Mutations

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Mutations

Drosophila have heart is open ended tube which


rhythmically contracts.
Few mutants never develop heart and die at
embryonic stage.
1980- Rolf Bodmer analyzed these mutants and found
gene responsible for development of heart.

tinman (after character wizard of Oz), transcription


factor

Human gene NKx2.5 which have similar sequence


with tinman but function is unknown.

1990-Johanthan and Cristine Siedman started


studing babies with abnormal hearts 1 in 125 babies
have problems in hearts.
These defects are inherited in autosomal mannner.
Detailed analysis showed gene is on 5th chromosome at spot
where NKx2.5 was mapped.
Later on it was found that these defects are due to tinman
gene and it is also transcription factor.

Why we study mutations (tinman and per illustrates)

Mutation is inherited change in genetic information.

Importance of mutations: Mutations are both sustainer of


life and suffering.

Peas and its variation


Morgan and mutations
Automobile and take out the parts
Categories of mutations:

Somatic mutations arise in somatic tissue, did not produce


gametes , not passed to next generation.

Mutation- mitosis- clone-


Earlier in development mutation occurs, more big is somatic
mutation.

Large number of cells in eukaryotes, lot od somatic


mutations

1014 cells and mutation occurs every million cell

1014/1000000 =108 =100 million mutations,


Some of the mutations have no affect because it is replaced
by normal cell.
Some of the mutations increase and spread and is cause of
cancer.

Germ Line mutations: arise in cell that produce gametes,


passed on further generation and affect somatic and germ
line tissues.

Usually we speak of these mutations.

Gene mutations- affecting single gene


Chromosome mutation-affecting chunk of DNA
Types of mutations:
Number of ways to classify mutations.

Base substitutions:
Simples way is base substitutions.
Transition purine by purine A—G and G--A
Pyrimidine by pyrimidine T—C and C—T.

Transversion- Purine by pyrimidine

A-G = A-C,A-T, C-G, T-G


insertions and deletions:

Insertion of base or group of nucleotide 1,2,3

Substitutions are believed more common but analysis


reveals insertions and deletions are more common.

Frame shift mutation

Alter the code but there are insertion or deletion of three


base pairs code remains intact but may affect phenotype and
called in frame insertions and deletions
Expanding tri nucleotide repeats: Set of three nucleotides
increase in number.

1991- FMR1- Fragile x syndrome, mental disorder


Tip of Long arm of X –chromosome is attached by slender thread.

1-1500 males and 1 in 2500 females

CGG normal person have 5-54 copies but people with disease have
hundreds or even thousands thousands of copies
Huntington disease: CAG (polyglutamine repeats).
Lack of coordination and degeneration in parts of the brain
mostly cortex and striatum

Cognitive defects, psychiatric abnormalities and movement


disorders, appear in middle age and advance in 10-15
years.

Healthy individuals 11-34 repeats, proline rich domains of


11 and 10 amino acids follow poly Q domains.
Forward mutation: Mutation that alters wild type is called
forward mutation

Reverse mutation- mutation which changes mutant to wild


type.

Missense mutation: substitution that result in different


amino acid in protein.

Sense codon into nonsense codon

Silent mutation- due to redundancy of genetic code.

Neutral mutation-alters amino acid sequence but do not


change function or little change

Loss of function and gain of function.


Molecular consequences of point mutation:

Synonymous mutation: The mutation change from one code


for an amino acid to other amino acid.

Missense mutation: Nonsynonymous mutation- one code into


other.

Nonsense: Where mutation is located, in the beginning or end.

Conservative substitution: In this case amino acid replaced is


chemically similar to the amino which is getting replaced.

Non-conservative: Amino acid replaced is different from the


amino acid which is replacing.
Mutation is regulatory and other non coding regions:

They do not encode protein, DNA binding sites.


At DNA level to which RNA polymerase and its associated
factors bind.

At RNA level, ribosomal binding sites and 5’ and 3’ splice


sites and regulate translation.

These affects are harder to predict.


Whether mutation affects the binding or not
Affect amount of the peptide or protein but not structure.

Many mutations within non coding regions will have little or


no affect.
Molecular basis of spontaneous mutations:

Whether mutation arise in response to the environmental


conditions

Salvador Luria and Max Delbruck. 1943.

E. Coli and phage was


Spread and some of the
Colonies survive.

Whether mutation were


produced randomly but
spontaneously in time or
Phage caused resistance.

If mutation occurred spontaneously mutations might be


expected to occur different time in different culture.
He saw fluctuations returns when people while playing
gambling on slot machine at faculty dance in Indiana university
club-jackpot mutation)-1940

20-small cultures each with few cells and incubated them until
they were 108 cells per millimeter.

There were also much larger cultures of same density.

