Notes On Mutation
Notes On Mutation
Sudden and abrupt Changes in the genetic material, specifically within nucleic acids. Affects the dna, or
the genes or sometimes the chromosomes
Genetic mutations insertion, deletion, susbstitution (sequence of gene changes – leads to change in
protein sequence ) shift in reading frame
Chromosomal mutations – chromosomes are made up of highly organized DNA and proteins ; deletion,
translocation, inversion, duplication (disruption in chromosomal structure, chromosomal number)
chromosomal abberations – structure
Klinefelter syndrome – XXY in set 23 rescence of both masculine and feminine characteristics
Radiaton
Chemicals
Condsumable items
TYPES OF MUTATION
2. Inversion – or susbtsitution wrong bases match /when broken chromosomes gets inversed
3. Normal Sequence
4. Deletion – a base is removed / some of the genetic material breaks off
Deletion Translocaton – when a fragment from one chromosomes breaks off and detaches to another
chromosome
Dna replication
Meiosis
Over a lifetime our DNA? can undergo changes or ‘mutations?’ in the
sequence of bases?, A, C, G and T.
This results in changes in the proteins? that are made. This can be a
bad or a good thing.
Mutations can occur during DNA replication? if errors are made and
not corrected in time.
Mutations can also occur as the result of exposure to
environmental factors such as smoking, sunlight and radiation.
Often cells can recognise any potentially mutation-causing damage
and repair it before it becomes a fixed mutation.
Mutations contribute to genetic variation within species.
Mutations can also be inherited, particularly if they have a positive effect.
For example, the disorder sickle cell anaemia? is caused by a
mutation in the gene? that instructs the building of a protein
called haemoglobin?. This causes the red blood cells? to become an
abnormal, rigid, sickle shape. However, in African populations, having
this mutation also protects against malaria?.
However, mutation can also disrupt normal gene activity and cause
diseases, like cancer?
Cancer is the most common human genetic disease; it is caused by
mutations occurring in a number of growth-controlling genes.
Sometimes faulty, cancer-causing genes can exist from birth, increasing
a person’s chance of getting cancer.
Small-scale mutations
Point mutation? – a change in one base? in the DNA? sequence.
Mutations
Genetic
Alterations in dna’/ genes – shift in the reading frame – resulting in defective protein synthesis
Chromosomal –
THE BIG BAD FLY HAD ONE RED EYE AND ONE BLU EYE.
Now, say that a mutation eliminates the first G. As a result, the rest of the sentence is read incorrectly:
THE BIB ADF LYH ADO NER EDE YEA NDO NEB LUE YE.
The same will happen in a protein. For example, a protein might have the following coding sequence:
A codon translation table (Figure 4) can be used to determine that this mRNA sequence would encode the following stretch
of protein:
Met-Lys-Leu-Arg-Arg-Met-Met-Met
Now, suppose that a mutation removes the fourth nucleotide. The resulting code, separated into triplet codons, would read
as follows:
Met-Asn-Phe-Ala-Gly-STOP-STOP