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Mutations and Genetic Exchange Scope of Mutations Mutation Types Mutation Causes Genetic Exchange via Recombination Transformation Conjugation Transduction Transposable Elements Scope of Mutation: • A mutation is any change in the proper nucleic acid sequence of a specific gene in a cell’s genome. It may result from a single base pair mismatch during DNA replication. • Mutation can create genetic diversity within a population; either beneficial, neutral, bad, or lethal. • Mutation could result in a new phenotype that is advantageous to successful reproduction of the mutated individual; this depends on particular environmental conditions, called selective pressures. • Such beneficial mutations stay within a population from generation to generation, and drive the evolution of that species. • Bad or lethal mutations are often lost from a population over subsequent generations. A single base substitution will change a codon; a new amino acid in the gene’s protein product may result. Spontaneous Mutation: E.g., Human Sickle Cell Anemia Why does this stay in human populations? Africans with one good and one mutated gene are resistant to African Sleeping Sickness, a lethal infections disease. NORMAL: Base Substitutions: 2) MISSENSE: 1) NUETRAL: 3) NONSENSE: NORMAL: Frameshift Mutation: • Results from 1 or 2 base deletion or addition to the DNA. • Causes the “reading frame” of codons to change. DELETION: • All codons read down from a frameshift may change every amino acid during translation. • Think of a simple sentence of 3-letter words” e.g. “The cat eat the fat rat.” Now, “The ate att hef atr at” Chemical Mutagens: Base Modification Nitric Acid (nitrite ion) reacts with amine groups to form nitrosamines in adenine. This base modification causes adenine to act like guanine. Chemical Mutagens: Base Analogs Base analogs mimic the critical chemical form of a normal base, so it gets incorporated during DNA replication. However, its proper base pairing function is altered so subsequent generations will maintain the mutation. UV Light Mutation • Thymine dimers can be repaired by a few different mechanism in the cells. • One important repair system for thymine dimers and chemical mutations is “excision repair”. • Excision repair involves cutting out the bad sequence on the mutated strand and replacing it with the proper bases. • The goal is to make repairs in DNA before it is replicated for the next generations, as that would pass on mutations. Excision Repair: • However, high UV doses may cause accumulation of too many thymine dimers for their repair prior to DNA replication. DNA replication is interrupted. • Rather than stop replication all together – certainly lethal - the DNA Polymerase is forced to randomly add bases. • This “error prone” repair represents a last chance for survival. Another name for this is “SOS repair”. Genetic Recombination: • Two DNA molecules may recombine segments of their molecule in a process called crossing over. • This is a relatively common event between chromosome copies in eukaryotes during meiosis. (Note the example here.) • Prokaryote chromosomes, viral DNA, and smaller fragments of “foreign” DNA may recombine, adding new genes (or different alleles) to an individual cell. • Bacteria can receive a foreign source of DNA for recombination through one of three different mechanisms of Genetic Exchange: - Transformation (external fragment) - Conjugation (bacterial “sex”) - Transduction (viral mediated) Transformation: 1) Foreign DNA from a dead donor cell is released into the environment as fragments. 2) Fragments can be taken up by a recipient cell. 3) A portion of foreign DNA may there recombine with recipient’s chromosome. • Recipient cells have been transformed into a new genotype. • Non-recombined foreign DNA eventually gets degraded by recipient cell nucleases. • A process that is performed naturally by some bacteria, or may be forced artificially in the laboratory. Conjugation: • Live donor contains an special fertility plasmid (F factor) that allows it to mate a recipient cell without an F factor and transfer a copy of the F factor into the recipient. • This is referred to as a “F+ x F- mating” and results in both cells being F+. 1) The F+ cell produces a sex pilus that will only attach to F- cell. 2) Once attached, the F factor’s DNA is replicated by rolling circle replication. 3) A linear copy of F factor is transferred via the pilus into the recipient. 4) F factor DNA circularizes in recipient and the pilus detaches. + F → Hfr • A small percentage of donor cells with an F factor will have that DNA recombine into the donor cell’s chromosome DNA at a specific site. • F+ cells that have their F factor integrated into their chromosome are called high frequency of recombination (Hfr) cells. • Like F+ cells, Hfr cells can produce a pilus and mate with an F- cell. Htr x F mating 1) Once the pilus has attached, again the DNA from the F factor begins rolling circle replication to transfer DNA across the pilus into the recipient. 2) However, only the initial portion of F factor DNA gets copied and transferred, the remaining majority of what is copied and transferred is chromosomal DNA from the donor cell. Only a fragment of the donor chromosome transfers. 3) Recombination between the recipient’s chromosome and the transferred donor chromosome fragment happens at a very high frequency. The recombinant F- cell is called a F’ cell, which now has new genes and/or alleles. Transduction: • Viruses are involved in genetic exchange called transduction. • Viruses are not cellular life; we simply refer to them as a particle, or virion. • Specifically, viruses of bacterial cells are called bacteriophage. The bacterial cell is the host. • Bacteriophage have an outer protein coating called a capsid and inside resides its small genome (phage DNA) • Viral infection will eventually result in controlling the host cell’s “machinary” to replicates hundreds of new viral particles. • Sometimes, although rare, host (donor) DNA gets packaged into capsid proteins, forming what is called a tranducing particle. • Transducing particles can infect other bacteria (recipient), where the donor DNA fragment can recombine with the recipient chromosome. Transposable Elements: “Jumping Genes” • Transposable elements (insertion sequences and transposons) can tranfer copies of themselves to other DNA molecules (chromosome, plasmid, or viral DNA). • Antibiotic resistance genes rapidly spread within and between bacterial populations by transposons carried on F factors called R plasmids.