20 individual cultures and 20 samples of small size were plated


in presence of page,
11 have 0 colony, 1,1,3,5,5,6,35,64,7107.

Large cultures showed much less variation 14-26.

If phage was inducing mutation, colony density hence mutation


rate would have been same. (Fluctuation test)
1969- noble prize
This elegant experiment suggests that resistant cells were
selected by the environmental agent.

Replica plating by Josua and Esther Lederberg 1952


Suppressor mutation:

Suppresses the effect of other mutation

 Occurs at a site different from the site of


original mutation

 Organism with a suppressor mutation is a


double mutant but exhibits the phenotype of un
mutated wild type

 Different from reverse mutation in which


mutated site is reverted back into the wild type
sequence
On the basis of Causative agent of mutation:
Spontaneous:
 Mutations that result from natural changes in DNA.
 All the types of point mutation.
 It occurs in DNA replication and G1 and G2 phase of cell cycles.

Induced:
 Results from changes caused by environmental chemicals &
radiations
 Any environmental agent that increases the rate of
mutation above the spontaneous is called a mutagen
such as chemicals & radiations
SPONTANEOUS MUTATION

DNA Replication Errors.

Spontaneous Lesions.

Transposition.
DNA REPLICATION ERRORS

Each of the common bases in DNA can spontaneously undergo a


transient rearrangement of bonding. i.e. Base pairs substitution
mutations
Chemically each base can exists in alternatives states called
Tautomers.
A proton shifts in nitrogen base forms on its rare tautomeric form
i.e. Tautomeric shift.
 In DNA, H- atoms usually prefer specific atomic location in
purine and pyrimidine bases .
• The N- atoms attached to C , G and A are in the amino form ( -
NH2 )
• The O- atom in G and T are in Keto form ( = O )
• Keto (C=O), enol (C-OH)
• Amino - (NH2), imino (=NH)
Mechanism of spontaneous mutation:

Mutation arise from many sources, one of them is DNA


replication.
Copy of millions or billions of nucleotides- error do occur

Insertion of transposable elements from elsewhere in the


genome.

Errors- A to C
Transitions: Each base can occur in one of the several forms
called tautomers-isomers differ in their position.

Keto form is usually present in DNA and enol and imine


forms are rare, when enol and imino forms are incorporated
them pair with wrong base and hence mutation.
Tautomeric shift:
Eg. In the example diagramed, a guanine undergoes a tautomeric shifts to its
rare enol from at the time of replication .in its enol form, it pairs with thymine,
during the next replication the guanine shifts back to its more stable keto form.
The thymine incorporated opposite the enol form of guanine directs the
incorporation of adenine during the subsequent replication . The net result is a
GC to AT mutation.
Indel mutations.
SPONTANEOUS LESIONS

Naturally occurring damage to the DNA also can generate mutations.


Three types of spontaneous lesions:

Depurination and Depyrimidiation.

Deamination.

Oxidative damage.
Depurination and Depyrimidiation
Depurination is the loss of purine due to breaking of
glycosidic bond of nucleotides in DNA.
Similarly depyrimidiaton is the loss of pyrimidine base.

AP: APURINIC SITE (or baseless site).


If such lesions are not repaired, there is no base to specify a
complementary base during DNA replication, and the DNA polymerase
may stall or dissociate from DNA.
Depurination-loss of purine- mammalian cells loses 10,000
purines from DNA IN 20 hr 37 deg
Deamination
Removal of amino group from a molecules i.e. from cytosine, adenine
and guanine .Chemicals are Nitrous acid (HNO2), sodium
bisulfite(NaHSO3).

e.g. Xanthine result form deamination of guanine is unable to base pairs with thymine and
cytosine and hence have lethal affect. Hypoxanthine selectively base pairs with cytosine
instead of thymine.
OXIDATIVELY DAMAGE

Attack by reactive oxygen species to the DNA.


Radicals like superoxide(O2), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and
hydroxyl radicals (OH).

E.g. 8-oxo-7-hydrodeoxyguanosine(8-oxodG) and thymidine glycol


are products of oxidative damage. Results 8-oxodG mispairs with A,
resulting in high level of G-T Transversions.
Thymidine glycol blocks the DNA replication.
Mutation in the environment: Mutagens present in the
environment.

Three mechanisms
a.Replace base with another base.
b.Alter the base
c. Damage the base so that it can not pair with any base.

Incorporation of base analogs: Similar to nitrogenous base and


incorporated instead of regular base.

They have different pairing properties.

5- bromouracil is analog of thymine that have bromine at


carbon position 5 instead of CH3 and do not affect atoms that
involve hydrogen bonding
TRANSPOSITION

A transposons is a DNA sequence that is able to insert itself(or


copy itself) at a new location in the genome, without having any
sequence relationships with target locus.

