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Promoter (genetics)

Also known as:promoter regionpromoter sequencecore promoter

A promoter is a regulatory DNA sequence located upstream (5') of a gene's transcription start site (+1) to which RNA polymerase and transcription factors bind to initiate transcription. In prokaryotes, the consensus promoter elements include the −10 (Pribnow box: TATAAT) and −35 (TTGACA) sequences; in eukaryotes, the core promoter often contains a TATA box (~−30), an initiator element (Inr) at +1, and downstream promoter elements (DPE). The strength of a promoter — determined by how closely its sequence matches the consensus — directly controls the frequency of transcription initiation and therefore the level of gene expression.

Comparison of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Core Promoter Elements

ElementOrganismPositionConsensus SequenceFunction
−35 elementProkaryote−35TTGACAInitial RNA Pol σ factor contact
Pribnow box (−10)Prokaryote−10TATAATDNA melting; RNA Pol binding
TATA boxEukaryote−30 to −25TATAAATBP binding; transcription start positioning
Initiator (Inr)Eukaryote+1YYANWYYTSS definition
Downstream promoter element (DPE)Eukaryote+28 to +34RGWYVTFIID binding in TATA-less promoters
CpG islandEukaryote (vertebrate)−500 to +200CG-rich regionMarks constitutively active promoters

Interactive Tools

NCBI Promoter Databases

Textbook detail on prokaryotic and eukaryotic promoter structure

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Khan Academy: Transcription Factors and Promoters

Explanation of TATA box, transcription factors, and promoter function

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Brilliant.org: Gene Regulation

Problems and concept breakdowns on promoter strength and regulation

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Diagram of a eukaryotic gene promoter showing TATA box, transcription start site, and RNA polymerase binding

Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Related Terms

Biology

Transcription (biology)

Transcription is the first step of gene expression in which a specific segment of DNA is copied into RNA (messenger RNA, mRNA) by the enzyme RNA polymerase. The process occurs in the nucleus of eukaryotes and the cytoplasm of prokaryotes, and involves three stages: initiation at the promoter, elongation of the RNA strand, and termination at a specific sequence. The resulting pre-mRNA in eukaryotes undergoes processing (5' capping, polyadenylation, and splicing) before being exported to the cytoplasm for translation.

Biology

Gene Expression

Gene expression is the process by which the information encoded in a gene is used to synthesize a functional gene product — most commonly a protein, but also functional RNA molecules such as tRNA, rRNA, and microRNA. It encompasses two main stages: transcription (DNA to mRNA) and translation (mRNA to protein), along with all associated regulatory and processing steps. Gene expression is tightly regulated at multiple levels — transcriptional, post-transcriptional, translational, and post-translational — allowing cells to respond dynamically to developmental cues, environmental signals, and metabolic needs.

Biology

DNA Replication

DNA replication is the biological process by which a double-stranded DNA molecule is copied to produce two identical DNA molecules, each containing one original and one newly synthesized strand. This semi-conservative process is essential for cell division, ensuring that each daughter cell receives a complete copy of the genetic information. It is carried out by a complex of enzymes including DNA polymerase, helicase, primase, and ligase, and occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle.

From Latin promovere, meaning "to move forward" or "to advance." The term promoter was introduced in genetics during the 1960s–70s to describe the DNA region that "promotes" or initiates transcription of a gene, first studied extensively in the context of the lac operon by Jacob and Monod.

promotertranscriptiongene-regulationrna-polymerasetata-boxmolecular-biology