Transcriptional vs. translational fusion

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Transcriptional fusion involves placing a reporter gene, such as lacZ, downstream of a gene's promoter, allowing measurement of transcriptional activity without including the entire gene. This method provides insights into promoter activity but does not account for post-transcriptional regulation. In contrast, translational fusion attaches a reporter directly to the protein of interest, enabling analysis of protein localization and expression levels. This approach reveals additional information about protein regulation beyond what transcriptional fusion can provide, as protein levels are influenced by various factors beyond transcription alone.
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What is the difference between transcriptional and translational fusion?

As I understand it, transcriptional fusion places a reporter, like lacZ, downstream of the promoter of your gene of interest (so it does not include your entire gene). Is this the same thing in a translational fusion?

What data does translational fusion give you that transcriptional fusion doesn't? The way I have come to understand it, the transcriptional fusion will still allow for B-gal to be translated and then you can measure its activity to determine relative transcription levels... is this anywhere near correct?


thanks
 
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With a transcriptional fusion you tag a reporter after a promoter of interest, thus you can measure the transcriptional activity of the promoter. With a translational fusion you tag your protein of interest, which means you can analyze its localization within a cell and also learn more about its actual expression levels (since protein levels are regulated on many different levels, not only promoter activity).
 
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