Insertion of a transposable elements into or near a functional


gene can alter its expression by causing loss of gene function or by
changing the gene expression (insertion mutation).
INDUCED MUTATION

Physical Mutagens
 Radiation
(a) Ionizing( e.g. X-ray, gama ray, cosmic ray)
(enough energy)
(b) Non- ionizing (e.g. UV ray)
 Heat
 Breaks the N-glycosidic bond in DNA.
 Results form apurinic site or baseless site.
 Leads to unstable and rapidly degrade the
DNA.
Chemical Mutagens
 Base Analogs
 Alkylating agents
 Intercalating agents
Radiations:
Ionizing radiations:
In 1927, Herman Muller demonstrated that mutations could
be induced by X-rays.

 X-rays, gamma rays, and cosmic rays are all capable of


penetrating tissues and damaging DNA.

 They remove electrons from the atoms that they encounter,


changing stable molecules into free radicals and reactive ions
which then alter the structures of bases and break
phosphodiester bonds in DNA.

 Ionizing radiation also frequently results in double-


strand breaks in DNA.
Shorter wavelength and higher energy than visible light

Important for
medical diagnosis because
they penetrate deeper
Treatment of Drosophila with X-rays sharply increased the
percentage of X- linked recessive lethals.

X-rays are electromagnetic radiation with shorter wavelength and


high energy.

Mutation could be induced by the external factor and was awarded


noble prize 1946 (physiology and medicine).

He developed simple and accurate technique to detect mutations.

CLB method- CLB chromosome


1.C- cross over suppressor- new mutation by cross over is avoided. It
is inversion which prevents cross over.
2. l lethal mutation- hemizygous and recessive condition-kill
individual.
3.B carriers bar eye phenotype which will be detected
Normally there will be ration of 2
females and 1 male

Muller say 150 fold increase in


mutations
Other researchers also showed that X-rays are mutagenic on other
organisms, plants, animals and other microbes.

Ability to induce mutation contributed immensely to our progress

Other chemicals were also discovered which are potent mutagens.

Sulphur gas (sulphur mustard was


First chemical to be mutagen
Charlotte Auerbach and associates
Discovered mutagenic affects of
mustard gas in WW2.

British government placed results in classified list and he could


publish and communicate the results with other geneticists.

List of chemicals that transfer alkyl group to DNA.


Non-ionizing
UV radiation causes thymine dimers, which block
replication.
Do not penetrate and only up to surface
Light repair separates thymine dimers.
Sometimes the repair jobs introduces the wrong
nucleotide, leading to a point mutation.
Ultraviolet radiation cause mutation in two ways
Disturb structure of DNA helices
Chemical mutagen: Chemical mutations are of 2 types
1.That are mutagenic to replicating and non replicating DNA.
2.That is mutagenic to replicating DNA (base analogs-acridine
dyes)
Base Analogs
 Chemicals with structures similar to that of any of four standard
bases of DNA.
 DNA polymerases cannot distinguish these analogs.
 They may be incorporated into newly synthesized DNA molecules.
 Both base analogs produce transition mutations.
 Mutations by base analogs can be reversed by treatment with the
same analogs or different analog.
2-Amino-purine:

Base analog of adenine.


Normally pairs with thymine.
May mispairs with cytosine.
Causes a transition mutation.
Nitrous acid (HNO2 ) is a potent mutagen.

Acts on replicating and


non-replicating DNA strands

Hypxanthine-AT to GC
Uracil- GC-AT
Guanine- xanthine no mutation
Alkylating agents:

 Chemicals that donate alkyl groups e.g.


Ethylmethanesulfonate(EMS).

It causes transitions, transversion, frame shift mutation and even


chromosome aberrations.

 It adds an ethyl group to guanine and produces 6-ethylguanine,


which pairs with thymine and leads to CG:TA transitions

 Also adds an ethyl group to thymine to produce 4-ethylthymine,


which then pairs with guanine, leading to a TA:CG transition

 Mustard gas is another alkylating agent.


Hydroxylating agents: NH2OH have specific mutagenic affect,
GC-----AT.

DNA is treated with hydroxylamine-amino group of cytosine is


hydroxylated and resultant hydroxylaminocystine base pairs with
adenine, GC-AT
Intercalating agents
 Proflavin, acridine orange, ethidium bromide, and
dioxin .
 They are about the same size as a nucleotide
 They produce mutations by sandwiching themselves
(intercalating) between adjacent bases in DNA
 They distort the three-dimensional structure of the
helix and cause single-nucleotide insertions and
deletions in replication
 These insertions and deletions frequently produce
frameshift mutations.
E.g.
Mutation Rates
 The frequency with which a gene changes from the wild
type to a mutant is referred to as the mutation rate.

