| ¿µ¹® | mutation | ÇÑ±Û | µ¹¿¬º¯ÀÌ |
|---|---|---|---|
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||
| ARMS | adverse reaction monitoring system; amplification refractory mutation system |
|---|---|
| MF | magnetic field; meat free; medium frequency; megafarad; membrane filler; merthiolate-formaldehyde [s... |
| TFM | testicular feminization male; testicular feminization mutation; total fluid movement; transmission e... |
| NST | Nonsense Syllable Test |
|---|---|
| NMD | Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay |
| ARMS | Amplification Refractory Mutation System |
| MFD | Mutation frequency decline |
| RIP | Repeat Induced Point mutation |
| nonsense mutation | <molecular biology> A mutation that causes a polypeptide chain to be ended prematurely. (13 Nov 1997) |
|---|
| codon, nonsense | A codon that is not assigned to an amino acid or to any stop signal. It was originally thought that nonsense codons were synonymous with terminator codons (codon, terminator) in that they signaled termination of a protein chain. Recent studies have found this not to be true. (12 Dec 1998) |
|---|---|
| nonsense | As used in genetics, relating to a mutation that causes a sequence such that the growing peptide chain terminates, often after several incorrect amino acid residues are incorporated. (05 Mar 2000) |
| nonsense codon | <molecular biology> The three codons, UAA (known as ochre), UAG (amber) and UGA (opal), that do not code for an amino acid but act as signals for the termination of protein synthesis. Any mutation that causes a base change which produces a nonsense codon results in premature termination of protein synthesis and probably a nonfunctional or nonsense protein. (13 Nov 1997) |
| nonsense strand | <molecular biology> DNA that does not code for part of a polypeptide chain or RNA.This includes introns and pseudo genes. In eukaryotes the majority of the DNA is noncoding. Noncoding strand refers to the so called nonsense strand, as opposed to the sense strand which is actually translated into mRNA. (18 Nov 1997) |
| nonsense suppression | Mutant tRNAs that read a chain termination codon as the signal for incorporation of a specific amino acid residue. (05 Mar 2000) |
| nonsense syndrome | <syndrome> A psychotic-like condition, without the symptoms and signs of a traditional psychosis, occurring typically in prisoners who feign insanity; e.g., such a person, when asked to multiply 6 by 4, will give 23 as the answer, or he will call a key a lock. See: malingering, factitious disorder. Synonym: nonsense syndrome, syndrome of approximate relevant answers, syndrome of deviously relevant answers. (05 Mar 2000) |
| nonsense triplet | A trinucleotide (codon) in which a base change to a termination codon results in premature termination of the growing polypeptide chain and, consequently, incomplete protein molecules, a termination codon. (05 Mar 2000) |
| acquired mutation | A change in a gene or chromosome that occurs in a single cell after the conception of the individual. That change is then passed along to all cells descended from that cell. Acquired mutations are involved in the development of cancer. (12 Dec 1998) |
| addition-deletion mutation | <molecular biology> A type of mutation that results from insertion or deletion of a single nucleotide into, or from, an open reading frame in the normal DNA sequence. Normally, the genetic code is read in the wrong frame, three nucleotides at a time, and the entire sequence downstream of the mutation, is translated into a polypeptide with a garbled amino acid sequence from the mutated codon onwards. These mutations may be induced by certain types of mutagens or may occur spontaneously and usually result in the generation, downstream, of nonsense, chain termination codons. Synonym: addition mutation, addition-deletion mutation, deletion mutation, reading-frameshift mutation. (21 Jun 2000) |
| addition mutation | <molecular biology> A type of mutation that results from insertion or deletion of a single nucleotide into, or from, an open reading frame in the normal DNA sequence. Normally, the genetic code is read in the wrong frame, three nucleotides at a time, and the entire sequence downstream of the mutation, is translated into a polypeptide with a garbled amino acid sequence from the mutated codon onwards. These mutations may be induced by certain types of mutagens or may occur spontaneously and usually result in the generation, downstream, of nonsense, chain termination codons. Synonym: addition mutation, addition-deletion mutation, deletion mutation, reading-frameshift mutation. (21 Jun 2000) |
| amber mutation | <molecular biology> A mutation from a codon which codes for an amino acid into the amber codon UAG, which normally signals that the translation of mRNA into an amino acid chain should stop. The mutation causes the amino acid chain to stop forming before it is actually completed. (09 Oct 1997) |
| back mutation | <molecular biology> A mutation that causes a mutant gene to revert to its original wild-type base sequence. Compare: forward mutation. (09 Oct 1997) |
| reading-frameshift mutation | <molecular biology> A type of mutation that results from insertion or deletion of a single nucleotide into, or from, an open reading frame in the normal DNA sequence. Normally, the genetic code is read in the wrong frame, three nucleotides at a time, and the entire sequence downstream of the mutation, is translated into a polypeptide with a garbled amino acid sequence from the mutated codon onwards. These mutations may be induced by certain types of mutagens or may occur spontaneously and usually result in the generation, downstream, of nonsense, chain termination codons. Synonym: addition mutation, addition-deletion mutation, deletion mutation, reading-frameshift mutation. (21 Jun 2000) |
| germinal mutation | A mutation in the germ cells (the cells which will undergo meiosis to form the gametes). Such mutations are therefore passed on to offspring. (09 Oct 1997) |
| germ-line mutation | Any detectable and heritable alteration in the lineage of germ cells. Mutations in these cells (i.e., "generative" cells ancestral to the gametes) are transmitted to progeny while those in somatic cells are not. (12 Dec 1998) |
| nonsense mutation |
A mutation which converts an amino-acid-specifying codon into a stop codon, eg, a change from UAU (tyr) to UAG (amber) would lead to the premature termination of a polypeptide chain at the place where a tyrosine was inserted in the wild-type. See stop codon; suppressor.
Ãâó: www.fao.org/docrep/003/X3910E/X3910E17.htm
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|---|---|
| nonsense mutation |
A mutation that causes the formation of a nonsense codon and the truncation of the protein product.
Ãâó: www.genpromag.com/Glossary~LETTER~N.html
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| nonsense mutation |
A gene mutation in which a base-pair change in the DNA causes a change in an mRNA codon from an amino acid-coding codon to a chain-terminating (nonsense) codon. As a result, polypeptide chain synthesis is terminated prematurely and is therefore either nonfunctional or, at best, partially functional.
Ãâó: www.modernhumanorigins.com/n.html
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| nonsense mutation |
A mutation that changes a normal codon into one which does not code for an amino acid.
Ãâó: www.pestmanagement.co.uk/lib/glossary/glossary_n.s...
|
| nonsense mutation |
a genetic mutation where a single nucleotide substitution creates a stop codon.
Ãâó: www.uvm.edu/~cgep/Education/Glossary.html
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