Mutation Flashcards

1
Q

Why do we care about mutation?

A

Because mutation is the source of ALL variation in populations

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1
Q

Why do we care about variation?

A

Because evolution operates by shifting patterns of variation in populations, over generations

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2
Q

Mutation

A

A random change in the genetic code resulting from errors in DNA replication

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3
Q

Before cell division…

A

Double DNA in the nucleus

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4
Q

How common is mutation?

A

Some estimates of an average mutation rate in human populations (at a given locus):
~ 0.1 per million genes per generation
~ 10 per million genes per generation

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5
Q

In a population of one million, how many people will have a mutation at a specific locus?

A

0-10 people

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6
Q

Phenotypic effects of a mutation will only appear if the mutation occurs where?

A

The coding region

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7
Q

3 categories of mutation?

A

1.) Point mutations
2.) Insertions/deletions
3.) Chromosomal rearrangment (ex. inversion)

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8
Q

Point mutation

A

A single base change in a gene

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9
Q

Hemoglobin

A

a protein that transports oxygen in our blood
- a single base substitution leads to a single amino acid substitution in the hemoglobin beta chain is the cause of sickle cell disease

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10
Q

Single base change in DNA triplet results in a different amino acid for Hemoglobin

A

CTC translates for Glutamic Acid
CAC translates for Valine*

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11
Q

Missense variant/non-synonymous change

A

a mutation that changes the amino acid

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12
Q

Not every point mutation will change the amino acid and this is due to what?

A

Redundancy in the triplet–> amino code
- SYNONYMOUS CHANGE

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13
Q

Polymorphism/Polymorphic

A

The existence of multiple forms
- a variant occurring at over 1% frequency in a population or sample

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14
Q

Single base change

A

Known a a Single Nucleotide Variant (SNV)

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15
Q

When a SNV becomes fairly prevalent in a population (over 1%), then it is classified as what?

A

A Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP)

16
Q

Multiple methods for studying human genetic variation rely on SNP genotyping and…

A

Comparing SNP’s among individuals

17
Q

A SNP in the ABCC11 gene is the determinant of what?

A

Human earwax type
(16q)

18
Q

Can Single Base Insertions or Deletions (INDELS) have huge consequences?

A

YES

19
Q

If the length of an INDEL is not a multiple of three, what can happen?

A

Frameshift that changes every amino acid downstream (after it)

20
Q

*Mutations at the chromosomal level

A

Deletion
Duplication
Inversion
Insertion
Translocation

21
Q

Mutation is more common than you might have expected

A

You are probably carrying mutations in your somatic cells