 Expressed as the number of mutations per biological unit i.e.


mutations per cell division, per gamete per round of
replication

e.g. mutation rate for achondroplasia (hereditary dwarfism) is


about 4 mutations per 100,000 gametes.

Mutation Frequency

 Incidence of specific type of mutation with in the group of


individual organism.

e.g. for achondroplasia, the mutation frequency in united state is


about 2x10⁻⁴.
Intercalating agent: Slip in between base pairs
Theory of allele frequencies.

Populations are made of mixing groups.

Original settlers receive genes from immigrating populations. Genes


are transmitted to the offspring and now to current populations.

Estimating allele frequencies.

Population (too large to study) and sampling.

MN blood group is decided by two alleles on the 4th chromosome.


Total number of alleles are = 2 x 6129 = 12258

Frequency of M allele = 2 x 1787 + 3039/ 12258

6613/12258 = 53.94

Frequency of N Allele = 2x 1303 +3039 /12258 = 0.46


Relating genotype to allelic frequencies:
Can we use allelic frequencies to predict about genotype.

1908-GH Hardy (British mathematician) and Wilhelm


Weinberg, a German physician
Genotype of populations from allele frequencies.

With Random mating, big population, no differential survival,


Hardy Weinberg frequencies persist for generations and that is
the reason it is called Hardy Weinberg equilibrium

Do these predictions fit with original data


Number of observations- number of restrictions

3-2= 1 ,
Sum of three predicted number is fixed by sample size.
Allele frequency of p was directly observed from sample data
and q (1-p) can be estimated indirectly and will not df.
df=1, p< 0.05 is 3.84

So there is an agreement between calculated value and predicted.

PKU (Incidence of PKU= 0.0001 in USA,

Under the assumption of Random mating,

q2 = 0.0001

q= root of 0.0001
q= 0.01

Thus one percent in population is mutant .

We can predict heterozygote carriers


p= 1-q , 1-0.01 =0.99

So about 2% is predicted to be carriers,

Hardy Weinberg applies to X linked genes and genes with


multiple alleles.

In eastern European population 88 % mean are normal and


12% are color blind p=0.88 and q=0.12
For ABO system IA, IB, IO p, q, r
p q r
P pp pq pr

Q pq qq qr

R pr qr rr

p2+q2+r2+2pq+2pr+2qr
Exceptions to Hardy Weinberg principle:

Mating is random: Random mating is the key, if mating are


nonrandom, it will lead deviation from HW equilibrium.
Related individuals mate each other (Consanguineous mating),
We can calculate inbreeding affect by using inbreeding coefficient
F
Inbreeding coefficient is from 0 (no inbreeding to 1-complete
inbreeding)
All genotypes have equal survival: If genotypes have different
survival

P= 2x 26+140/ 2x 200 =0.48, q=1-0.48 =0.52

0.48 x 0.48 x 200 = 46.03


0.52 x 0.52 x 200 = 54.08
2pq= 99.8
Population subdivision: Ability of population to breed with other
members of the same population.

No ecological and biological barriers


When population is single interbreeding unit meaning that
population can mate with other individuals. In nature populations
are usually divided. Fish is lakes which are divided,
let us say frequency of A is high in one lake and low in other lake.

Migration: When individuals move from one territory to another,


Migration can change the allele frequency.
Tay-Sachs disease ts (0.017)

Q= 1-0.017 = 0.983

2 X 0.017 X 0.983 =0.033

1/30 ,
Conditional lethal mutations:

They are most useful mutations, they are lethal in one


environment (restrictive) and viable in second environment
(permissive).

Help in identification of mutation in essential genes that rsult in


complete loss of gene product.

Placing them in restrictive environment will tell us about gene


function.
Conditional lethals have been used to decipher many important
functions from development to photosynthesis.

Three major type of conditional mutants


Auxotrophs, conditional lethal and suppressor mutations.
Auxotrphs are mutation that are unable to synthesis essential
metabolite (amino acid, purine, pyrimidine and vitamins) .

They will grow when amino acid is supplemented in the medium


(permissive) but will not grow when essential metabolite is absent

Intermediate “Y” is present in small quantities but mutation in


enzyme result in more of “Y” and hence easy isolated .

You have complex with many proteins and you can study role of
individual protein
Robert Edgar, Johanthan King and William wood who worked on
complete pathway of morphogesis of T4 phage bacteria.

50 Out of 200 genes code for structural proteins, each genes codes
for one or more steps in structural pathway
Robert Edgar, Johanthan King and William wood established the
complete pathway of T4 morphogenesis.

ETS of photosynthesis.

Circadian rhythms
Learning and memory

Complementation test: One gene – one polypeptide, scientists


define mutation but were not knowing whether mutation is in
the same gene or not (Drosophila Eye).

