Is attenuation the product of an allosteric effect? Is attenuation the result of a transcriptional or a translational activity? Explain your answers.
Ch. 12 - Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria and Bacteriophage

Sanders3rd EditionGenetic Analysis: An Integrated ApproachISBN: 9780135564172Not the one you use?Change textbook
All textbooks
Sanders 3rd Edition
Ch. 12 - Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria and Bacteriophage
Problem 4c
Sanders 3rd Edition
Ch. 12 - Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria and Bacteriophage
Problem 4cChapter 12, Problem 4c
Identify similarities and differences between an inducible operon and a repressible operon in terms of
The organization of structural genes of the operon.
Verified step by step guidance1
Understand the concept of an operon: An operon is a cluster of genes under the control of a single promoter and regulatory elements. It is a key feature of prokaryotic gene regulation.
Define an inducible operon: An inducible operon is typically off by default and requires the presence of an inducer molecule to activate transcription. A classic example is the lac operon in *E. coli*.
Define a repressible operon: A repressible operon is typically on by default and can be turned off when a specific molecule (corepressor) binds to the repressor protein. A classic example is the trp operon in *E. coli*.
Compare the organization of structural genes: Both inducible and repressible operons have structural genes organized in a contiguous sequence, which are transcribed together as a single mRNA (polycistronic mRNA). This allows coordinated expression of genes involved in a common pathway.
Highlight the regulatory differences: In an inducible operon, the repressor protein is active by default and binds to the operator to block transcription until the inducer molecule inactivates the repressor. In a repressible operon, the repressor protein is inactive by default and requires a corepressor molecule to bind to the operator and inhibit transcription.

Verified video answer for a similar problem:
This video solution was recommended by our tutors as helpful for the problem above.
Video duration:
3mWas this helpful?
Key Concepts
Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.
Operon Structure
An operon is a cluster of genes under the control of a single promoter, allowing for coordinated expression. In prokaryotes, operons can be classified as inducible or repressible based on their regulatory mechanisms. The structural genes within an operon are transcribed together, producing a single mRNA that encodes multiple proteins, which can be functionally related.
Recommended video:
Guided course
Arabinose Operon
Inducible Operon
An inducible operon is typically off and can be turned on in response to an inducer molecule. This type of operon, such as the lac operon in E. coli, allows for the expression of genes involved in metabolizing specific substrates when they are present. The presence of the inducer leads to the inactivation of a repressor protein, enabling transcription of the structural genes.
Recommended video:
Guided course
Induced Mutations
Repressible Operon
A repressible operon is usually active and can be turned off by a corepressor molecule. An example is the trp operon, which regulates the synthesis of tryptophan. When tryptophan levels are high, it binds to the repressor, activating it and blocking transcription of the operon, thus preventing the unnecessary production of tryptophan.
Recommended video:
Guided course
Arabinose Operon
Related Practice
Textbook Question
441
views
Textbook Question
The transcription of -galactosidase and permease is inducible in lac⁺ bacteria with a wild-type lac operon. Explain the mechanism by which lactose gains access to the cell to induce transcription of the genes.
660
views
Textbook Question
Identify similarities and differences between an inducible operon and a repressible operon in terms of
The transcription-regulating DNA sequences.
793
views
Textbook Question
Why is it essential that bacterial cells be able to regulate the expression of their genes? What are the energetic and evolutionary advantages of regulated gene expression? Is the expression of all bacterial genes subject to regulated expression? Compare and contrast the difference between regulated gene expression and constitutive gene expression.
982
views
Textbook Question
Identify similarities and differences between an inducible operon and a repressible operon in terms of
The presence and action of allosteric regulatory molecules.
566
views
Textbook Question
The trpL region contains four repeated DNA sequences that lead to the formation of stem-loop structures in mRNA. What are these stem-loop structures, and how do they affect transcription of the structural genes of the trp operon?
530
views