Genetics-mutations
Translesion DNA synthesis
(SOS repair) last ditch effort A translesion DNA Polymerase ---> relaxed base-pairing specificity ---> permits replication past damage
Metacentric
- centromere approximately in middle
Chiasmata
- visible manifestations of cross-over events At least one chiasma is usually essential for proper segregation of each pair.
Cancer
2 heritable properties 1. reproduce in defiance of normal restraints Cells divide at greater rate than wildtype 2. invade and colonize territories normally reserved for other cells Cells tend to displace other cells from their normal position and can invade other areas Cells in this state are said to be transformed Gone from wildtype to transformed state Most cancers derive from single abnormal cell that is able to outgrow its neighbors
DNA Repair
>130 genes have been identified in the human genome associated with DNA repair
Mutation
A change in the order of the bases in an organism's DNA; deletion, insertion, or substitution. only mutations in germ line can be inherited
Frameshift Mutation
A mutation occurring when the number of nucleotides inserted or deleted is not a multiple of three, resulting in the improper grouping of the following nucleotides into codons.
Silent Mutation
A mutation that changes a single nucleotide, but does not change the amino acid created.
Nonsense Mutation
A mutation that changes an amino acid codon to one of the three stop codons, resulting in a shorter and usually nonfunctional protein.
Missense Mutation
A point mutation in which a codon that specifies an amino acid is mutated into a codon that specifies a different amino acid.
Fragile X syndrome is caused by A) trinucleotide repeats. B) free radicals. C) microdeletions. D) 5-Bromouracil. E) depurination.
A) trinucleotide repeats
Oncogene
Add to number of cells May promote cell cycle progression Inhibits apoptosis Positive regulators of the cell-cycle Inhibit programmed cell-death (apoptosis) Growth factors, transcription factors, signal transduction proteins Proto-oncogenes (c-onc) Virally transported (v-onc)
Indels
Addition or deletion of single base Can be deleterious if it occurs in AA acid sequence
During mutagenic treatment with nitrous acid, an adenine deaminates to form hypoxanthine, which bonds like guanine. The mutational event would be A) AT to CG B) AT to GC C) AT to TA D) GC to AT E) GC to TA
B) AT to GC
Trinucleotide repeat disorders are the result of A) a high rate of mutation throughout the genome. B) extensive duplication of a single codon. C) deviations from the genetic code in human mitochondria. D) tRNAs failing to recognize specific codons. E) transversions of the DNA bases in a coding sequence
B) Extensive duplication of a single codon
Transversion
Base substitution in which a purine replaces a pyrimidine or a pyrimidine replaces a purine
Beads on a string.
Bead = nucleosome String = intervening DNA 10nm in diameter
Mutation caused by acridine
Causes insertions or deletions
G1
Cell is actively growing Transcription, translation Preparing for next phase Enzymes, proteins
Forward mutation
Changes the wild-type phenotype to a mutant phenotype
Base analogs
Chemical Agents E.g., Bromodeoxyuridine and 2-aminopurine higher rate of tautomerization
DIAKINESIS
Condenses further
Cell Cycle
Cyclin CDK drives cell cycle
If an incorrect base is incorporated during DNA synthesis and is not corrected by DNA polymerase, it can be corrected by postreplication repair. This involves A) detection of the mismatch. B) a recognition of the methylation status of the DNA strands. C) a process similar to excision repair. D) All the above. E) None of the above.
D) All of the above
In E. coli a region of a gene with repeats of the sequence CTGG will be prone to A) reversion. B) missense mutation. C) nonsense mutation. D) frameshift mutation. E) amber mutation.
D) Frameshift mutation
S phase
DNA replication chromosome duplication
Mismatch Repair
Detect damage Incorrect base? Remove base Replace DNA
Nucleotide Excision Repair
Detect the damage Assemble the complex Remove the damage Replace DNA
In E. coli, mutation arising during repair is mostly by A) thymine dimer splitting. B) excision repair. C) mismatch repair. D) recombinational repair. E) SOS repair.