1940 Edward Lewis developed complementation test for


functional allelism
Coupling-cis-configuration
Repulsion-trans configuration.

1940 Lewis that certain mutation


in cis and trans configuration have
different phenotypes.

This is called position affect


And positional effect Lewis
observed is called cis-trans
position effect.

It lead development of
complementation test for
functional allelism.

This allowed to test whether mutation are in the gene.


cis- heterozygote might have wild type chromosome might have wild
type phenotype whether mutation are in single gene or two genes.

cis-might have wilt type to evaluate trans heterozygote.

Trans heterozygote a x b a/b together.

In virus, trans heterozygotes are produced by simply infecting host


cells by two mutants.

Regardless of how trans heterozygote are constructed, they provide


the same information.

If trans heterozygote have mutant phenotype, then mutation are in


the same gene.
If in trans heterozygote phenotype is wild type, then mutation are in
the different genes.
Amber mutation of T4 bacteriophage.
Amber mutation in essential genes are conditional lethal.

When present in E. coli restrictive strain B, there is lethality.

When present in strain CR63, phenotype is wild type

Amber mutation produces translation termination triplet in coding


regions of genes and products are truncated ones, therefore
complementation test are unambiguous.

Two of amber mutations are amB17 and amH32 gene 23 which


codes for structural protein of phage head.

Other amE18 in gene 18 which codes for major structural proteins of


phage tail
Complementation or lack of it is assessed by the phenotype
(wild type of mutant).

Recombination-actual breakage and union of parts of


chromosome.

Functional allelism= same gene or different gene, two


mutations do not complement each other in the same unit of
function.
Structural allelism= two units are in same loci in the
chromosome. They are determined by recombination, two
mutation that do not recombine are structurally allelic.

Mutations that are structurally and functionally allelic are


called homo alleles, they do not complement or recombine with
each other- defects at the same site, defects that overlap
common site.
Heteroallels- mutations that are functionally allelic but
Structurally non-allelic- heteroalleles, occur at different sites within
same gene, they recombine with each but do not complement each
other.

Screening test for mutagenicity: The ames test

We use lot of chemical and hence it is important to know their


toxicity. Carcinogenicity is tested on rodents by feeding or injecting
them with chemicals- maintaining large population of mice is
expensive and mutation is low frequency event.

Ames and colleagues developed test- Salmonella typhimurium-


created auxotrophic strains of mutants carring transition,
transversion, frame shift mutation.

Reversion of auxotroph's to phototrophs.


Known number of bacteria on medium lacking histdine and then
measure frequency of revertants
They reported 90% correlation between mutagenicity and
caricinogencity.

They tests rat liver extracts.

Nitrates found in charred meat are not mutagenic but they are
converted into nitrosamines in euryokarotic cells which are
mutagenic.
Genetic fine structure

Gene have following three properties:

Functional property- particular phenotypic effect.

Mutational property: producing different phenotypes

Recominational property: It can separate itself from other


genes
Cis-trans is simple functional test for allelism between recessive
mutations located on the same loci.

Two mutations in trans heterozygote are allelic if they produce


mutant type and non allelic if they wild type phenotype..

Ability of two recessive mutation to restore wild type phenotype


either partially or completely in the trans positions has been termed
as complementation.

Neurospora
In Neurospora, nutritional mutants have been used and ease which
they can be detected have made them suitable for complementation.

Strains that lack capacity to synthesize histadine (amino acid) and


are unable to grow on minimal media.
his-3-locus Neurospora, CD16, 245, 261, D566, 1438
Thus we can have functional order of alleles
245-261-D566-1438.
However collinearity between genetic and complementation
map is not always true.
CD16 is shown as left
but effect all three regions.
rii locus
Most refined analysis of genetic locus, T4 loci affecting rapid lysis.
Mutations in this loci can be distinguished from mutations in other
“r” loci by inability of rii mutants to grow on lysogenic E. coli.

They could infect K but could not destroy it.

One when two different rii mutants were infected, they


complement each and lead to the lysis.

These mutants fell into two functional groups, A and B and they
complement each other.

Benzer called each of these units as cistron and phenamena of


complementation between a and b are intercistronic
complementation.
It now know these cistrons produce proteins, bind to cell
membrane of bacterial host and force it to break.
Importance of rii lay in the analyses of genetic structure

Two “r” mutants (numerous viral particles)- infect strain B of


E. coli, wild type phage is formed rx and ry one occupy one sub
locus and another other sublocus

rxry+ /rx+ry…..... rx+ry+ but there is no lysis but these wild type
could be detected by permitting phage derived from- E. coli B
to grow on K strain, frequency of appearance plaques on K
strain gives idea of recombination between two original
mutants.

