1 / 22

Mutations

Mutations. Genetic Changes. What is a mutation ?. A change in the base sequence of DNA. What causes mutations?. Mistakes in replication (spontaneous) Mistakes in base pairs Environmental factors (mutagens) High energy radiation (X rays, UV rays)

rance
Download Presentation

Mutations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mutations Genetic Changes

  2. What is a mutation? • A change in the base sequence of DNA

  3. What causes mutations? • Mistakes in replication (spontaneous) • Mistakes in base pairs • Environmental factors (mutagens) • High energy radiation (X rays, UV rays) • Chemicals (asbestos, cyanide, formaldehyde) • High temperature

  4. A mutagen • Any agent that causes a change to the DNA sequence • High energy mutagens (radiation) break the DNA strands apart causing deletions or substitutions • Highly reactive mutagens (chemical) interact with the DNA usually causing substitutions

  5. Mutations in reproductive cells • Changes a sequence of nucleotides in a gene • May produce a new trait for the offspring

  6. Mutations in body cells • Change in the nucleotide sequence only effects the individual and will not be passed down to the offspring • i.e. Cancer, which effects genes that control cell division in mitosis

  7. Types of Mutations • Point mutations • Frameshift mutations • Chromosomal mutations • Deletion • Insertion • Inversion • Translocation

  8. Point mutations • A simple change in a single nucleotide base or “letter” of the gene sequence

  9. Point mutations • Original:   The fat cat ate the wee rat. • Point Mutation: The fat hat ate the wee rat (changing the r in cat to the h in hat). • This change alters the meaning of the instructions significantly. In DNA, switching one base in the DNA sequence to a different base canchange the protein that the gene makes.

  10. Frame-shift mutations • When one or more bases are added or deleted to the DNA strand. • It shifts the reading of mRNA codons by one base

  11. Frame-shift mutations • Original:   The fat cat ate the wee rat. • Frame Shift: The fat caa tet hew eer at. (the “t” from cat is removed) • This type of mutation can make the DNA code meaningless and often results in a shortened protein. 

  12. Frame-shift mutations

  13. Deletions • Occur when a part of the chromosome is left out.  • These can be small, such as the removal of just one "letter" or long enough to affect a large number of genes next to one another on the chromosome. • Deletions can also cause frame-shift mutations.

  14. Deletions • Original:  The fat cat ate the wee rat. • Deletion: The fat ate the wee rat. (deletion eliminated the word “cat.”)

  15. Deletions

  16. Insertions • Result in the addition of extra DNA. • Results is duplication of genes on the same chromosome. • May also cause frame-shift mutations, and they generally result in a nonfunctional protein. 

  17. Insertions • Original:  The fat cat ate the wee rat. • Insertion: The fat cat xlw ate the wee rat.

  18. Inversions • An entire section of DNA is reversed. • These can be small inversions within genes or large inversions that involve large regions of a chromosome and contain several genes.

  19. Inversions • Original:   The fat cat ate the wee rat. • Inversion: The fat eew eht eta tac rat.

  20. Translocations • Occur when a part of one chromosome breaks off and is added to a different chromosome

  21. Translocations

  22. Mutation Examples

More Related