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Summary A Level AQA Biology Topic 8 notes -- control of gene expression

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Detailed notes by an A* student on topic 8 (control of gene expression) of the AQA A Level biology specification. Notes address points in the specification. Topics covered include: - mutations - epigenetics and RNA interference - cancer - stem cells - genome projects - DNA technology (recombinant DNA technology; amplifying DNA fragments in vivo and in vitro; DNA probes; gel electrophoresis)

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June 12, 2025
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Topic 8

Alteration of the sequence of bases in DNA can alter the structure of proteins
●​ Frame shift: a mutation changes the nature of all base triplets downstream from the
mutation
●​ Gene mutations occur spontaneously
●​ Mutation rate increased by mutagenic agents
●​ Mutation:
○​ Inversion
○​ Duplication
○​ Translocation
○​ Substitution
○​ Deletion
○​ Addition

Most of a cell’s DNA is not translated
●​ Totipotent cells can divide and produce any type of body cell
○​ During development, totipotent cells translate only part of their DNA, resulting in
cell specialisation
○​ Totipotent cells occur only for a limited time in early mammalian embryos
●​ Pluripotent cells are found in embryos – pluripotent cells can specialise into any cell in
the body but lose the ability to become the cells that make up the placenta
○​ (Totipotent cells can divide into the cells that make up the placenta in mammals)
●​ Multipotent and unipotent cells are found in mature mammals and can divide to form a
limited number of cell types
○​ Multipotent stem cells can differentiate into a few different types of cell, e.g
multipotent stem cells in bone marrow can form both red and white blood cells
○​ Unipotent stem cells can only differentiate into one type of cell, eg epidermal skin
cells and cardiomyocytes (heart muscle cells that make up a lot of tissue in the
heart)
●​ Pluripotent stem cells can divide in unlimited numbers and can be used in treating
human disorders (aka embryonic stem cells)
●​ Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells) can be produced from adult somatic (body)
cells using appropriate protein transcription factors
○​ The adult somatic cells are made to express a series of transcription factors that
are normally associated with pluripotent stem cells, and these transcription
factors cause the cells to express genes that are associated with pluripotency.
■​ Can do this eg by infecting the cells with a specially-modified virus that
has the genes coding for the transcription factors within its DNA → when
the virus infects the cell these genes are passed into the adult cell’s DNA
so the cell is able to produce the transcription factors

, Regulation of transcription and translation
●​ In eukaryotes, transcription of target genes can be stimulated/inhibited when specific
transcription factors move from the cytoplasm into the nucleus
○​ In the nucleus they bind to specific DNA sites near the start of their target genes.
○​ Some transcription factors – activators – stimulate or increase the rate of
transcription (eg help RNA polymerase bind to start of target gene)
○​ Some transcription factors – repressors – inhibit or decrease the rate of
transcription (eg bind to start of target gene preventing RNA polymerase binding)
●​ Role of oestrogen in initiating transcription:
○​ Oestrogen is a steroid hormone
○​ In the cytoplasm, oestrogen binds to a transcription factor called an oestrogen
receptor → forms an oestrogen-oestrogen receptor complex
○​ The complex moves from the cytoplasm into the nucleus where it binds to
specific DNA sites near the start of the target gene
○​ Complex acts as an activator of transcription
○​ (In some cells the complex acts as a repressor of transcription → depends on the
type of cell and the target gene)
●​ Epigenetic control of gene expression in eukaryotes:
○​ Epigenetic control works through the attachment or removal of chemical groups
(epigenetic marks) to/from DNA or histones
■​ Increased methylation of DNA switches a gene off
●​ Methyl group attaches to DNA coding for a gene at a CpG site
●​ Increased methylation changes the DNA structure so that the
transcriptional machinery can’t interact with the gene and it is not
expressed
■​ Decreased acetylation of histones switches a gene off
●​ Histones are proteins that DNA wraps around to form chromatin
(which makes up chromosomes) → chromatin can be highly
condensed or less condensed. When highly condensed, not
transcriptionally active
●​ When histones are acetylated, the chromatin is less condensed so
transcriptionally active because transcriptional machinery can
access the DNA
●​ So decreased acetylation of histones causes chromatin to become
more condensed so transcriptionally inactive
●​ Histone deacetylase enzymes are responsible for removing the
acetyl groups
○​ Epigenetic marks don’t alter the base sequence; they alter how easy it is for
enzymes and other proteins to interact with and transcribe the DNA
○​ Epigenetic changes to gene expression can occur in response to environmental
factors, eg pollution
○​ Epigenetic changes can be inherited by offspring → most epigenetic marks on
the DNA base sequence that offspring inherit are removed between generations,
but some escape the removal process and are passed on.
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