Title: Site-directed mutagenesis
1Site-directed mutagenesis
- Mutation is a random process
- The rate of mutation can be increased with
radiation or mutagenic chemicals - Individuals mutant at certain loci can be
selected for or screened for, but the exact
location and nature of the mutation is unknown. - Site-directed allows for a particular mutation to
be created in a particular location in the DNA - Requires knowledge of the DNA sequence
- Requires ability to synthesize oligonucleotides
2Site-directed mutagenesis-2
- Procedure
- Oligonucleotide with desired mutation is
chemically synthesized - Ss DNA is obtained from cell
- Inserted in a plasmid
- The two are hybridized then the oligonucleotide
is extended to make ds DNA. - DNA synthesis (semi-conservative) produces one
normal DNA molecule, one mutant molecule, leading
to one normal cell, one mutant cell.
3Site directed mutagenesis-3
www.web-books.com/ MoBio/Free/Ch9G.htm
4Transposons
- DNA can jump from one location to another
- Three kinds of examples
- Insertion sequences (simple) (IS)
- Transposons (made of IS plus other genes)
- Certain viruses like Mu that insert themselves
- Transposition can be replicative or not
- Non-replicative DNA element physically moves
to new location within the DNA - Replicative DNA element is copied to another
location. - Transposition occurs in both pro- eukaryotes
5More on IS and transposons
- IS have inverted terminal repeats and code for a
transposase that moves the IS. - Tranposons have IS at each end and unrelated
genes in the middle.
A site that discusses transposons and replicative
vs. non-replicative transposition
http//www.sci.sdsu.edu/smaloy/MicrobialGenetics/
topics/transposons/non-repl-tpn.html
6Examples of mutations and their phenotypes
- ABO blood groups
- Enzymes involved are glycosyltransferases, add
carbohydrates to lipids in membranes - Type A and Type B alleles differ by 4 nucleotides
- Type O (only H substance produced)
- Gene contains early frameshift, causes short,
non-functional protein to be produced. - Mutations are only source of new alleles, but
also the cause of genetic disease.
7Human Genetic Diseases
- Presented because of general interest in human,
medical genetics. - Note the following information
- Name of disease frequency in population
gender, race, or ethnicity of most affected
individuals, disease symptoms, chromosomal
location, cause of disease if known.
8Autosomal Dominant -1
- Huntingtons Disease
- 1/10,000 in people of European descent.
- Progressive deterioration of nervous system
- Jerky spasmodic movements, then loss of control
- Require total care in last years of life
- Onset age 30-50, duration 10-15 yr ending in
death - Gene linked to RFLP near end of 4p
- Trinucleotide repeat CAG 11-34 copies normal, 42
to gt100 in disease - Function of protein, Huntingtin, elusive.
Positively affects brain. Would be 3144 amino
acids long.
9Autosomal dominant -2
- Marfan syndrome
- Disease among group connective tissue disorders
- Caused by deficiency of fibrillin, required for
proper connective tissue production. - Map location 15q21.1
- Incidence 1/10,000. 25 are spontaneous mut.
- Syndrome skeleton, lens of eye, CV system
- Tall with long thin fingers and arms
- Aorta susceptible to rupture
- Flo Hyman, Abe Lincoln?
10Autosomal dominant -3
- Achondroplasia
- Gene located 4p16.3
- Frequency is 1/50,000, mostly spontaneous mut.
- Protein affected is fibroblast growth factor
receptor - Interferes with cartilage production
- Head and trunk normal, long bones dont grow
- Not cured by human growth hormone
- Cure? Elizaroff technique break and extend
bones, force new growth. - Herve Villachez of original Fantasy Island TV show
11Autosomal Recessive -1
- Cystic fibrosis
- Caucasian populations heterozygotes 1/25,
occurrence in newborns (north. Europ. 1/2000) - CF gene maps to 7q31.2
- Many possible mutations in area, 20 very common,
one (70 of all) most common 3 base deletion. - Protein is an ion channel, 1480 aa, regulates
flow of salt through epithelial cell membranes. - Failure water retained, thick mucus, salty
sweat, chronic infections and malfunction. - Life expectancy much improved quality still poor.
