Chapter 14 Definitions of the Gene - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 14 Definitions of the Gene

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Title: Chapter 14 Definitions of the Gene


1
Evolution?
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The Molecular Basis of Mutation-Evolution
  • Mutations alter the nucleotide sequences of genes
    in several ways, for example the substitution of
    one base pair for another or the deletion or
    addition or one or a few base pairs.

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Tautomeric Shifts
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Tautomeric Shifts AffectBase-Pairing
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Mutation Caused by Tautomeric Shifts
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Base Substitutions
  • A transition replaces a pyrimidine with another
    pyrimidine or a purine for another purine.
  • A transversion replaces a pyrimidine with a
    purine or a purine with a pyrimidine.

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Frameshift Mutations
Previously discussed
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Factors Influencing the Rate of Spontaneous
Mutations
  • Accuracy of the DNA replication machinery
  • Efficiency of the mechanisms for the repair of
    damaged DNA
  • Degree of exposure to mutagenic agents in the
    environment

10
Induced Mutations
  • Induced mutations occur upon exposure to physical
    or chemical mutagens.
  • Hermann J. Muller and Edgar Alternburg measured
    the frequency of X-linked recessive lethal
    mutations in Drosophila.
  • Muller demonstrated that exposing Drosophila
    sperm to X-rays increased the mutation frequency.

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Chemical Mutagens
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Types of Chemical Mutagens
  • Chemicals that are mutagenic to both replicating
    and nonreplicating DNA (e.g., alkylating agents
    and nitrous acid)
  • Chemicals that are mutagenic only to replicating
    DNA (e.g., base analogs and acridine dyes)

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A Base Analog5-Bromouracilit is more like
Thymine!
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Mutagenic Effects of 5-Bromouracil
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Nitrous Acid Causes Oxidative Deamination of Bases
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Intercalation of an Acridine Dye Causes
Frameshift Mutations
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Alkylating Agents
  • Alkylating agents are chemicals that donate alkyl
    groups to other molecules.
  • Alkylating agents induce transitions,
    transversions, frameshifts, and chromosome
    aberrations.
  • Alkylating of bases can change base-pairing
    properties.
  • Alkylating agents can also activate error-prone
    DNA repair processes.

18
Hydroxylamine
  • Hydroxylamine is a hydroxylating agent.
  • Hydroxylamine hydroxylates the amino group of
    cytosine and leads to GC ?AT transitions.

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The Electromagnetic Spectrum
  • X-rays induce mutations through ionization.
  • Ultraviolet light induces mutations through
    excitation- Energy addition.

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Irradiation Dosage and Mutation Frequency
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Ionizing Radiation Causes Changes in Chromosome
Structure
  • Ionizing radiation breaks chromosomes and can
    cause deletions, duplications, inversions, and
    translocations.
  • These types of mutations display two-hit kinetics.

22
Mutagenesis by Ultraviolet Irradiation
Thymine Dimers
  • Hydrolysis of cytosine to a hydrate may cause
    mispairing during replication
  • Cross-linking of adjacent thymine forms thymidine
    dimers, which block DNA replication and activate
    error-prone DNA repair mechanisms.

23
Mutations Induced by Transposons
Wrinkled Pea
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Expansion of Trinucleotide Repeats
Previously discussed
  • Simple tandem repeats are repeated sequence of
    one to six nucleotide pairs.
  • Trinucleotide repeats can increase in copy number
    and cause inherited diseases.
  • Examples Fragile X Syndrome, Huntington disease,
    spinocerebellar ataxia
  • These diseases are characterized by anticipation,
    the increased severity of disease or earlier age
    of onset in successive generations as the
    trinucleotide copy number increases.

25
  • Mutations are induced by chemicals, ionizing
    irradiation, ultraviolet light, and endogenous
    transposable genetic elements.
  • Point mutations are of three types
  • Transitionspurine for purine and pyrimidine for
    pyrimidine substitutions,
  • Transversionspurine for pyrimidine and
    pyrimidine for purine substitutions, and
  • Frameshift mutationsadditions or deletions of
    one or two nucleotide pairs, which alter the
    reading frame of the gene distal to the site of
    the mutation.

You must know for your future
26
Evolution?
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Alpha and Beta chain mutantssome of them
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Phylogenetic relationships
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How could we use GFP fluorescence to figure
out-codon optimize GFP?
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