VARIABILITY AND CHANGES OF GENETIC INFORMATION I Flashcards

1
Q

WHAT IS GENETIC VARIATION?

A

differences in the sequence of DNA among individuals

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2
Q

WHAT DOES GENETIC VARIABILITY ARISE FROM?

A

mutations and polymorphisms

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3
Q

WHAT IS A MUTATION?

A

permanent heritable change that occurs in DNA sequences either due to mistakes when the DNA is copied or as the result of environmental factors such as UV light
-frequency of <1% (rare genetic variants)

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4
Q

WHAT ARE POLYMORPHISMS?

A

the inheritance of a trait controlled by a single genetic locus with 2 alleles, in which the least common allele has a frequency of about >1%
-most common type of polymorphism involves variation at a single nucleotide
EG: HAIR COLOUR

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5
Q

WHAT INCREASES THE RISK OF A GENE MUTATION WITHIN A CHILD?

A

age of the father

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6
Q

WHAT INCREASES THE RISK OF A CHROMOSOMAL ABORNOMALITY IN A CHILD?

A

age of both parents, mainly the mother
father = 50 yrs
mother = 35 yrs

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7
Q

HOW COMMON ARE CHANGES IN THE GENOME?

A

very frequent, however the majority has no effect and we are not even aware of them unless
they cause a genetic disease (only then they become clinically significant)

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8
Q

WHAT IS ALLELIC HETEROGENEITY?

A

different mutations at the same gene locus leads to the same or very similar phenotypes
-several mutations for one gene (each leading to an abnormal phenotype)
-gene problem

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9
Q

WHAT IS LOCUS / NON-HETEROGENEITY?

A

a mutation at multiple loci are capable of producing the same phenotype
-neighborhood problem - various genes

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9
Q

DEFINE WILD TYPE

A

the phenotype of the typical form of a species as it occurs in nature

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10
Q

WHAT IS A SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISM?

A

DNA sequence variation occurring when a single nucleotide in the genome differs between members of a species or paired chromosomes in an individual
-occur in the coding and non-coding (1/1000 bp) parts of genome
-commonly known as a point mutation = change of one single nucleotide (base) anywhere in the genome (90%)
-usually with no effect or small effect (effects the predisposition to individual disorders)

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11
Q

HOW DO POLYMORPHISMS WITH AN INCREASED NUMBER OF COPIES DIFFER?

A

alleles differ in the number of repeats

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12
Q

NAME AND EXPLAIN THE 5 TYPES OF POLYMORPHISMS WITH INCREASED NUMBER OF COPIES.

A

MICROSATELLITES / SHORT TANDEM REPEATS (STR) = occur in DNA when a pattern of one or more nucleotides is repeated and the repetitions are directly adjacent to each other
-repeats of 2-5bp, frequently CA bases or GATA bases, usually di / tri / tetra nucleotide
-usually in introns, accessible regions
-unique to each family
-used as molecular markers in forensic science

MINISATELLITE / VARIABLE NUMBER TANDEM REPEATS (VNTR) = tract of repetitive DNA in which certain DNA motifs (ranging in length from 10 – 100 base pairs) are typically repeated 5-50 times.
-occur in telomeres and sub-telomeric regions of genome

CLASSICAL SATELLITES = repeated units of 100s / 1000s of nucleotides
-main component of functional centromeres and form the main structural constituent of heterochromatin
-variability is without phenotypic effect

COPY NUMBER VARIATION (CNV) = sections of the genome are repeated and the number of repeats in the genome varies between the individuals in the human population
-type of structural variation
-DNA segments greater than 1000bp long but less than 5mb
-segments can include several genes
-changes the biggest amount of genome

INDEL VARIANT = insertion or deletion of bases in the genome of an organism
-measure from 1-10,000bp long
-usually only have 2 alleles
-important for microdeletion and microduplication syndromes, evolutionary significance on gene duplication

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13
Q

WHAT ARE THE IMPACTS OF INSERTIONS, DELETIONS, INVERSIONS, AMPLIFICATION OF SINGLE NUCLEOTIDES TO WHOLE DNA SEGMENTS?

A

quantitative structural changes of different degrees
-various alleles with the presence or absence of a segment or variability in the number of segment copies
-various effects as some can be pathological, some cause predispositions and some do nothing

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13
Q

WHAT ARE INSERTIONS AND DELTIONS ALSO KNOWN AS?

A

frameshift mutations
-the mutation can alter the translational reading frame of the gene, it can lead to the formation of a new stop codon and the production of a protein with loss of function

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14
Q

WHAT CAN MUTATIONS IN PROMOTOR REGIONS CAUSE?

A

can effect gene expression
-lead to impaired binding of transcription factors
-decreased affinity of RNA polymerase and reduced transcription

(both of the above are essential for transcription and translation of gene into protein)

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15
Q

WHAT CAN MUTATIONS WITHIN THE EXON / INTRON BOUNDARY CAUSE?