E) SOS repair
Photoreactivation (Photolyase)
Enzyme detects damage (thymine dimer) and is activated by light. Enzyme breaks the dimer bond and the DNA is repaired. Widespread in nature
Proofreader repair by DNA Polymerase
Error rate = 10-5 Proofreader improves it to 10-7
Molecules that react with DNA
Ethylmethanesulfonate Nitrosoguanidine
Medelian Inheritance
Examination of visible traits and how they are transmitted. 1st systematic, controlled approach to breeding- used common garden pea (many varieties available
Point mutation
Gene mutation involving changes in one or a few nucleotides
BRCA1
Genes associated with certain forms of breast cancer Tumor suppressor gene
Age and DNA repair
Goukassian et al. 2000 Increase in frequency of skin cancer with age Significant decrease in repair of thymine dimers Photolyase expression declines Significant decrease in levels of proteins associated with excision repair Repair mechanisms become less efficient with age
G2
Growth, active transcription One DNA molecule becomes Getting ready for last phase of cell cycle
Mutagen causing base changes from GC to AT(transition) only
Induced mutation- Romouracil
Prophase 1 (meiosis)
Leptotene, Zygotene, Pachytene, Diakenesis
Deamination
Loss of amino group Produces transitions if not at first detected and repaired Cytosine ---------> Uracil which binds with adenine. Detected and removed almost always CG to UA to TA Adenine ----------> Hypoxanthine which binds to cytosine. AT to GC base pair
A base change resulting in a codon specifying a different amino acid
Missense Mutation
M Phase
Mitosis/Meiosis and Cell division Produces two daughter cells
Tautomerization
Mutagen; alternative forms of a base (enol & imino) with different H bonding capabilities produces transitions if replicated twice it results in three wildtypes and one mutant
Induced Mutations
Mutations generated by exposure to certain environmental agents.
Repair of DS breaks
Non-homologous end-joining Causes deletion Homologous recombination Synthesis-dependent strand annealing Uses other chromosome to repair damage
A base change resulting in a stop codon
Nonsense Mutation
P and Q.
P is short arm Q is long arm
An enzyme that repairs thymine dimers in visible light in E. coli
Photolyase
A bacterium E. coli suffered ultraviolet irradiation. In the base-pair sequence shown below, note that the adjacent thymines formed a dimer. What are the requirements, the process, and the outcome of the repair by (a) photoreactivation and (b) general excision repair, if this damage were to be repaired?
Photoreactivation: enzyme detects thymine dimer and is activated by light, enzyme breaks dimer bond, and DNA is repaired General Excision: detect damage, complex created, remove damage, replace DNA
Trinucleotide repeat expansion disorders
PolyQ diseases (CAG ---> Gln) Huntington disease Spinocerebellar ataxia (certain types) Non PolyQ CGG repeat in Fragile-X syndrome
Ionizing radiation
Produces reactive oxygen species(molecules around DNA) that can damage DNA
Eukaryotic Chromosome
Prokaryotic DNA molecule - a near constant state of compaction. Eukaryotic chromosome undergoes periodic structural changes dispersed during interphase to condensed during nuclear division. Each chromosome is a single dsDNA(ds=double stranded) molecule
Spontaneous Mutation
Random change in the DNA arising from errors in replication Not Caused by mutagen Most are corrected by proofreader of DNA polymerase most that aren't corrected are transitions
A postreplication repair system most prone to error
Recombinational Repair
Nucleolar Organizer
Region of rRNA genes
Prophase
Replication and migration of centrioles - responsible for the organization of cytoplasmic microtubules into spindle fibers. Nuclear membrane disappears (pulled apart by microtubules) chromosomes condense through coiling nucleolus disappears Early phase-everything is condensing Late phase- no longer have nuclear envelope
Telophase
Reversal of events that occurred during Prophase.
