Gene expression programs are like recipes that tell cells what to make and when.
Imagine you have a toy kitchen, and each recipe tells you how to build different kinds of toys, cars, robots, or cookies. In the body, cells use these recipes too: they follow them to make special tools called proteins, which help the cell do its job.
How It Works
Every cell has a big cookbook inside it, this is like the DNA. When a cell needs to make something new, it looks up the recipe in its cookbook and starts cooking, that’s gene expression.
Sometimes the cell cooks one recipe all day long; other times, it switches recipes depending on what it needs to do. These sets of recipes being followed at the same time are called gene expression programs.
Real Life Example
Think about a baker who makes bread in the morning and cakes in the afternoon, they follow different sets of recipes at different times. Similarly, your body uses different gene expression programs when you're growing, resting, or fighting off germs.
Examples
- Cells use these programs to decide which proteins to produce based on the environment.
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See also
- What are epigenetic marks?
- What is invitinin?
- What are transcription factors?
- What are epigenetic modifications?
- How Does Homeostasis: How Your Body Stays in Balance with its Environment Work?