12Autosomal Recessive -2
- Sickle cell anemia
- In people of Mediterranean or African origin
- In US, 1/500 Afr-Amer afflicted, 1/12 heterozyg.
- Single point mutation in hemoglobin gene
- Causes protein to become sticky, especially w/o
Oxygen bound to it. Episodes when winded. - Aggregation of Hem. makes clumps, RBC become
sickle shaped clog capillaries, break. - Anemia, pain, O2 deprivation of tissues.
- Selection is positive because protection against
malaria. 11p15.5 is map location.
13Autosomal Recessive -3
- Adenosine deaminase deficiency severe combined
immunodeficiency disease (ADD) - Catabolism of adenosine to uric acid is blocked
- Deoxyadenosine accumulates, kills helper T cells
- 20q13.11
- Tay-Sachs disease
- Map 15q23-24 no synthesis of hexosaminidase A
- Excess fatty acids accumulate, nerve cells killed
- Various forms and stages, classic is lt 6 mo
infant - Most common in Ashkenazaic Jews, 1/3600 in US
14X-linked Diseases
- Fragile X syndrome
- 2nd Leading cause of inherited mental retardation
after Down Syndrome. 1/2500 children - Site Xq27-28 which breaks in cell culture when
starved for nucleotides. - 3 things to learn from this
- Example of sex-linked (X-linked) inheritance
- But dominant instead of recessive.
- Another trinucleotide repeat disease
- Phenomenon called imprinting
- Transmitting males not affected, but daughters
are.
15X-linked Diseases-2
- Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
- Loss of muscle function starting w/ voluntary
muscles, then involuntary - Symptoms begin early, life expectancy lt30 yrs
- Affects boys, 1/3500
- Gene for large protein dystrophin is mutated
- Dystrophin gene contains any of various deletions
or additions resulting in frameshift mutations - Protein is defective fails to anchor
cytoskeleton to membrane proteins cells die - Weakens muscle fibers.
- Gene location Xp21.2
16X-linked Diseases-2
- Hemophilia-A
- Failure of blood to clot, lack of factor VIII.
- The incidence of hemophilia is about 17,500
live male births and 125,000,000 live female
births. - maps to Xq28. Various mutations occur in the gene
- Red-green colorblindness
- Not a disease, a condition
- Failure to produce protein-pigment light
receptors needed to perceive colors. - Xq28
17Trinucleotide repeats responsible for several
genetic diseases
- In these genes, the repeat is normal
- Excessive numbers of repeat causes disease
- The higher the of repeats, the earlier and more
severe - Genetic anticipation
- When the number of repeats is high, offspring
inherit increasingly higher numbers of repeats,
worse disease - Causes of diseases are unknown
- The repeats can occur in various locations not
clear why large numbers of repeats cause disease.
See below.
18Trinucleotide repeat diseases-1
- Huntington Disease
- Complete loss of muscle control with age
dominant - CAG repeat in gene for huntingtin
- 10-35 repeats normal up to 120 in disease
- Repeat located in coding portion calls for
glutamine - Myotonic dystrophy
- Weakness of muscles and other affects
- Dominant gene on chromosome 19
- Repeat is in 3 untranslated region of gene for
protein kinase CTG - 5-37 copies is normal up to 1500 copies diseased
19Trinucleotide repeat diseases-2
- Fragile X syndrome (Martin-Bell)
- X linked trait, but more common in females
because it is dominant (1 in 8000 vs. 1 in 4000) - 2nd leading cause of mental retardation
- Thin section of X chromosome breaks in cell
culture when cells starved for certain nutrients
(folic acid) - At thin section, FMR-1 gene has CGG repeat
- Actually upstream from coding sequence
- 6-54 repeats normal 55-230 repeats normal BUT
passes on an increased to offspring above 230,
retarded.
20Location of trinucleotide repeats