Million of phage particles could be plated on cultures of Strain


K and rare recombination frequencies were observed.
0.0001
Deletion Mapping
Unkown r and known r which was found to recombine with
each other to produce r+.
If r+ recombinants were formed, mutation could be called
point mutation, otherwise it is multisite nature.

R155 and 174 recombine to produce r+


When either of them is crossed with r164, no r+ is formed.
R164 is multisite mutation which covers both 174 and 155.
Multisite decrease the recombination- which indicates they
are probably deletions.

These deletions served as tool to decrease the labor.


E. Coli and infect r mutant and known deletion site and then
observe whether they are present in the deletion site
If mutant is within deletion site, no r+ but if it is outside it will
lead to r+
Deletions used by Benzer include deletions in various areas of A
and B
Benzer met Andre Lwoff (Pasteur institute ) and he started his work in Paris

Except noble he has almost all awards to his credit.

Until 1950, it was known that recombination frequency is very low in the
neighboring genes and to dissect out chances of recombination in a gene, you
need very efficient system.

System should be able to recognize recombination at low frequencies.

100 Mutations in 6 sites and you can map them

With n mutants number of crosses n(n-1)/2 , 10 (10-1)/2 = 45

100 (100-1)/2 , 100x 99/2 , 9900/2 = 4950

Virulent phages (kill) and temperate phages (lamda and P2)


Virulent phages are T1,T2, T3,T4 etc.

Temperate phages can be lytic or lysogenic (pro-phage and induced to lytic


mode)
Plaques are identified on the basis of plaques.

r+ plaques are large 1.0-15mm in diameter and have fuzzy ring at the surface

Mutants r1,r2 and r3 show rapid lysis and


Resuting in different plaque morphology
2.0-2.5mm plaques with sharp periphery.

R mutants can infect B cells (E. coli B) and give


rise to r type plaques but they do not form
plaques for E. coli K12

but is lysogenic to phage lamda –E. coli K12 (lamda).

This property is so sensitive you can detect one r+ in


108rii phages on E. coli K12.

It was discovered by Benzer while working in Paris


Rii a x rii b – r+ (B. cell)
Then grow in E. coli K12
Reversion of r mutants into r+ is the limitation.

Mutants which were screened for reversion were unsuitable for genetic cross and
mutants were reduced to 2400.

Some mutants were extremely stable and no reversion to r+ and they have lesion and
Benzer used these to map point mutations.

6 deletion mutants, he mapped 2000 mutants


Fine structure of rii locus:
155 and 274 = 0.014 units apart
201 and 274 = .017 units

201-155-274, but no recombination between 155 and 201 even though


method was very sensitive.
He found that wild type recombinants are not produced at frequencies
less than 0.01

But apart from r+, other product is double mutant,


actual limits of recombination are .02.

Unit of genetic sub division beyond which recombination do not occur


is called recon.

2000 spontaneous mutation mapped and occupy 308 sites which are
disturbed fairly in rii locus and there are some hotspots and there are
sites with 0 mutations.
There are 500 mutation sites present in rii locus and elementary unit of
mutations is called muton.

Combing Benzer results with some general results:


T4 have approximately 1500 map units and each map unit
200,000/1500 = 133.33

Rii region have two cistrons and 6 map units for A and 4 map units of B
133.33 x 10 = 1330.

Smallest map unit found by Benzer 0.02 10/0.02= 500 mutational units

1500/500 = 3 nucleotides for each unit


Since the nucleotide available for recombination may be less than 1330,
Certain nucleotides may not carry any information in usual sense but
serve as spacers between citrons and serve spaces as between citrons.
Since Benzer’s Work Tessman has shown many artificially induced mutation may be
separated by recombination distances as low as 0.00001 percent

10/0.00001 =10/1 x100000/1= 1000000/1 1000000/1330= 0.00133

It means that adjacent nucleotides can undergo recombination.


Linkage and Recombination: Walter Stanborough Sutton
(1903) put forward Boveri –Sutton Chromosome theory.

But he noticed that number of factors is more than number of


chromosomes.

Drosophila have 4 pairs of chromosomes but have numerous


factors.

Sutton therefore suggested that those on the same


chromosome would be expected to link together in a group.

Many of the early geneticists showed independent


assortment but did show expected linkage for some factors.

Mendel's experiments with the peas for example


According to some biologists, absence of linkage was due
to breakage and mixing of the parts of the chromosomes
and chromosome were meant only to tie genes.

Complete assortment between two pairs of alleles


should result 9:3:3:1

AABB x aabb
Bateson and Punnet worked on sweat pea.
Flower color and pollen shape did not assort independently

AABB x aabb

AB x ab

AaBb (AB, Ab, aB, ab) expected.

However they were tied together and F2 contains so many


original phenotypes and very few new genotypes.

