Mutations Flashcards
What is a mutation?
Heritable alteration (e.g. change in nucleotide sequence) in a gene or chromosome.
What are the 2 types of mutation causes? Give examples of these.
- Exogenous
- ionising particles
- free radicals (e.g. UV light, smoking, air pollution)
- mutagenic chemicals and anti-cancer agents - Endogenous
- DNA replication defects
- transposable elements
- free radicals (e.g. Mitochondrial metabolism, leukocyte inflammation)
What are transposable elements?
- Ubiquitous specific supernumerary DNA sequences (>1 gene) always contained within another DNA molecule.
- Can transpose as a discrete unit to random sites in the genome - can insertionally activate target genes, causing mutation.
Which genes are more susceptible to TE invasion?
Large genes, e.g. BRCA1/2 and breast cancer
What are micromutations? Give examples of these.
Single nucleotide changes.
- deletion
- insertion
- substitution
What are the 2 types of nucleotide substitution?
- Transition: change to the same base type (e.g. A to G, T to C).
- Transversion: change to a different base type (e.g. A/G to C/T).
Give an example of a disease caused by a single base substitution.
- Sickle cell disease
- Missense mutation: substitution in codon 7 of HBB gene causing 6th aa change from Glu to Val.
What kind of mutations can single nucleotide changes cause?
- Mutations that do not have an effect:
- silent/neutral - no aa change (synonymous)
- Mutations that change gene products:
- missense mutation - change in aa
- Mutations that change the amount of gene product:
- affect transcription/translation (e.g. Alter promoter activity, alter translation initiation at AUG, prevent mRNA splicing, reduce mRNA stability)
- Mutations that change the polypeptide length:
- frameshift mutation
- stop codon mutation
- nonsense mutation
What is nonsense-mediated decay (NMD)?
A surveillance pathway that eliminates mRNA transcripts containing premature stop codons.
Describe a disease caused by missense mutation?
- Thalassemia intermedia: particularly severe form of beta-thalassemia (no or extremely low levels of mutant beta-globin mRNA).
- Mutant transcript produces truncated beta chains - leads to clinical phenotype in heterozygote.
Name different types of structural macro mutations.
- Deletion
- Duplication
- Inversion
- Substitution
- Translocation
Why might inversions/translocations not have a significant effect in somatic cells?
No genetic info loss
Suggest a disease where gene translocation does have a large impact.
Certain type of leukaemia caused by a gene translocation between chromosome 9 and 22.
- no significant change for chromosome 9
- gene fusion on chromosome 22 - creates new type of protein continually expressed (normally regulated)
Why are DNA transcription/translation errors more common than DNA replication errors?
RNA polymerases don’t proofread like DNA polymerases
Why are the effects of transcrption/translation errors not usually significant?
- Cell makes multiple copies of RNA so unlikely that same mistake will happen again in exactly the same place.
- RNAs are quickly degraded - ‘bad’ copy of RNA will be quickly removed.
- RNAs are not inherited molecules passed down from generation to generation - not as consequential as making genome change which is lasting and permanent.