Mutations Flashcards
What are gene pools?
sum of all alleles in a population
What are Mutations? where can it occur
a change in the DNA that can affect a single gene (gene mutations) or all/part of a chromosome (chromosomal mutations)
- occur in body or sex cells
What are somatic mutations?
- occurs in body cells
- often involved in cancerous grwoths
- not inherited
What are germinal mutations?
- occur in gametes
- don’t usually affect individual but may be passed onto next generation
Two main types of mutations? and describe
- Gene mutations
- Changes in a single gene so that traits normally produced by that trait are changed.
- Occur during DNA replication - Chromosomal mutations
- all or part of a chromosome is affected.
What are causes of mutations?
- Agents known to increase rate of mutation called mutagenic agents or mutagens - called induced mutations
- Spontaneous mutations – random error in biological process-
- change or damage to mutagens can be caused mustard gas, UV lights, Xrays
- which triggers DNA replication errors
What is a type of gene mutation?
Point mutation
What is point mutation?
- change in only one base that could alter a protein, have no effect at all, or prevent the protein being produced
- Within genes, the sequence of the bases in DNA is the code for amino acids used to build a protein.
- If DNA of particular gene is altered, the protein it codes for could be missing or abnormal.
What are the 3 mechanisms(can come about) of point mutation?
-During DNA replication:
- Inserted – new nucleotide added to DNA strand
- Substituted – existing nucleotide is replaced with a different base
- Deleted – a nucleotide is removed from the DNA strand
2 Examples of point mutation?
Albinism – mutation in gene for melanin production
- Effects: absence of pigment from hair, skin, eyes
Duchene muscular dystrophy – arises from mutation in mother which can be passed onto sons, or in male zygote
- Effects: wasting of leg muscles and later arms, shoulders and chest.
- Death occurs within failure of respiratory muscles
What is a Lethal recessive allele? what do they cause? and example
- Most gene mutations produce a recessive allele called Lethal Recessive
- They are recessive mutations which are lethal if not masked by dominant allele
- Cause death of embryo or foetus, or early death of child
- Eg. Tay Sachs Disease
What are chromosomal mutations?
Involve all or part of chromosome and affect a number of genes
- Cause abnormalities so severe, miscarriage often occurs in early pregnancy.
5 Types of chromosomal mutations
- occurs durivng cell division:
Deletion: part of chromosome lost
Duplication: section of chromosome occurs twice. - Can happen when part of chromatid breaks off and joins to wrong chromatid.
Inversion: break occurs and broken piece joins back on wrong way around. - Change order of gene and may disrupt pairing of homologous pairs in meiosis.
Translocation: part of chromosome breaks off and re-joined to wrong chromosome.
Non-disjunction: chromosome pair does not separate during meiosis and one daughter cell has extra chromosome while the other has one less. - Aneuploidy – change in chromosome number
What is evolution?
- the change in characteristics of a species over time.
- It is gradual and occurs over a number of generations.
- reflects the changes in allele frequencies in populations, not individuals
What is migration?
individuals moving between populations- enables gene flow
What is gene flow?
- movement of genetic material from one population to another.
What are barriers to gene flow and the types?
Barriers inhibit/hinder interbreeding between populations leading to separate gene pools forming.
- Barries classified by cause:
- Geographical barriers
- Sociocultural barriers:
What is Geographical barriers?
E.g. oceans, mountain ranges, deserts, expansive ice
Most common barrier for early humans.
E.g. First Nations people of Australia isolated by oceans as sea levels rose.
What is Sociocultural barriers?
developed as humans people more culturally complex
Language and religious groups, economic status, educational background and social position.
E.g. Basque people of Pyrenees (France & Spain) have unique language which has preserved culture and gene pool.
What is Natural Selection?
- the process by which a species becomes better adapted to its environment
- individuals with favourable characteristics have a survival advantage and pass characteristics to next generation
- there must be struggle for existence and those best suited to environment were more likely to survive (survival of the fittest).
- environmental factor acting is selective agent
What are the 3 basic observations the theory of natural selection based on?
- Variation: all members of a species vary and variation could be passed onto next generation.
- Birth rate: all living organisms reproduce at rate greater than food supply and other resources increase.
- Nature’s balance: although high birth rate, species numbers relatively constant.
What are the 4 mutations that can be classified by effect?
- Missesne mutations: cause a change in amino acid (and therefore, protein)
- Nonsense mutations: change in the base sequence to code STOP, stopping protein synthesis and producing protein unable to function
- Neutral mutations: cause change to amino acid, however, does not change the structure of protein enough to affect protein’s function
- Silent mutation: does not change the amino acid (or protein).
What is frameshift?(cause of mutations)
when bases have been added or removed -> can affect the outcome for all the DNA from that point on
Allele frequency
how many of each allele of a gene occur in the gene pool