Question 5: Define an operon. giving an example, explain an Inducible operon.
Answer:
The concept of operon was first proposed by Jacob and Monad, in 1961. An operon is a unit of prokaryotic gene expression which includes coordinately regulated or structural genes and control elements which are recognized by regulatory gene product.
Components of an operon:
- Structural gene When lactose is added to the E.coli, the structural genes produces mRNAs, which in turn, synthesize specific polypeptides on the ribosomes (translation).
- Promoter The sequence of DNA where RNA polymerase binds and initiates transcription of structural genes is called promoter.
- Operator The sequence of DNA adjacent to promoter where specific repressor protein binds is called operator.
- Regulator gene The gene that codes for the repressor protein which gets bind to the operator and suppresses its activity as a final result by which transcription will get switched off.
- Inducer It is a chemical substrate which inactivates the repressor by the latter’s structure and many other processes are in turn induces in terms of this. It is a chemical of diverse of diverse nature like metabolite, hormone substrate etc.
Inducible operon system:
An inducible operon system is a regulatory unit of genetic material which remains switched on in response to the presence of a chemical signal, e.g., the lactose or lac operon of E.coli.
The lactose operon: the lac Z, Y and A genes are transcribed from a lac transcription unit under the control of a single promoter. They encode enzyme required for the use of lactose as a carbon source. The lac I gene product and the lac repressor are expressed from a separated transcription unit that is upstream from the operator.
Lac operon consists of three structural genes (Z, Y and A), operator, promoter and a separate regulatory gene. The three structural genes (Z, Y and A) transcribe polycistronic mRNA.

- Gene z codes for β- galactosidase enzyme which breaks lactose into galactose and glucose
- Gene y codes for permease, which increases the permeability of the cell to lactose.
- Gene a codes for enzyme transacetylase that catalyses the transacetylation of lactose in the active form.
1. When lactose is absent
- When lactose is absent, I gene regulates and produces repressor mRNA which translate repression.
- The repressor protein binds to the operator region of the operon and as a result prevent RNA polymerase to bind the operon.
- The operon is switched off.
2. When lactose is present
- Lactose acts as an inducer which binds to the repressor and forms an inactive repressor.
- The repressor fails to bind the operator region.
- The RNA polymerase binds to the operator and transcript lac mRNA.
- lac mRNA is polycistronic, i.e. produces all three enzymes, β-galactosidase, permease and transacetylase.
- The lac operon is switched on.
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