DNA mutations Flashcards

1
Q

what do mutations start with

A

a replication error that isn’t caught

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2
Q

mutations fall in one of three categories

A

beneficial mutations
neutral mutations
deleterious mutations

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3
Q

most mutations are

A

neutral or slightly deleterious

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4
Q

changes one amino acid

A

missense mutation

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5
Q

creates a change in a base that does not change an amino acid

A

silent mutation

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6
Q

changes an amino acid to a stop codon

A

nonsense mutation

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7
Q

when a base is either added to or removed from an mRNA sequence, it will cause a shift in the sequence of frame

A

insertion or deletion

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8
Q

an increase in the number of each type of chromosome

A

polyploidy

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9
Q

the addition or deletion of a chromosome

A

aneuploidy

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10
Q

occur when sections of a chromosome break and rotate before rejoining the chromosome

A

inversions

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11
Q

occurs when a broken section of one chromosome becomes attached o another chromosome

A

translocation

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12
Q

chromosome level mutation can be visualized via

A

karyotypes

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13
Q

strand of DNA is the same as the mRNA sequence

A

sense strand

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14
Q

strand in DNA that is copied by RNA polymerase into RNA

A

antisense strand

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15
Q

all amino acids except two are encoded by more than one codon

A

redundant

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16
Q

one codon never codes for more than one amino acid

A

unambiguous

17
Q

a few minor exceptions, all codons specify the same amino acids in all organisms

A

nearly universal

18
Q

the first two bases are usually identical when multiple codons specify the same amino acid

A

conservative

19
Q

how many bases specify a single amino acid

A

three

20
Q

what is the start codon

A

AUG

21
Q

what are the stop codons

A

UAA
UAG
UGA

22
Q

mechanisms for point mutations typically act through three primary processes

A

base replacement
base alteration
base damage

23
Q

example of base replacement

A

analogues

24
Q

example of base alterations

A

chemical modifications

25
Q

example of base damage

A

disrupt base-pairing

26
Q

the spontaneous isomerization of a nitrogenous base to/from keto and enol forms or to/from amino and imino forms

A

tautomeric shift

27
Q

what type of mutations to tautomeric shifts cause

A

transition mutations

28
Q

where one purine/pyrimidine base pair is replaced with the other purine/pyrimidine base pair

A

transition mutations

29
Q

removal of amino groups from nitrogenous base

A

deaminations

30
Q

if cytosine is deaminated what is created

A

uracil

31
Q

if 5-methylcytosine is deaminated what is created

A

thymine

32
Q

add ethyl groups to normal base

A

alkylating groups

33
Q

adds hydroxyl groups to normal base

A

hydroxylating agents

34
Q

hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds

A

depurination

35
Q

purine bases are hydrolyzed where

A

at the ribose glycosidic linkage, leaving the sugar-phosphate backbone in tact

36
Q

most commonly incorporated, leading to a transition mutation

A

adenine