1.4 Protein, mutations & genetic disorders Flashcards
How many proteins are there within the human body and what do they do?
there are thousands of proteins which do a wide range of important tasks
What chemical elements do all proteins contain?
carbon
hydrogen
oxygen
nitrogen
What other chemical element do some proteins contain?
sulphur
What are proteins held in?
a 3D shape by peptide bonds, hydrogen bonds and interactions between individual amino acids. (e.g. sulphur bridges)
What do polypeptide chains do to form the 3D shape of protein?
fold
What are the 2 types of protein structure and describe them?
fibrous proteins - flat sheets
globular proteins - wound into ball
What will having polypeptide chains arranged in different ways give rise to?
the large variety of structures and shapes of proteins and ultimately contribute to their different roles (e.g. structural and enzymes)
Give 2 examples of structural proteins?
keratin (hair)
collegen (skin)
Give 2 examples of enzymes (include substrate and products)?
hydrogen peroxide (catalase)-----> oxygen + water starch (amylase)-----> maltose
What is a mutation?
a change in the structure or composition of an organism’s genome.
What is an organism’s genome?
all the genes it contains
What can a mutation either result in?
no protein or a faulty protein being expressed.
When do mutations occur?
randomly and rarely
What do mutagenic agents do?
Increase the rate of mutations
Give some examples of mutagenic agents?
UV radiation
X-rays
Mustard gas
What is a genetic disease?
a disorder which can be directly related to a person’s genotype.
What can a mutation cause a change in?
the sequence of amino acids in a gene, which result in the protein it codes for not functioning as it should.
What do most genetic disorders drastically affect?
a person’s phenotype
What do single gene mutations involve?
the alteration of a DNA nucleotide sequence as a result
of the substitution, insertion or deletion of nucleotides.
What is a single gene mutation that replaces an amino acid called?
a point mutation
What are the 3 types of point mutations?
missense mutations
nonsense mutations
splice-site mutations
Why do missense mutations occur?
as a result of a substitution mutation (when one nucleotide is substituted with another). This replaces one amino acid codon with another, meaning that a different amino acid with be placed in the protein chain.
Why missense mutation called that?
Because they make sense, the altered codons still code for amino acids, but they don’t make the right sense, a different amino acid will be placed.
Give an example of a missense mutation?
sickle-cell disease