Why is gene expression important

Each cell expresses, or turns on, only a fraction of its genes at any given time. The rest of the genes are repressed, or turned off. The process of turning genes on and off is known as gene regulation. Gene regulation is an important part of normal development. Genes are turned on and off in different patterns during development to make a brain cell look and act different from a liver cell or a muscle cell, for example. Gene regulation also allows cells to react quickly to changes in their environments. Although we know that the regulation of genes is critical for life, this complex process is not yet fully understood.

Gene regulation can occur at any point during gene expression, but most commonly occurs at the level of transcription (when the information in a gene’s DNA is passed to mRNA). Signals from the environment or from other cells activate proteins called transcription factors. These proteins bind to regulatory regions of a gene and increase or decrease the level of transcription. By controlling the level of transcription, this process can determine when and how much protein product is made by a gene.

Gene expression is a complex process involving coordination of dynamic events, which are subject to regulation at multiple levels: the transcriptional level (transcription initiation, elongation, and termination), the posttranscriptional level (RNA translocation, RNA splicing, RNA stability), the translational level (translation initiation, elongation, and termination), and the posttranslational level (protein splicing, translocation, stability, and covalent modifications).

From: Comprehensive Medicinal Chemistry II, 2007