POLYMORPHISM
A
polymorphism is a genetic variant that appears in at least 1% of a population.
Examples: the human
ABO blood groups, the human Rh factor the human major histocompatibility
complex (MHC).
By setting the cutoff at 1%, it excludes spontaneous mutations that may have
occurred in
— and spread through the descendants of — a single family.
Protein Polymorphisms:
All
the examples above are of the protein products of alleles. These
can be identified by: serology; that is, using antibodies to detect the
different versions of the
protein and electrophoresis; if amino acid changes in the protein alter its net
electrical
charge,
it will migrate more or less rapidly in an electrical field.
Enzymes are frequently polymorphic:
A population may contain two or more variants of
an enzyme encoded by a single locus. The variants differ slightly in their
amino acid sequence and
often this causes them to migrate differently under electrophoresis. By
treating the gel with
the substrate for the enzyme, its presence can be visualized. Electrophoretic
variants of an
enzyme occurring in a population are called allozymes.
Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphisms (RFLPs):
Proteins are gene products and
so polymorphic versions are simply reflections of allelic differences in the
gene; that is, allelic
differences in DNA. Often these changes create new — or abolish old — sites for
restriction enzymes
to cut the DNA. Digestion with the enzyme then produces DNA fragments of a
different length.
These can be detected by electrophoresis.
Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs):
Developments in DNA sequencing now make
it easy to look for allelic versions of a gene by sequencing samples of the
gene taken from different
members of a population (or from a heterozygous individual). Alleles whose
sequence reveals
only a single changed nucleotide are called single nucleotide polymorphisms or
SNPs.
SNPs
can occur in noncoding parts of the gene so they would not be seen in the
protein product. might
not alter the cutting site for any known restriction enzymes so they would not
be seen by RFLP
analysis.
Copy Number Polymorphisms (CNPs):
Genetic analysis (using DNA chips and FISH) has
revealed another class of human polymorphisms. These copy number polymorphisms
are large
(thousands of base pairs) duplications or deletions that are found in some
people but not in
others. On average, one person differs from another by 11 of these. One or more
have been found
on most chromosomes, and the list is probably incomplete
.
While most of this
DNA is non-coding,
functional genes are embedded in some of it. How, or if, the person adapts to
the resulting change in gene number is unknown
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