A

interfere with the process of splicing

EG: TAY-SACHS DISEASE
arises due to the autosomal (chromosome 15) recessive mutations in the beta hexosaminidase A gene which cause the intron between exon 12-13 to not be removed - causes defect in the beta hexosaminidase A enzyme and the accumulation of the GM2 (as a result of build up of galactose) ganglioside (fat) within nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord leading to toxicity
-beta hexosaminidase A usually breaks galactose down into glucose in breast milk as an energy supply for the baby
-most common type is infantile tay-sachs disease which becomes apparent around 3-6 months with the baby unable to carry out typical motor functions

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16
Q

WHAT ARE INTERSPERSED REPETITIVE SEQUENCES?

A

identical or nearly identical DNA sequences that are scattered throughout the genome as a result of transposition or retro-transposition events
-repeat sequences are dispersed throughout the genome and non-adjacent

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16
Q

WHAT ARE THE 2 CLASSES OF MOBILE ELEMENTS?

A

CLASS I / RETROTRANSPOSONS = replication through RNA intermediate by reverse transcription
-a new copy of a DNA sequence is then inserted into another place in the genome
(COPY AND PASTE)

LINE:
-long interspersed nuclear elements - L1 sequences
- transcribed into mRNA and translated into a protein that acts as a reverse transcriptase, which can make a DNA copy of the LINE RNA that can be integrated into genome
-100,000 truncated and 4,000 full length L1 sequences in human genome

SINE:
- short interspersed nuclear elements
- Alu sequences (repetition inserted into different locations on genome) are the most common
- non coding mobile elements
-100 to 700bp long
-transcribed into tRNA or rRNA by RNA polymerase III

LTR:
- long terminal repeats
- identical sequences of DNA that repeat hundreds or thousands of times found at either end of retrotransposons or pro-viral DNA formed by reverse transcription of retroviral RNA
-endogenous retrovirus

CLASS II / DNA TRANSPOSONS = “jumping genes” - are DNA sequences that move from one location in the genome to another using the enzyme DNA transposase
(CUT AND PASTE)

-45% of human genome consists of these mobile elements

17
Q

WHAT ARE THE TYPES OF MUTATIONS DEPENDING ON ORIGINS?

A

SPONTANEOUS = endogenous causes (errors in replication, spontaneous lesions, transposable genetic elements and reactive oxygen species)

INDUCED = exogenous causes (mutagens), ionizing radiation

18
Q

WHAT ARE THE 2 MUTATION CLASSES OF CELLS?

A

SOMATIC = aging (accumulation of various small mutation) or tumours (mutation of proliferation gene)
-occur in non-germline tissue
-non-heritable

GAMETIC = present in egg or sperm and infects all cells in off spring
-heritable
-cause cancer family syndrome

18
Q

EXPLAIN CHROMOSOMAL MUTATIONS

A

results from a structural chromosomal aberration
-double stranded breaks in DNA, loss or gain of chromosomal segment or abnormal rearrangement of segment
-submicroscopic and microscopic deletion or duplication of larger segments (>kb, CNV)
-interstitial deletion/duplication – when a part of chromosome deletions/duplicates in-between telomeres

19
Q

EXPLAIN GENOME MUTATIONS

A

change in number of chromosomes, chromosomal abnormalities

POLYPLOIDY = multiplication of haploid chromosome set (triploidy, tetraploidy)

ANEUPLOIDY = one chromosome missing or in addition (monosomy, trisomy)

EUPLOIDY = one or more complete set of chromosomes

20
Q

WHAT IS A POINT MUTATION?

A

mutation which affects a single nucleotide base pair

21
Q

WHAT IS A GENE MUTATION?

A

results from a permanent alteration in the DNA sequence that makes up a gene, such that the sequence differs from what is commonly found

22
Q

WHAT IS A SYNONYMOUS MUTATION?

A

substitution of one nucleotide base for another in an exon of a gene coding for a protein, such that the produced amino acid sequence is not changed

TRANSITION = purine for purine / pyrimidine for pyrimidine

TRANSVERSION = purine for pyrimidine / pyrimidine for purine

-these processes are possible due to the degenerative nature of genetic code
-can also occur outside of coding sequences

EG: CHRISTMAS DISEASE
Hemophilia B = A->G in promoter of gene for anti-hemophylic factor IX - this prevents transcription factor (which is for clotting) from binding -> decrease in the amount of product)

23
Q

WHAT IS A NON-SYNONYMOUS / MISSENSE MUTATION?

A

point / substitution mutation in which a single nucleotide change results in a codon that code for a different amino acid
EG: SICKLE CELL
-GAG -> GTG = glu -> val = HbA -> HbS in the beta globin gene causing sickle shape of RBC
-occurs in exon coding region

24
Q

WHAT IS A NONSENSE MUTATION?

A

point mutation in a sequence of DNA that results in a premature stop codon and a truncated, usually non-functional protein product

EG: NEUROFIBROMATOSIS
NF1 gene (tumor suppressor gene)
CGA -> TGA
arg -> stop
-cancer occurs

25
Q

WHAT IS AN ELONGATION MUTATION?

