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Mutants and Disease MUPGRET Workshop

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Mutants and Disease

MUPGRET Workshop

Mutation Heritable change in the DNA

sequence. Naturally occurring Induced

Types of mutations Chromosomal Point Insertion/Deletion DNA repair

Mutagens Environmental Chemical

Mutations as a tool Associating a phenotype with a

gene. Understanding gene function. Studying protein interactions. Understanding cell lineage and

organ development.

Associating a phenotype with a gene Changes in the DNA sequence that

non-functional or reduced function proteins often cause a visible change in the appearance of the organism.

Some changes do not give visible phenotypes.

Often identified as an “off-type” in plant species.

Misspelled Genes: 3 Possible Outcomes

A misspelled gene

DNA

Cell may not be able to

follow damaged

instruction

Cell does not make the

protein

X

X

OR Spelling error may be harmless

Functional protein made

by the cell

OR Damaged protein is made

Damaged protein may or

may not be able to function in

the cell.

Dwarfing Gibberellic acid

(GA) is a plant hormone.

GA levels influence growth.

Mutants in genes for GA synthesis, reduce plant height.

Associating a phenotype #2 This is often the first step towards

understanding the function of a gene or to dissecting a biochemical pathway.

The mutation can be either a naturally occurring one or an induced one.

Can be targeted or random.

Understanding gene function “You don’t know how something

really works until you have to fix it.”

Disruptions of the gene can be either non-functional or “leaky”.

Often the “leaky” phenotypes will really help you understand how to gene works.

Understanding gene function In the case of targeted

mutagenesis where you know what the other genes in that would/could be co-regulated with the mutant are you can understand the pathway better by looking at expression of the co-regulated genes.

Understanding gene function In the case of site directed

mutagenesis where you can target particular sequences, you can dissect the part of the protein that is important for function.

Can help to ID the catalytic site or a site involved in protein-protein interactions or a site involved in transport, etc.

Protein Explorer Protein Explorer

http://molvis.sdsc.edu/protexpl/frntdoor.htm

Also available at Biology Workbenchhttp://workbench.sdsc.edu/

Tutorials at http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/posters/chromosome/pdb.shtml

Troubleshooting http://molvis.sdsc.edu/protexpl/troubles.htm

Studying protein-protein interaction Often use a series of alleles that have

defects in different parts of the gene to identify the site that is required for protein-protein interaction.

The series can be insertions, deletions, or point mutations and may come from nature or be induced or a combination of the two.

Interaction Maps Molecular Interaction Maps

http://discover.nci.nih.gov/mim/index.jsp

Understanding cell lineage Usually used with transposon

mutagenesis. Transposons are mobile pieces of DNA

that can insert into a gene and disrupt its function.

Insertion can happen throughout development and can be used to track where cells came from with visible marker.

Ac/Ds in Maize

Corn example of cell lineage

Methods for detection mutations Alteration in electrophoretic

mobility Sequencing Protein trunctation test

Blazing a Genetic Trail It tells the story of how mutations

are involved in several different diseases.

http://www.hhmi.org/genetictrail/

Association Genetics Usually used for medical genetics. Recently applied to plant genetics.

Which genes were involved in domestication?

Is this gene responsible for part of the difference we see in a particular trait such as plant height?

Dwarf 8 Mutagenesis and

trait analysis suggested that d8 might influence flowering time and plant height.

D8 study Sequenced D8 in many ~100

maize lines. Measured flowering time and plant

height in the same material. Compare DNA sequence to

flowering time and plant height.

D8 summary Found several polymorphisms that

are associated with changes in flowering time.

Data also indicate that D8 has undergone selection. Compare synonymous vs.

nonsynonymous substitutions.

Plants as a Model for Disease Sometimes mutations in the same

gene in different organisms have similar phenotype.

This allows researchers to choose the organism with the best genetic resources to study the normal function of that gene.

This also allows researchers to identify prospective genes for a phenotype in one species, based on another.

Xeroderma pigmentosa Autosomal recessive. UV exposure damages DNA. Defect in DNA damage repair. Risks include cancer,

telangiectasia, disfigurement. Can be diagnosed before birth. Take total protection measures

from sun/fluorescent light.

Xeroderma pigmentosa

UV damages tissue that contains molecules that can absorb light.

Mechanisms of UV damage

Low penetration into tissues. Molecular fragmentation—proteins,

enzymes, and nucleic acids contain double bonds that can be ruptured by UV.

Free radical generation—molecules of susceptible tissues absorb UV and eject an electron, which is taken up by oxygen, then termed superoxide, a free radical.

Free radicals Are scavenged by superoxide

dismutase, vitamin C, vitamin E, glutathione peroxidase, carotene.

Lesion mutant in maize

Prions and Disease Proteins that can change shape. And make other proteins change

their shape! As number of changed proteins

increases a phenotype is observed. Causal agent of mad cow disease,

scrapie in sheep and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans.

Prions II Previously thought only nucleic

acid encoded changes caused disease.

Stanley Prusiner discovered prion’s ability to change other protein’s structure and won the Nobel Prize.

Sup35 is a prion-like protein in yeast.

Sup35 Translation termination factor Carboxyl end binds to the ribosomal

complex to terminate translation. If Sup35 is converted to an alternate

conformation (infectious prion conformation) the shape change spreads throughout the cell and is passed to daughter cells.

Sup35 In prion conformation causes

ribosomes to read through stop codons altering shape and function of proteins.

Not adaptively advantageous so why is it maintained?

Why? True et al. 2000. Nature 407: 477-

483. Reduced translation fidelity, extends

proteins. Some of these are antibiotic resistant. Could lead to stabilization of new

phenotype under correct environment.