Frameshift
Both types of mutation have the potential to cause a large effect.In general, a frameshift mutation is more likely to cause a large effect. This is because it shifts the 'reading frame' - so that all of the subsequent codons (groupings of 3 bases that are read to determine which amino acid will be added) will be changed.A point mutation is when a single base is replaced. This can either result in the same amino acid being added to the protein being synthesised (a silent mutation), a different amino acid being added (a missense mutation) or in a STOP codon (a nonsense mutation).If a point mutation causes a premature STOP codon - this is quite likely to have a large effect on the protein.
The two types of bases to which affixes are added are roots and stems. Roots are the core elements of a word, while stems are forms to which affixes can be added to create different variations of the word.
The three different types of mutation are substitution, insertion, and deletion. They differ because deletion is missing a base, insertion has a base that was added, and substitution has a base that has been replaced.
Two types of bases to which affixes are added are roots and stems. Roots are the primary lexical units of words, while stems can be modified or extended by affixes to create new words or change the word's grammatical category.
i] spontaneous mutation ii] induced mutation iii] germinal mutation iv] somatic mutation v] chromosomal mutation vi] gene mutation are the some of the major types of mutation......
gene mutation, chromosomal abberations
nonsense mutation, missense mutation, frameshift muation, deletion or addition mutation
The three major types of mutations generally are point mutation, insertion, and deletion. Point Mutation - This is when one base is substituted or changed into another base. Typically it changes from a purine to a purine, or pyrimidine to pyrimidine Insertion - A base is inserted into the DNA sequence shifting all of the other bases. Deletion - A base is deleted from the DNA sequence shifting all of the other bases.
The three types of mutations are substitution (a single nucleotide is replaced with a different one), insertion (an extra nucleotide is added to the DNA sequence), and deletion (a nucleotide is removed from the DNA sequence).
Frameshift mutations and Point mutations. The difference between the two are that point mutations occur at a single point in the DNA sequence and frameshift mutations shift the "reading frame" of the genetic message.
From another angle: beneficial and detrimental.
The most common type of mutation is a point mutation, where a single nucleotide base is changed, inserted, or deleted in the DNA sequence. This can result in a different amino acid being incorporated into the protein during translation, leading to potential changes in the protein's function.