With a coworker at the Pasteur Institute, Jacob discovered that the genes of a bacterium are arranged linearly in a ring and that the ring can be broken at almost any point. In 1958 Monod and Jacob began to collaborate in studies of the regulation of bacterial enzyme synthesis. One of their first major contributions was the discovery of regulator genes, so called because they control the activities of structural genes. The latter, in turn, not only transmit hereditary characteristics but also serve in the production of enzymes, other proteins, and ribonucleic acid (RNA). (See operon.)
Jacob and Monod also proposed the existence of an RNA messenger, a partial
copy of the gene substance deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), that carries genetic
information to other parts of the cell. They also found that in a normal cell
the balance between regulator and structural genes enables the cell to adapt to
varying conditions. An interruption in this balance, however, can stimulate the
production of new enzymes that can prove either beneficial or destructive to the
cell.
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