It looked gametes were AB and ab like

Bateson and Punnet explained that certain gametes multiplied


preferentially after meiosis.
Parental gametes multiplied mitotically after meiosis
There was serious objections to this view and lack of evidence.

Linkage groups: In Drosophila Morgan and workers found that


hereditary characteristics were associated together in groups.

White, yellow body, single bristles, miniature wings tend to be


inherited together.

Yw x wild type – mostly you find yw together.

Similarly other non sex linked are found in three groups.

Bridges found that autosomal gene dachsous (shorted wing),


black (body color) tend be transmitted together, also
associated are star(small rough eyes), aristae less (certain
bristles missing) and other genes.
In Drosophila there are 4 groups of linked genes,
One group- one of the four pairs of chromosomes.

X linked groups was named as first linkage group and other


are named after that.

Departures from independent assortment could be


therefore explained by non-random assortment.

Very few genes were found in forth linkage group, it is tiny


dot and number of genes is related to physical size.

To date relationship between linkage groups and


chromosomes holds true.

In maize 10 linkage groups, peas 7


Complete Linkage: When genes are closely associated and they
are transmitted together.

Practically all genes on 4 chromosome of Drosophila show no


assortment.

4th chromosome mutations bent wings and shaven bristles

bt svn/bt svn x bt+ svn+ =

bt svn x bt+ svn+ = either of then were found

No - bent and normal and normal and shaven.


bt svn Bt+ svn+ bt svn+ Bt+ svn
X X
bt svn bt+ svn+ bt svn+ Bt+ svn

bt svn Bt+ svn+ bt svn+ bt+ svn

bt svn bt svn bt svn+ bt svn


X X
Bt+ svn+ bt svn Bt+ svn bt svn

bt svn bt+ svn+ bt svn+ bt+ svn

bt svn bt svn bt svn bt svn


Complete Linkage is observed in other linkage groups when
Drosophila males are used in test cross. However there is
assortment between linkage groups
pr vg pr+ vg+ bt pr Bt+ pr+

X X
pr vg pr+ vg+ bt pr bt+ pr+

pr vg pr+ vg+ bt pr bt+ pr+

pr vg Pr vg bt pr bt pr

X X
pr+ vg+ pr vg bt+ pr+ bt pr
bt pr
bt+ pr
bt pr+ bt pr+
pr vg pr+ vg+ bt+ pr
bt+ pr+

pr vg pr vg bt pr bt pr+
Incomplete Linkage and recombination: Complete linkage of
genes on the same chromosome is actually rarity.

Genes of the most of the linkage groups assort at least


partially independent of each of other.

White eye and miniature wings both are sex linked and have
recessive effect.

Hemizygous males show the effect of mutation.

w+ m+ X w m
w+ m+ /wm

w+ m+ X xy - w m, w+ m+ =62.4% (743/1190)
w m w+ m , w m+ = 37.6 (447/1190)
Incomplete Linkage and recombination:

1.There is no apparent breakdown of chromosomes by random


assortment.
2.Sex linked genes remain linked to sex chromosomes.
3.Chromosome association was found true to other linkage
groups.
4. Recombinant type suggest crossing over take place in F1
females

Morgan suggested that genes are arranged in linear order on


chromosomes and Linkage was therefore physical relationship
between genes.
So there is physical cross over between gene pairs.

Crossover theory fitted well with the Janssens 1909, chiasma


represents exchange between homologous chromosome.
Four strand crossing over:

If Morgan theory is right, whether recombination occurs


between two homologous chromosomes before that are
divided or between chromatids from homologous
chromosome.
Four strand crossing over:

Since bar is semi dominant gene and heterozygous can be


distinguished from the homozygous type when fertilized.

These experiments were performed by Anderson and


crossing occur at stand stage.

In haloid organisms like chlamydomonas all products of the


meiosis are recovered.

In Chlamydomonas and Neurospora- products of meiosis


tetrad of an individual can be phenotyped.
Y+ x y (color of plant)

Yy - meiosis – Y, Y, y, y zoospores

At two gene pairs independent assortment is observed

Y+ mt+ x y mt

Y+ mt+ y mt zygote

Y+Y+ mt+mt+ yy mt-mt-

Y+ mt+ y mt- Y+mt- y mt+


Y+ mt+ y mt- Y+ mt- ymt+

Parental ditypes nonparental ditypes


Detection of Linkage:

Independent assortment and then test deviation from the


expected rations.

AABB x aabb

AaBb x aabb

AB, Ab, aB, ab


ab ,ab , ab, ab

If assortment occurs- four types are produced


If linkage is complete- recombinants are not as frequent
Aa x aa

Aa aa ( can be lethal) and will affect the ratio

To distinguish between these two situations.

