Ch.19: Gene mutation, DNA repair, and recombination Flashcards

1
Q

What are gene mutations?

A

molecular changes in the DNA sequence of a gene

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2
Q

What is a transition?

A

a change of a pyrimidine (C, T) to another pyrimidine (T, C) or a purine (A, G) to another purine (G, A)

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3
Q

What is a transversion?

A

a change of a pyrimidine (C, T) to a purine (A, G) or a purine (A, G) to a pyrimidine (C, T)

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4
Q

Silent Mutations are?

A

base substitutions that do not alter the amino acid sequence of the polypeptide due to the degeneracy of the genetic code

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5
Q

Missense mutations are?

A

base substitutions in which an amino acid change occurs

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6
Q

Nonsense mutations are?

A

base substitutions that change a normal codon to a stop codon

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7
Q

Frameshift mutations involve?

A

the addition or deletion of a number of nucleotides that is not divisible by three

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8
Q

What mutations are characterized by their differential ability to survive?

A

Deleterious mutations: decrease the chances of survival. The most extreme are lethal mutations.

Beneficial mutations: enhance the survival or reproductive success of an organism

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9
Q

What do suppressor mutations do?

A

reverse the phenotypic effects of another mutation

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10
Q

What does an intragenic suppressor mutant do?

A

the second mutant site is within the same gene as the first mutation

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11
Q

What does an intergenic suppressor mutant do?

A

the second mutant site is in a different gene from the first mutation

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12
Q

What are the two types that animal cells are classified as?

A

Germ-line cells: Cells that give rise to gametes such as eggs and sperm

Somatic cells: All other cells

(slide 17 has a good picture for this)

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13
Q

What does Tonr stand for?

A

T one resistance

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14
Q

What did the Lederberg bacteriophage T1 tonr experiment prove?

A

By placing random mutants on plates that contained T1 and one that didn’t, it showed that most cells were killed by T1; this showed that spontaneous mutants could occur that provided selective advantages

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15
Q

What are the 3 types of spontaneous mutations?

A
  • Depurination
  • Deamination
  • Tautomeric shift
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16
Q

What is Depurination? What mutations does it cause?

A

the removal of a purine (guanine or adenine) from the DNA forming an apurinic site; depurination of A or G can cause both transition and transversion mutants

17
Q

What is deamination? What mutations does it cause?

A

deamination of cytosine is the removal of an amino group from the cytosine base
- Base pairing causes the cytosine to be converted to a thymine which results in a C:G to T:A transition mutation
- deamination of 5-methylcytosine causes a C:G to T:A transition mutation

18
Q

What is a Tautomeric shift and the common stable forms? What mutations does it cause?

A

A tautomeric shift is a temporary change in base structure
-Tautomeric shifts cause both T:A to C:G and C:G to T:A transition mutations

  • The common, stable form of thymine and guanine is the keto form. Rarely, T and G convert to an enol form

-The common, stable form of adenine and cytosine is the amino form/ Rarely, A and C can convert to an imino form

19
Q

What does oxidative stress do?

A

Causes a G:C to T:A transversion mutation to counter transition mutation

20
Q

What are deamination agents?

A

replace amino groups
with keto groups (–NH2 to =O) ex. nitrous acid

-can change cytosine to uracil and adenine to hypoxanthine
- modified bases do not pair with the appropriate nucleotides in the daughter strand during DNA replication and mutations occur
-Uracil base pairs with adenine and hypoxanthine base pairs with cytosine

21
Q

What are alkylating agents? What mutations does it cause?

A

disrupt the appropriate pairing between nucleotides by alkylating bases within the DNA, ex. nitrogen mustards and ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS); cause both cause both G:C to A:T and T:A to C:G transition mutations

22
Q

What do deamination agents cause?

A

both C:G to T:A and A:T to G:C transition mutations

23
Q

What do intercalating agents cause?

A

frameshift mutations

24
Q

What do base analogues cause?

A

transition mutations

25
Q

What does UV light cause and what mutations?

A

the formation of cross-linked thymine dimers and C:G to T:A transition mutations

26
Q

What can allow covalent modifications of nucleotides to be reversed?

A

three specific enzymes

27
Q

What does Photolyase do?

A

repairs thymine dimers (It splits the dimers restoring the DNA to its original condition using the energy of visible light for photoreactivation)

28
Q

What does Alkyltransferase do?

A

repairs alkylated bases (It transfers the methyl or ethyl group from the base to a cysteine side chain within the alkyltransferase protein. This action permanently inactivates
alkyltransferase)

29
Q

What do base excision repair (BER) involve?

A

a category of enzymes known as DNA N-glycosylases that recognize an abnormal base and cleave the bond between it and the sugar in the DNA
- can eliminate abnormal bases such as uracil, 3-methyladenine and 7-methylguanine depending on species

30
Q

What does Nucleotide excision repair (NER) do?

A

repair many types of DNA damage:
- Thymine dimers and chemically modified bases
- Missing bases
- Some types of crosslinks
-NER is found in all prokaryotes and eukaryotes, however, its molecular mechanism is better understood in prokaryotes

31
Q

What do Mismatch repair systems do?

A

recognize and correct base pair mismatches

32
Q

What are the 2 systems that can repair DNA double-strand breaks?

A

homologous recombination repair (HRR): sister chromatids are genetically identical; can be an error-free repair mechanism

nonhomologous end joining (NHE): repair may result in the deletion of a small region of the DNA.

33
Q

What happens when a replicative DNA polymerase encounters a damaged translesion DNA region?

A

DNA polymerase is swapped for a TLS polymerase and the region is duplicated with error-prone replication

34
Q

What happens in the Holliday model for homologous recombination?

A

a break occurs at the identical location of two chromatids that are aligned together

35
Q

What happens in a double-strand break model?

A

a double-strand break creates a gap in the DNA of a single chromatid that must be repaired

36
Q

What are the 2 ways gene conversion can occur?

A

-DNA mismatch repair (can convert one allele to another (branch migration))
-DNA gap repair synthesis (can convert one
allele to another (uses double-strand break model))