Mutation Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the defintion of a mutation?

A

Any alteration to the genetic material that produces a heritable change in the nucleotide sequence

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2
Q

What can people associate with ‘mutation’ but isn’t?

A
  • Chemical damage to DNA that is not inherited or chemical moderations of nucleotides associated with temporary changes in gene function
  • Genetic recombination: A process that re-assorts alleles between homologous chromosome pairs?
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3
Q

When does homologous recombination actually take place?

A
  • During gametogenesis (formation of gametes)

- Double-strand break

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4
Q

What can happen if homologous recombination goes wrong?

A

Large scale aberrations

-can cause an incorrect chromosome number and breakages which may be rejoined in the wrong configurations

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5
Q

What are the types of large-scale change (global) mutations? and their subdivisions?

A

1) Chromosomal aberrations:
- Deletions
- Duplications
- Insertions
- Inversions

2) Genome rearrangements (arise from chromosomal breakage and ause re-distribution of genetic material between different chromosomes

3) Changes in chromosome number (Downes syndrome)
- usually arise from mistakes in chromosome segregation at cell division

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6
Q

What are the types of localised change mutations? and their subdivisions?

A

1) Point mutations (single nucleotide changes)
- Base substitution
- Loss or gain of a single nucleotide

2) Deletion/Insertion
- loss/gain of 2 or more bases

3) Duplication
- a sequence is repeated

4) Inversion
- a sequence is inverted

5) Transposition
- movement of a piece of DNA from one location to another

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7
Q

What are the groups of the majore bases of nucleic acids?

A

Purine - Guanine, Adenine

Pyrimidine - Cytosine, Thymine, Uracil

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8
Q

What is the definition of a transition mutation?

A

Changes a purine for a purine or a pyrimidine for a pyrimidine

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9
Q

What is the definition of a transversion mutation?

A

Changes a purine for a pyrimidine or a pyrimidine for a purine

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10
Q

How can point mutations be classified?

A
  • Silent, missence or nonsense

- frameshift due to insertion/deletion

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11
Q

What triplet code is the stop codon?

A

UGA

Uracil, Guanine, Adenine

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12
Q

What are the effects of points mutations on the protein?

A
  • No effect in Samesense (DNA polymorphism) and missense (Protein polymorphism)
  • Change of function in missense and small deletions
  • loss of function in missense, nonsense and frameshifts
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13
Q

What are the effects of point mutations on the organism?

A

Could range from:

  • no effect
  • loss of function
  • altered phenotype
  • genetic disease
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14
Q

How does the mutation affect diploids (two copies of each chromosome) ?

A
  • Mutation prevents gene product synthesis
  • Alters gene product
  • A MUTATION IN AN ESSENTIAL GENE MAY BE MASKED
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15
Q

How does the mutation affect haploids? (yeast and bacteria)

A
  • mutation that affects gene function usually alters the phenotype
  • A MUTATION IN AN ESSENTIAL GENE IS LETHAL
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16
Q

What are the three phenotypes depending on the activity of the protein?

A

1) Wild type (little or no activity and half the wild-type protein is enough eg, mutation is recessive)
2) Mutant (mutant protein alters function that displaces the wild type protein eg, mutation is dominant)
3) Intermediate (if both wild-type and mutant proteins function but differently eg, the mutation is codominant

17
Q

When do recessive mutations reveal themselves?

A

When sexual reproduction combines two mutant alleles

-eg, cystic fibrosis (1/25 people carry the mutant gene)

18
Q

What is a reversion?

A

The same process that causes a point mutation can also be responsible for reversing it at the same site