First we should see


1. Segregation of individual gene pair as expected.
2. They check out whether two gene pairs assort independently.

AB Ab aB ab

140 38 32 150 Observed 360

141 90 90 90 Expected 360

Departure is highly significant


Aa x aa

Aa aa

140+38 =178 32+150= 182 observed 360


180 180 expected 360

Bb bb

140+32= 172 38+150=188 expected 360


180 180 observed 360
Parental Recombinant
Phenotypes phenotypes

AB+ab Ab + aB

140+150=290 38+32 =70 360

180 180 360


Detection of Linkage:

9:3:3:1 Ratio

Phenotypes

AB Ab aB ab
180 30 60 10 280 Observed
157.5 52.5 52.5 17.5 280 expected

Chi square value is 17.14, 3 degrees of freedom

Three possible causes:


a. Departure for gene A from the expected ratio of 3:1.
b.Departure of gene B from expected ration of 3:1
c.Departure from independent assortment.
A aa

Observed 180+ 30 =210 60+10 280


Expected
210 70

X2 with one deg. of freedom= 0


Test for segregation at gene B
B b
Observed 180+60= 240 30+10= 40 280

Expected 210 70

(30)2 + (-30)2

210 70 = 17.14 this ratio is not caused by linkage rather


distortion at B
Calculation of autosomal recombination frequencies by backcrossing
to homozygous recessives:

Recombination frequencies between two genes can be


calculated by backcrossing F1 to homozygous recessive.

AB/ab x ab/ab

Ab and aB- recombinats

vg cn/ vg+ cn+ x vg cn /vg cn

Vg+ cn and cn+ vg recombination frequency


Another example:

A and B are dominant mutations and a and b are recessive wild


type alleles.

Jammed (J)- narrow wings


Lobe (reduced eyes) JL/J+L+ -double mutant

JL/J+L+ x JL = J+L and JL+


Recombination frequencies for sex linked genes.

XY -males , X from mother.

miniature and white have 37.6 recombination frequency.

Yellow white (yw) gray red (y+w+)


98.5

Yellow red gray white 1.5%


Gene mapping in diploids:

In 1911 Morgan discovered linkage in Drosophila and he


expressed his opinion there was relationship between
recombination frequency and distance of genes on
chromosome.

A, B, C, recombination frequency is measure of distance


between them.

AC would have less probability of recombination than AB


Then ACB
1911 Sturtevant have flash of inspiration, strength of the
variation of the linkage indicated how genes are positioned
along a chromosome providing a way of mapping.

B C P R M
0 10 30.7 33.7 57.6

Y w v m r (rudimentary wings)

Law of segregation and law of independent assortment

Punnet and Bateson-


Purple flowers and long pollen x Red flowers and round pollen

F1= Purple and long


F2- mostly purple and long or red flowers and round pollen
A B
….........................
...........................
a b
............................
............................

A B
….........................
AB
...........................
Ab
a b
aB
............................
ab
............................

Recombination frequency: number of recombinants x 100


....................................................
Total number of progeny
CIS configuration = wild type

Trans configuration = wild and mutant

Green thorax and brown puparium (Australian blow fly-


Lucilia cuprina)

p+ b+ Test cross
x pb
p b

P+b+ , pb p+b pb+


Pb

4040 10 10
20/100 x 100 = 20%
Bridges and Olbrycht crossed Drosophila
Echinus (rough eye), Scute (sc) and cv (crossveinless)
ec, sc, cv x +,+,+
Sex linked
F1 = ec, sc, cv/+,+,+ x males- ec, sc. cv
found in males of F1
And F2

2635 F2, 2108 no recombination

20% cross over occurred.

ec and sc = 239/2635 = 9.1

cv and ec = 288 =10.9

Sc and cv = 527/2635 = 20%


ec …........... sc = 9.1
ec…........................cv= 10.9
sc….............................cv= 20.0

Sc...... ........ec................cv

But the mutations cause lethality that will also impact


recombination frequencies.
Double cross over:
ABC - 23 combinations, particular combinations is missing
and is rare event.

+ ec + = sc, ec, cv

X X

Sc + cv

Bridges and Olbrycht = found 20,000, =


0.02 double cross over.
Co-incidence and interference:
Frequency of double cross overs is affected by its neighbors.
They occur more rarely then expected.

Occurring of event A =0.0674 is cross over between sc and ec


0.0964 = ec and cv
Both 0.0674 x 0.0964 = 0.0065

0.0065 x 20785 = 135 double cross overs


Ratio of observed cross over to the expected double cross is
called coincide coefficient.

5/135= 3.7 % of expected number

Degree of inference = 1- coefficient of coincidence


6.7 9.6 8.4 16.0 11.1
Sc….....ec................cv..................ct..............v.................g
Scute echinus crossveinless cut vermillion garnet

0 6.7 16.3 24.7 40.7 51.8

No recomination frquency is more than 50%

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