A relatively rare type of mutation causing human genetic disease is the indel, a complex lesion that appears to represent a combination of micro-deletion and micro-insertion. In the absence of meta-analytical studies of indels, the mutational mechanisms underlying indel formation remain unclear. Dat
Mechanisms of insertional mutagenesis in human genes causing genetic disease
β Scribed by David N. Cooper; Michael Krawczak
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 782 KB
- Volume
- 87
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-6717
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β¦ Synopsis
Examples of the insertion of less than 10 bp of DNA sequence into human gene-coding regions causing genetic disease were collated in order to study the underlying causative mechanisms. The nature of these insertions was found to be consistent with several mechanisms of mutagenesis including: (1) slipped mispairing mediated by direct repeats or runs of identical bases and (2) the templated misincorporation of bases by secondary-structure intermediates whose formation is facilitated by palindromic (inverted repeat) sequences, quasi-palindromic sequences or symmetric elements. Both the size and position of insertions were found to be non-random and highly dependent upon the surrounding DNA sequence. Inferred mechanisms of insertional mutagenesis thus appear to be very similar to those involved in the causation of gene deletions.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In the Human Gene Mutation Database (www.hgmd.org), microdeletions and microinsertions causing inherited disease (both defined as involving < or = 20 bp of DNA) account for 8,399 (17%) and 3,345 (7%) logged mutations, in 940 and 668 genes, respectively. A positive correlation was noted between the m
packaged in vitro to produce recombinant phage clones. From the dissected 10 pg of DNA, 80 phage clones were obtained which hybridiLed in situ to the chromosomal rcgion of dissection.