The operon is a unit of bacterial gene expression that includes structural genes and control elements in DNA. The lac operon is an example of negative inducible regulation, where a repressor protein binds to the operator to prevent transcription unless the inducer is present. The lac repressor is a tetramer controlled by allosteric changes - binding of the inducer inactivates the repressor. Other operons like trp use different mechanisms of regulation including attenuation, where transcription is controlled by RNA secondary structure formation. Translation can also be regulated through features in the 5' UTR of mRNAs.