Geneticists Mutants

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

Geneticists  Mutants. Mutations are essential for: Genetic analysis and gene mapping Identifying and isolating disease genes Understanding gene function Discovering biochemical pathways Evolution: Most new mutations - deleterious Some provide selective advantage. 1. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

1

Geneticists Mutants

Mutations are essential for:Genetic analysis and gene mappingIdentifying and isolating disease genesUnderstanding gene functionDiscovering biochemical pathways

Evolution:Most new mutations - deleteriousSome provide selective advantage

2

Types of Mutations

Wild type Mutant Wild type Forward Reverse

(Backward)

3

Types of Mutations

Point Mutations - Base-pair substitutions

transition

transversion

purpur; pyrpyr

purpyr; pyrpur

4

Types of Mutations

Point Mutations - can change how codons are read

missense

nonsense

5

Types of Mutations

Translation of a nonsense mutation

6

Types of Mutations

Point Mutations - may not be obvious due to code redundancy

neutral

silent

7

Types of Mutations

Point Mutations - can have polar effects

Frameshift:

insertion or deletion

8

Types of Mutations

Deletion - Null Mutant - ‘knock out’

Large segment or entire gene lost

No functional product possible

Reverse mutation impossibleunless gene replaced

9

Suppressor Mutations

Second mutation cancels out effects of firstrestores wild-type phenotype to mutants

Intragenic suppressionBoth mutations in same gene

UGU (cys) - UGA (stop) - UGC (cys)

Intergenic suppressionTwo different genes involved

10

Intergenic Suppressor Mutations

Second mutation often in tRNA gene

11

Intergenic Suppressor Mutations

Nonsense suppressor

12

Intergenic Suppressor Mutations

Missense suppressor

13

Classifying Mutations

Conditional - mutant phenotype expressed in certain conditions

Temperature sensitivity - tyrosinase (melanin production)

Useful for studying genes required for essential functions

14

Classifying Mutations

Somatic - mutation occurs in body cells

affects only the individual

Germ line - mutation in gamete producing tissues

passed on to next generation

15

Classifying Mutations

Spontaneous - random mistake

rate 1 in 104 to 109 mutations/cell/generation

Induced - caused by exposure to mutagen

mutagenesis

16

Causes of Spontaneous Mutations

Tautomeric Shifts

enol form of G with T

imino form of A with C

imino form of C with A

enol form of T with G

17

Causes of Spontaneous Mutations

Consequences of Tautomeric Shifts - transitions

Causes of Spontaneous Mutations

DNA looping-out during replication (replication slippage)

Deletion Insertion

19

Causes of Spontaneous Mutations

Replication slippage in trinucleotide repeat regions

Repeat expansion

Anticipation

Huntington disease

Fragile X syndrome

20

Causes of Spontaneous Mutations

Deamination

C:G > U:A > T:A

A > Hypoxanthine:C

methylcytosine > TC:G > T:A

Transitions

21

Induced Mutations

Base analogs - 5-bromouracil

incorporated into DNA during synthesis higher incidence of tautomeric shifts

22

Induced Mutations

Base analogs - 5-bromouracil

Transitions

23

Induced Mutations

Intercalating agents - misalignment mutagens

proflavin, acridine orange, ethidium bromide

24

Induced Mutations

Intercalating agents - addition of nucleotide (base)

insertionframeshift

25

Induced Mutations

Intercalating agents - deletion of nucleotide (base)

deletionframeshift

26

Base Modifying Agents

Nitrous acid - oxidative deamination Transitions

27

Base Modifying Agents

Hydroxylamine (NH2OH)

Transitions

28

Base Modifying Agents

Alkylating agents

CH3

Nitrogen mustard Cl-CH2-CH2-N-CH2-CH2-Cl

Ethylmethanesulfonate CH3-Ch2-O-SO2-CH3

Nitrosoguanidine HN=C-NH-NO2

O=N-N-CH3

Transfer methyl or ethyl group to bases

29

Base Modifying Agents

Alkylating agents

Methylmethane sulfonate

Transitions, Mispairing, Crosslinking and Breakage

30

Mutagenic Effects of Radiation

Nonionizing radiation - Ultraviolet light (UV) - 260 nm

Absorbed by bases - pyrimidine hydrates, pyrimidine dimers

Mispairing,Lethal if notrepaired

31

Mutagenic Effects of Radiation

Ionizing radiation - Xrays, Radioactive Isotopes, Neutrons (Radon gas,

Radium)

High energy - penetrates tissues, displaces electrons

creates positively charged free radicals

Base changes, breaks in backbone, crosslinking

Results of exposure:Base substitutions, Deletions, Duplications, Inversions, Translocations, Chromosome breakage

32

Self-Induced Mutagenesis

Radium - glows in the dark - watches, clothingmouth cancer, build-up in bones, anemia

Nuclear energy - Chernobyl - 200x increase mutations in voles

X-rays - physicians - bone cancershoe stores -

Tanning salons - UVA/UVB both dangerousCigarette smoking - lung, pancreas, bladder, esophageal, etc.Radon gas - lung disease, cancer