A

point mutation that changes a stop codon into an amino acid coding triplet
EG: ALPHA GLOBIN
UAA -> UAC
STOP -> Tyrosine
-abnormal protein hemoglobin

26
Q

WHAT IS A FRAMESHIFT MUTATION?

A

is a genetic mutation caused by indels (insertions or deletions) of a number of nucleotides in a DNA sequence that is not divisible by three

EG: ABO BLOOD GROUPS
deletion GTG -> single bp deletion at the ABO locus alters the reading frame
= allele A -> allele O
EG: Tay Sachs
4bp insertion-> frameshift leading to the origin of premature stop codon = deficiency of enzyme hexosaminidase A

EG: mutations in rRNA and tRNA genes can lead to errors in cellular translation

26
Q

GIVE EXAMPLES OF CHEMICAL MUTAGENS

A

ALKYLATING AGENTS = methylation -> error in base pairing→ point Mutation

NITRIC ACID = base deamination -> error in base pairing

ACRIDINE DYES = insertions -> frameshift mutations

NUCLEOTIDE BASE ANALOGS = structural similarity eg. bromouridine - an analogue of thymidine
- transition - purine for purine, pyrimidine for pyrimidine transversion - purine for pyrimidine and vice versa

POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS = cigarettes

27
Q

GIVE EXAMPLES OF PHYSICAL MUTAGENS

A

UV RADIATION = form pyrimidine dimers T=T, C=C, T=C => replication defects, interfere with transcription

IONIZING RADIATION = direct effect (DNA break, chromosomal aberration) and indirect (ionization of molecules)

28
Q

GIVE EXAMPLES OF BIOLOGICAL MUTAGENS

A

VIRUSES = the viral nucleic acid integrates into the genome of host cell

29
Q

EXPLAIN MUTATION HOTSPOTS

A

mutation frequencies vary significantly along nucleotide sequences such that mutations often concentrate at certain positions called hotspots
-mutation hotspots (12x more likely to become mutated)
-C≡G
-CpG islands can mutate during replication
-Transition of cytosine
-gene mutations increase with paternal age
-chromosomal mutations increase with maternal age

30
Q

WHAT IS A DYNAMIC MUTATION?

A

progressive base amplification (triplet repeats)
-the probability of expression of a mutant phenotype is a function of the number of copies of the mutation
-the replication product of a dynamic mutation has a different likelihood of mutation than its predecessor
-unstable, heritable
-origin through premutation in a previous generation

EG:
FRAGILE X = CGG in UTR
HUNTINGTONS = CAG in EXON
FREIDREICH ATAXIA = GAA in INTRON
MYOTONIC DYSTROPHY = CTG in UTR

31
Q

WHAT ARE INDIRECT MUTAGENS?

A

Chemical compounds which start to be reactive only after metabolic activation in organism

32
Q

WHAT ARE PHENOTYPIC CONSEQUENCES OF MUTATIONS?

A

LOSS OF GENE PRODUCT FUNCTION = metabolic defects because of change in enzymes, usually recessive character

GAIN OF NEW, ABNORMAL FUNCTION OR ABNORMAL PROTEIN = usually dominant/codominant character

DOMINANT - NEGATIVE MUTATION (antimorphic) = abnormal protein inhibits normal protein, occurs in heterozygotes

32
Q

WHAT IS A REPLICATION CLIP?

A

DNA chain or DNA polymerase accidentally forms a loop during replication -> small duplication

if template strand detaches -> small deletion

33
Q

WHAT OCCURS DURING UNEQUAL CROSSING OVER?

A

aberrant recombination; large deletion/duplication

34
Q

WHAT OCCURS DURING UNEQUAL EXCHANGE NETWEEN MISALIGNED SISTER CHROMATIDS?

A

breaks and exchange between sister chromatids –

microdeletion syndrome

35
Q

EXPLAIN THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF DELETIONS

A

3 / MULTIPLE OF 3 BASES = 3bp deletion in cystic fibrosis
-1 amino acid is missing -> delta F 508 = phenylalanine is missing)

LARGE DELETIONS WITHIN A GENE = Duchenne muscular dystrophy -> huge deletion in the dystrophin gene

TOTAL GENE DELETION = X-linked ichtyosis has a complete deletion of the steroid sulphatase gene

WHOLE GENE DUPLICATION = Charcot-marie tooth -> there is a tandem duplication of a gene segment between repetitive sequences. Duplication of genes -> increase dose of product
(one of the gene encodes for components of myelin in the PNS) = there is a progressive loss of muscle tissue and touch sensation

36
Q

WHAT ARE NON SYNONYMOUS MUTATIONS?

A

missense, nonsense, elongation
-worst type of mutations
-coding mutations

37
Q

WHAT ARE SYNONYMOUS MUTATIONS?

A

silent, RNA translation issues
-coding mutations

38
Q

WHAT ARE THE NON-CODING MUTATIONS?

A

promoter, splicing, interaction issues

39
Q

WHAT IS THE FUNCTION OF AN UNTRANSLATED REGION?

A

provides stability to the transcript