DNA and Mutations
DNA and Mutations
DNA and Mutations
A mutation is a change in DNA, the hereditary material of life. An organism's DNA affects how it
looks, how it behaves, and its physiology. So a change in an organism's DNA can cause changes
in all aspects of its life.
Mutations are essential to evolution; they are the raw material of genetic
variation. Without mutation, evolution could not occur. In this tutorial,
we�ll explore:
Types of mutations
There are many different ways that DNA can be changed, resulting in different types of mutation.
Here is a quick summary of a few of these:
Substitution
A substitution is a mutation that exchanges one base for another (i.e., a
change in a single "chemical letter" such as switching an A to a G). Such
a substitution could:
Insertion
Insertions are mutations in which extra base pairs are inserted into a
new place in the DNA.
Deletion
Deletions are mutations in which a section of DNA is lost, or deleted.
Frameshift
Since protein-coding DNA is divided into codons three bases long,
insertions and deletions can alter a gene so that its message is no
longer correctly parsed. These changes are called frameshifts.
For example, consider the sentence, "The fat cat sat." Each word
represents a codon. If we delete the first letter and parse the sentence
in the same way, it doesn't make sense.
There are other types of mutations as well, but this short list should give
you an idea of the possibilities
The only mutations that matter to large-scale evolution are those that can
be passed on to offspring. These occur in reproductive cells like eggs and
sperm and are called germ line mutations.
Some regions of DNA control other genes, determining when and where other genes are turned
"on". Mutations in these parts of the genome can substantially change the way the organism is
built. The difference between a mutation to a control gene and a mutation to a less powerful
gene is a bit like the difference between whispering an instruction to the trumpet player in an
orchestra versus whispering it to the orchestra's conductor. The impact of changing the
conductor's behavior is much bigger and more coordinated than changing the behavior of an
individual orchestra member. Similarly, a mutation in a gene "conductor" can cause a cascade of
effects in the behavior of genes under its control.
Many organisms have powerful control genes that determine how the body is laid out. For
example, Hox genes are found in many animals (including flies and humans) and designate
where the head goes and which regions of the body grow appendages. Such master control
genes help direct the building of body "units," such as segments, limbs, and eyes. So evolving a
major change in basic body layout may not be so unlikely; it may simply require a change in a
Hox gene and the favor of natural selection.
Mutations to control genes can transform one body part into another. Scientists have
studied flies carrying Hox mutations that sprout legs on their foreheads instead of
antennae!
The mutations that cause sickle cell anemia have been extensively studied and demonstrate how
the effects of mutations can be traced from the DNA level up to the level of the whole organism.
Consider someone carrying only one copy of the gene. She does not have the disease, but the
gene that she carries still affects her, her cells, and her proteins:
3.
This is a chain of causation. What happens at the DNA level propagates up to the level of the
complete organism. This example illustrates how a single mutation can have a large effect, in
this case, both a positive and a negative one. But in many cases, evolutionary change is based
on the accumulation of many mutations, each having a small effect. Whether the mutations are
large or small, however, the same chain of causation applies: changes at the DNA level
propagate up to the phenotype.
The effects of
mutations
Small-scale mutations
Each of our genes is a copy from either our mum or our dad. If there is a mutation in one of
these genes, this can be passed on from parent to child along with the rest of their genes.
Small inherited changes can make big differences to our bodies. For example, the most
common mutation to cause cystic fibrosis? is the loss of three letters in a gene called CFTR.
Even though mutation is common, inherited diseases are relatively rare. This is because
inherited diseases are often recessive, which means that a person must have two copies of
the mutated gene to get the disease.
Hereditary mutations are inherited from a parent and are present throughout a
person’s life in virtually every cell in the body. These mutations are also called
germline mutations because they are present in the parent’s egg or sperm cells,
which are also called germ cells. When an egg and a sperm cell unite, the
resulting fertilized egg cell receives DNA from both parents. If this DNA has a
mutation, the child that grows from the fertilized egg will have the mutation in
each of his or her cells.
Acquired (or somatic) mutations occur at some time during a person’s life and
are present only in certain cells, not in every cell in the body. These changes can
be caused by environmental factors such as ultraviolet radiation from the sun, or
can occur if a mistake is made as DNA copies itself during cell division. Acquired
mutations in somatic cells (cells other than sperm and egg cells) cannot be
passed on to the next generation.
Genetic changes that are described as de novo (new) mutations can be either hereditary
or somatic. In some cases, the mutation occurs in a person’s egg or sperm cell but is
not present in any of the person’s other cells. In other cases, the mutation occurs in the
fertilized egg shortly after the egg and sperm cells unite. (It is often impossible to tell
exactly when a de novo mutation happened.) As the fertilized egg divides, each resulting
cell in the growing embryo will have the mutation. De novo mutations may explain
genetic disorders in which an affected child has a mutation in every cell in the body but
the parents do not, and there is no family history of the disorder.
Somatic mutations that happen in a single cell early in embryonic development can lead
to a situation called mosaicism. These genetic changes are not present in a parent’s
egg or sperm cells, or in the fertilized egg, but happen a bit later when the embryo
includes several cells. As all the cells divide during growth and development, cells that
arise from the cell with the altered gene will have the mutation, while other cells will not.
Depending on the mutation and how many cells are affected, mosaicism may or may
not cause health problems.