33

Identifying Mutagens

The Ames Test

liver extractmimics metabolism

reverse mutationsinduced

34

Detecting Mutations

Visible - direct observation

Nutritional - auxotrophs

replica plating

Resistance - selective media

35

Repair of DNA Damage

Spontaneous damage to DNA ~ 1 change/ 109 bp/min

10,000 mutations per cell every 24 hr

If not repaired, cells and individuals would die rapidly

36

Light Repair - Photoreactivation

Direct repair of UV-induced pyrimidine dimers

Photolyase (phr) - activated by visible light

Error free repair - prokaryotes, simple eukaryotes

37

Repair of Alkylation Damage

O6-methylguanine methyltransferase (ada) - E. coli

removes methyl group restoring guanine

Similar mechanism for repair of alkylated thymine

38

Base Excision Repair

Glycosylase recognizes and removes damaged base by cleaving bond between base

and sugar

Other enzymes remove the sugar leaving gap in DNA

DNA polymerase and DNA ligase repair gap

39

Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER)

NER - Dark Repair - Repairs any damage that distorts DNA helix

E. coli

UvrA (uvrA), UvrB (uvrB), UvrC (uvrC), UvrD (uvrD)

UvrA and B recognize damage

UvrC and B cuts backbones on both sides of lesion

UvrD unwinds and releases region between cuts

DNA pol I and DNA ligase fill gap

40

Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER)

E. coli

41

Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER)

Mammalian systems - products of ~ 12 genes involved

Deficiency in repair - Xeroderma pigmentosum

light sensitivity

42

Methyl-Directed Mismatch Repair

Recognizes mismatches in newly synthesized DNA

E. Coli - mutS, mutL, mutH

Exonuclease creates gap

DNA pol III and ligaserepair gap

43

Methyl-Directed Mismatch Repair

Humans - hMSH2, hMLH1, hPMS1, hPMS2 involved

Mutations in any of these genes - HNPCC

Hereditary Nonpolyposis Colon Cancer

Autosomal Dominant - Predisposition to cancer

Heterozygous cell suffers mutation in good allele

No repair capability remainsMutations begin to accumulate rapidly

44

Double-Strand Break Repair

Homologous and Non-homologous recombination repair

Defects - familial breast and ovarian cancer

45

Recombination Repair

Postreplication - Recombination repair - recA

DNA pol and ligase

Nucleotide excision repair

46

Translesion DNA Repair - SOS Response

E. coli - lexA, recA

Too much damage for repair, RecA is activated

induces LexA self-destruction

no more repression of 17 genes for SOS repair

DNA polymerase for translesion replicationintroduces errors into DNA

47

Transposable Elements

Mechanism for Movement -

insert into nonhomologous regions of chromosomes

Transposase: move DNA elements

Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes

Reverse Transcriptase:

RNA > DNA > RNA

Eukaryotyes

48

Transposable Elements in Prokaryotes

Phage mu - integration disrupts genes

R plasmids - antibiotic resistance genes move

accumulate on plasmids - Multiple Resistance

ge *mu* ne

ampRES

tetRES

49

Transposable Elements in Prokaryotes

Insertion Sequences (IS) - 768 bp (IS1) , 4-19 copies

terminal inverted repeats (IRs), transposase

transposition into genes inactivates them, alters expression

50

Insertion Sequences in Prokaryotes

IS movement into a nonhomologous target site

staggered cut

direct repeats

51

Transposons in Prokaryotes

Transposons (Tn)

IS elements on Both sides

Carry genes

52

Transposon Movement

One possible model

53

Transposable Elements in Eukaryotes

Barbara McClintock - Moveable genes in Indian corn (Zea mays)

Discovery 1940s; Noble Prize 1983; Died 1993 at 90

54

Transposable Elements in Corn

Moveable genes in corn - controlling elements

C - purple c - colorless

Insertion of Ds (dissociation) C > c - colorless

Loss of Ds, reversion c > C - purple spot

55

Transposable Elements in Corn

Molecular evidence explains moveable genes in corn

Ac - activator transposase

Ds - no transposase

56

Transposable Elements in Corn

Ac transposition mechanism

57

Ty Elements in Yeast

Delta - promoter and recognition sequences for transposases

Two ORFs - TyA and TyB - encode proteins for transposition (RT)

Retrotransposons - move by an mRNA intermediate

~ 35 copies per genome

58

P Elements in Drosophila

Approximately 15% of Drosophila genome is mobile.

P elements are one example.

polypeptides

59

Human Retrotransposons

SINEs and LINEs are retrotransposons (interspersed elements)

~ 20% human genome = LINEs

~ 3% human genome = one SINE, Alu

Full length LINEs move autonomously,also enable SINE movement

Transposition of LINE into factor VIII generesponsible for spontaneous

hemophilia

SINE insertion into neurofibromatosis gene caused disease