Sense Mutation: a single substitution mutation when the change in the DNA base sequence results in a new codon still coding for the same amino acid
Deletion Mutation: A type of gene mutation wherein the deletion (as well as addition) of (a number of) nucleotide(s) causes a shift in the reading frame of the codons in the mRNA, thus, may eventually lead to the alteration in the amino acid sequence at protein translation.
Insertion Mutation: A type of mutation resulting from the addition of extra nucleotides in a DNA sequence or chromosome. Insertion of a larger segment into the chromosome can also lead to mutation. It results when an unequal crossover happens during meiosis.
Frameshift Mutation: A mutation seen when a number of DNA nucleotides not divisible by three is added or deleted. This causes a reading frame shift and all of the codons and all of the amino acids after that mutation are usually wrong.
Point Mutation: A mutation in DNA or RNA molecule involving a change of only one nucleotide base. It is a simple change in one base of the gene sequence.
Translocation Mutation: Translocations are the transfer of a piece of one chromosome to a nonhomologous chromosome. Translocations are often reciprocal; that is, the two nonhomologues swap segments.
references: http://www.biology-online.org http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/M/Mutations.html http://www.genetichealth.com/g101_changes_in_dna.shtml
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