Lecture 49 Flashcards

1
Q

what are the short-term consequences of DNA damage?

A
  1. reduced proliferation
  2. altered gene expression
  3. apoptosis
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2
Q

what are the long term consequences of DNA damage?

A
  1. aging

2. disease

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3
Q

What are the two classes of spontaneous mutation?

A
  1. errors of replication

2. spontaneous lesions- chemical changes

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4
Q

what kind of errors can occur during replication?

A

wrong base is incorporated by DNA poly

due to tautomerism sometimes thymine can be in its enol form and bind with guanine

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5
Q

what is bloom syndrome?

A

A defect in the DNA helicase enzyme

characteristics:

  1. smaller than average
  2. narrow chin, prominent nose and ears
  3. facial rash
  4. chromosome instability (higher risk of cancer)
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6
Q

What are the three main types of spontaneous dna damage?

A
  1. depurination
  2. deamination
  3. oxidative damage
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7
Q

explain depurination?

A

most common

breaking of glycosidic bond between base and sugar in purine nucleotides; a purine is lost

An apurinic site is the result

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8
Q

explain deamination?

A

loss of an amine group from a base

cytosine will deaminate to uracil

but… 5-methyl cytosine deaminates to thymine; which will lead to bigger issues. (mutational hotspot)

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9
Q

explain oxidative damage?

A

a result of the production of reactive oxidative compounds due to oxidative metabolism

can lead to a transverse mutation

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10
Q

what can UV light lead to the creation of?

A

covalent linkages between adjacent pyrimdine bases on the same DNA strand.

these dimers interfere with normal base pairing and block replication

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11
Q

types of repair mechanisms?

A
  1. nucleotide excision
  2. base excision
  3. mismatch repair
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12
Q

How does excision repair occur?

A
  1. recognize damage
  2. recruit endonucleases
  3. region excised
  4. DNA poly fills gap
  5. ligase seals
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13
Q

xeroderma pigmentosum

A

autosomal recessive disorder

mutations in NER genes

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14
Q

base pair excision?

A
  1. missplaced base
  2. base removed by glycosylase
  3. sugar phosphate removed by endonuclease
  4. replace base and ligate
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15
Q

mismatch repair?

A

1) Mismatch missed by proofreading is recognized by MSH proteins
2) Repair may occur during S-phase (if missed by proof-reading) or in G2 when genome is scanned for errors
3) Excision of bases around mismatch
4) Repair by re-synthesis

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16
Q

how can double strand breaks be fixed?

A
  1. non-homologous end joining

2. recombinational repair

17
Q

what is the result of DNA repair gene mutation?

A
  1. increased error rate

2. genomic stability

18
Q

ataxia telangiectasia?

A

mutation of the ATM gene
autosomal recessive
increased cancer risk (avoid X-rays)