The lactose operon in E. coli is the group of genes that regulates the production of enzymes necessary to break down lactose in bacterial cells.
It is an example of an inducible operon in which the presence of a key metabolic substance (lactose, an alternative energy source) induces the transcription of structural genes.
This binding incapacitates the RNA polymerase, located on the promoter, to read the DNA and carry out the transcription of the structural genes and consequently the transcription of the operon is turned off.
Therefore, we can conclude that the lactose (lac) operon in E. coli is an example of a gene that is repressed when lactose is not available in a cell.
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