Tumor Suppressor Gene
Roles complementary to oncogenes Negative regulators of the cell-cycle(inhibits progression of cell cycle) Promoting cell death
A base change resulting in a codon specifying the same amino acid
Silent Mutation
Anaphase
Sister chromatids separate (disjunction) and migrate to the poles after division of the centromeres chromatids are now chromosomes
Metaphase
Spindle apparatus becomes prominent Chromosomes migrate to the equatorial plane Migration due to binding of spindle fibers (microtubules) and other proteins to centromere and centriole.
Depurination
Spontaneous breaking the glycosidic bond connecting the base to the sugar(causes loss of purine) Apurinic site- ribose sugar that has lost purine Thousands of events per cell cycle Recognized quickly and repaired If it occurs right before DNA replication, a base is randomly incorporated Can produce transversions and translations
Heterochromatin
Stains darker Compacted DNA, less genetic activity In and around centromere and near telomeres
Euchromatin
Stains lighter, less compacted, more genetically active
DIPLOTENE
Synaptonemal complex dissociates Chiasmata(sections where crossing over occurs) appear as homologs begin to separate
The Ames test.
Take mouse liver cells and grind it up to release enzymes Mix with different strains of bacteria that are unable to make histadine If mutant histadine becomes wildtype then it is likely product causes mutations
Rare state of a normal base which may lead to mutation by its faulty base-pairing properties
Tautomere (enol)
Type of mutation in which a purine is substituted for a purine
Transition
Deamination of 5-methylcytosine,
Transition occurs Thymine not recognized as foreign so it is often not corrected
Type of mutation in which a pyrimidine is substituted for a purine
Transversion
p53
Tumor suppressor gene As many as 50% of human tumors are associated with p53 mutations A transcription regulator activated in response to DNA damage Stops cell cycle progression until damage is repaired in response to DNA damage Induces apoptosis What would happen if p53 was not functional
Genomes
Unique set of the DNA of an organism. Size (how many bases) Number of genes in genome (protein coding genes) Chromosome number Chromosome linkage Organelle genomes Mitochondrion - ~17Kbp in vertebrates Chloroplasts - >100Kbp
Homology Dependent Repair
Using the complementary strand to make the repair Nucleotide excision repair Removal and replacement Non-bulky damage
Nucleolus
around area with most transcription
Acrocentric-
centromere is closer to one end
Reverse mutation
changes a mutant phenotype back to the wild-type phenotype
ZYGOTENE
chromosomes SYNAPSE form homologous pairs
Ultraviolet radiation
cross links adjacent pyrimidines, mostly thymine. Creates chemical bond between adjacent pyrimidines on a single strand Consequences for DNA replication mutagenicity of UV light explains why sunlight can cause skin cancer.
Telomeres-
ends Every chromosome has 2
Nucleosome
histone proteins are combined with DNA into repeating subunits 2 each H2A, H2B, H3, H4 = histone octomer DNA wraps around octomer to produce nucleosome
Intercalating agents
mimic base pairs and cause insertions/deletions Insert themselves into the double helix usually ends up causing insertion or deletion
Wildtype
normal, most common phenotype
Slip Strand mispairing
occurs in short repeating sequences during DNA replication Newly synthesized strand may slip DNA polymerase doesn't recognize issue so one strand becomes longer than the other in the second DNA replication Results in addition of one base If template strand slips there will be a deletion, template strand and new synthesized strand becomes shorter by 2 bases
Transitions
purine to purine or pyrimidine to pyrimidine Appear to occur more often than transversions A<-->G T<-->C
Meiosis
reduce the number of chromsomes by half. 2N ----> N 2 separate division cycles (meiosis I and II)
LEPTOTENE -
single thread stage- allows homologous chromosomes to synapse
PACHYTENE
threads are fully synapsed CROSSING-OVER occurs - precise breakage, swapping, and reunion between non-sister chromatids
Histones-
ubiquitous in eukaryotes basic due to arginine and lysine positive charge allows them to bind with negatively charged DNA 5 histone proteins... H1, H2A, H2B, H3, H4
Telocentric-
very close to end but not at very end