Topic Summaries

Gene expression and mutations (HT ONLY)

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Stem cells, microscopy, and microorganisms

Plant disease and monoclonal antibodies

The brain and the eye

Resource cycles and environmental change

  • Not all parts of DNA code for proteins. Non-coding parts of DNA play a role in gene expression and can switch genes on and off. Variations in non-coding regions may affect how genes are expressed.
  • A mutation is a change in the DNA sequence; for example, an insertion of a nucleotide or a deletion of one.
  • Mutations occur continuously, but most mutations do not alter the protein or only alter it slightly so that its shape and therefore function is not changed.
  • A few mutations code for an altered protein with a different shape, altering the activity of a protein, e.g. an enzyme may no longer fit the substrate-binding site or a structural protein may lose its strength.
  • Some mutations are advantageous and allow genetic variation.

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