8.1 Alteration if the sequence of bases in DNA can alter the structure of proteins ( 8.0 The control of gene expression) Flashcards
what is a gene mutation
- a change in the base sequence of DNA
- can arise spontaneously during DNA replication
what is a mutagenic agent
a factor that increases rate of mutation e.g UV light or alpha particles
Explain how a gene mutation can lead to the production of a non functional protein or enzyme
1) changes sequence of base triplets in DNA so changes sequence of codons on mRNA
2) so changes sequence of amino acids in the encoded polypeptide
3) so changes position of hydrogen / ionic / disulphide bonds
4) so changes tertiary structure of protein
5) enzymes - active site changes shape so substrate can’t bind , enzyme substrate complex can’t form
Describe the different types of gene mutations
substitution :
- a base / nucleotide is replaced by a different base / nucleotide in DNA
Addition :
- 1 or more bases / nucleotides are added to the DNA base sequence
Deletion :
1 or more bases / nucleotides are lost from the DNA base sequence
Duplication :
A sequence of DNA bases / nucleotides is repeated / copied
Inversion :
A sequence of bases / nucleotides detaches from the DNA sequence , then rejoins at the same position in the reverse order
Translocation :
A sequence of DNA bases / nucleotides detaches and is inserted at a different location within the same or a different chromosome
explain why not all gene mutations affect the order of amino acids
- some substitutions change only 1 triplet code / codon which could still code for the same amino acid
• as the generic code is degenerate - some occur in introns which do not code for amino acids as they’re removing during splicing
explain why a change in amino acids sequence is not always harmful
- may not change tertiary structure of protein
- may positively change the properties of the protein , giving the organism a selective advantage
explain what is meant by frame shift
- occurs when mutations change the number of nucleotides / bases by a number not divisible by 3
- this shifts the way the genetic code is read , so all the DNA triplets / mRNA codons downstream from the mutation change
explain how mutations can lead to production of shorter polypeptides
- deletion or translocation => triplet / codon missing so amino acids missing
- substitution , addition , deletion , duplication , inversion or translocation => premature so stop triplet / codon so amino acids missing at end of polypeptide