Difference between revisions of "Promoters and Reporters in Synthetic Biology"

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= What Are Promoters and Reporters? =
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== What Are Promoters and Reporters? ==
  
 
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promoter Promoters] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reporter_gene reporters] are genes used in engineering gene circuits. Promoters are DNA sequences located upstream of a gene; they provide binding sites for transcription factors and, eventually, RNA polymerase, allowing genes to be transcribed. If a promoter is being repressed, then transcription cannot occur as RNA polymerase will not have a place to bind.
 
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promoter Promoters] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reporter_gene reporters] are genes used in engineering gene circuits. Promoters are DNA sequences located upstream of a gene; they provide binding sites for transcription factors and, eventually, RNA polymerase, allowing genes to be transcribed. If a promoter is being repressed, then transcription cannot occur as RNA polymerase will not have a place to bind.
  
 
Reporters are not as specific as promoters; they are genes that convey some easily-identifiable and measurable characteristic when they are transcribed, such as fluorescence or beta-galactoside proteins. Reporters are generally attached to other gene sequences so the scientist has a way of knowing if the gene is being transcribed - if the reporter is being transcribed, one can assume that the gene of interest is being transcribed as well.
 
Reporters are not as specific as promoters; they are genes that convey some easily-identifiable and measurable characteristic when they are transcribed, such as fluorescence or beta-galactoside proteins. Reporters are generally attached to other gene sequences so the scientist has a way of knowing if the gene is being transcribed - if the reporter is being transcribed, one can assume that the gene of interest is being transcribed as well.

Revision as of 13:41, 20 November 2007


What Are Promoters and Reporters?

Promoters and reporters are genes used in engineering gene circuits. Promoters are DNA sequences located upstream of a gene; they provide binding sites for transcription factors and, eventually, RNA polymerase, allowing genes to be transcribed. If a promoter is being repressed, then transcription cannot occur as RNA polymerase will not have a place to bind.

Reporters are not as specific as promoters; they are genes that convey some easily-identifiable and measurable characteristic when they are transcribed, such as fluorescence or beta-galactoside proteins. Reporters are generally attached to other gene sequences so the scientist has a way of knowing if the gene is being transcribed - if the reporter is being transcribed, one can assume that the gene of interest is being transcribed as well.