Negative control occurs when a regulatory protein called a repressor binds to DNA and shuts down transcription
Positive control occurs when a regulatory protein called an activator binds to DNA and triggers transcription
Cells that are abnormal because they produce a product at all times instead of regulating expression of the product are called constitutive mutants.
Jacob and Monod coined the term operon to describe a set of coordinately regulated bacterial genes that are transcribed together into one polycistronic mRNA.
The group of genes involved in lactose metabolism was termed the lαc operon.
The repressor binds to a DNA sequence in the lαc operon called the operator.
In allosteric regulation, a small molecule binds to a protein and causes it to change its shape and activity.
A protein known as the catabolite activator protein (CAP) has long been viewed as exerting positive control of many operons in E. coli, including the lαc operon.
Negative feedback control is a form of control in which the final product of a pathway inhibits the production of the product.
The only difference is that for the trp operon the small molecule regulator is called a co-repressor, because it works with the repressor to make it active.