If the stop codon is mutated to encode for another amino acid, it would result in the incorporation of that amino acid into the protein being synthesized, leading to a longer and potentially non-functional protein. This disruption of the normal termination of protein synthesis could affect the structure and function of the protein, potentially causing cellular dysfunction or disease.
Most mutations in eukaryotes are recessive because they typically involve changes in a single gene, and the presence of a normal copy of the gene can often mask the effects of the mutated gene. This means that the mutated gene is only expressed when both copies of the gene are mutated, resulting in a recessive trait.
The specific sequence of the new mRNA strand produced by a mutated gene will depend on the nature of the mutation. Mutations can cause changes in the coding region of the gene, leading to alterations in the mRNA sequence and potentially affecting the resulting protein or gene function. Further analysis and sequencing of the mutated gene would be required to determine the exact mRNA sequence.
Because if an error is made during protein synthesis, the result is at worst one bad protein. If an error is made during DNA replication, that error will persist for the entire lifespan of that cell and be inherited by every daughter cell it produces. Should the error prove deleterious, the effects can be catastrophic for the cell or the organism. For example, if an error occurs in a protein coding segment of DNA, it is possible that every protein that locus generates will now be defective.
There is no single "most mutated" country. Mutation rates can vary in different populations due to factors such as genetic diversity, environmental exposures, and healthcare infrastructure. Additionally, mutations occur spontaneously and are not tied to a specific geographical location.
Huntington's disease is dominant in inheritance patterns because only one copy of the mutated gene is needed to develop the disease. This means that if a person inherits the mutated gene from just one parent, they will likely develop Huntington's disease.
Missense mutation: changes one sense codon to another, resulting in incorporation of amino acid.Nonsense mutation: changes a sense codon into a stop (or nonsense) codon, resulting in premature termination.
i dont no
Cancer is not caused by a pathogen, it is caused by a mutated cell which multiplies to create more mutated cells and so on.
No, absolutely not. No species is able to change or turn into another. Impossible.
A mutant can be mutated just as any other life form.
No. They are a separate species - from another planet, the "Ood Planet" - who have been enslaved by humans.
Depending on the version, he is either a mutated rat, or a mutated human.
no
There does not seem to be a scientific name to describe the fear of being mutated.
you get mutated spores in mushroom kingdom, but its only lvls 30-40
Neither; a tumour is a group of ordinary cells that have mutated for one reason or another, and have started to grow out of control.
There have been reports of mutated animals and plants on the island yes