
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genetic switch
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hunchback gene in drosophila
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