Biology
Mutations in the same gene cannot complement
 
KEY TERMS:
- A complementation test  determines whether two mutations are alleles of the same gene. It is  accomplished by crossing two different recessive mutations that have the same  phenotype and determining whether the wild-type phenotype can be produced. If  so, the mutations are said to complement each other and are probably not  mutations in the same gene.  
 - Two mutants are said to complement each other when a diploid that is heterozygous  for each mutation produces the wild type phenotype.  
 - A complementation group is a  series of mutations unable to complement when tested in pairwise combinations in  trans; defines a genetic unit (the cistron).  
 - A cistron is the genetic unit  defined by the complementation test; it is equivalent to the gene.  
 - A gene (cistron) is the  segment of DNA specifying production of a polypeptide chain; it includes regions  preceding and following the coding region (leader and trailer) as well as  intervening sequences (introns) between individual coding segments (exons).  
 
KEY CONCEPTS: 
- A mutation in a gene affects only the protein coded by the  mutant copy of the gene, and does not affect the protein coded by any other  allele.  
 - Failure of two mutations to complement (produce  wild-phenotype) when they are present in trans configuration in a  heterozygote means that they are part of the same gene. 
 
   How do we determine whether two mutations that cause a  similar phenotype lie in the same gene? If they map close together, they may be  alleles. However, they could also represent mutations in two different  genes whose proteins are involved in the same function. The complementation test is used to determine whether two  mutations lie in the same gene or in different genes. The test consists of  making a heterozygote for the two mutations (by mating parents homozygous for  each mutation).
If the mutations lie in the same gene, the parental  genotypes can be represented as:
m1  and  m2
m1         m2
The first parent provides an m1 mutant  allele and the second parent provides an m2 allele, so that  the heterozygote has the constitution:
m1
m2
No wild-type gene is present, so the heterozygote has mutant  phenotype.
If the mutations lie in different genes, the parental  genotypes can be represented as:
m1+  and +m2
m1+        +m2
Each chromosome has a wild-type copy of one gene  (represented by the plus sign) and a mutant copy of the other. Then the  heterozygote has the constitution:
m1+
+m2
in which the two parents between them have provided a  wild-type copy of each gene. The heterozygote has wild phenotype; the two genes  are said to complement.
The complementation test is shown in more detail in Figure 1.27. The basic test consists of the comparison shown  in the top part of the figure. If two mutations lie in the same gene, we see a  difference in the phenotypes of the trans configuration and the  cis configuration. The trans configuration is mutant, because  each allele has a (different) mutation. But the cis configuration is  wild-type, because one allele has two mutations but the other allele has no  mutations. The lower part of the figure shows that if the two mutations lie in  different genes, we always see a wild phenotype. There is always one wild-type  and one mutant allele of each gene, and the configuration is irrelevant. The  basic test and some exceptions to it are discussed in 32.9 Complementation.
Failure to complement means that two mutations are part of  the same genetic unit. Mutations that do not complement one another are  said to comprise part of the same complementation  group. Another term that is used to describe the unit defined by the  complementation test is the cistron. This is the  same as the gene. Basically these three terms all  describe a stretch of DNA that functions as a unit to give rise to an RNA or  protein product. The properties of the gene with regards to complementation are  explained by the fact that this product is a single molecule that behaves as a  functional unit.
  
  
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Genetic Terms
Genotype is the genetic composition of an organism. Phenotype is the set of characteristic manifested by an organism. An individual has a heterozygous condition if he has 2 different alleles of the same gene An individual has a homozygous condition if... 
  
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An Interrupted Gene Consists Of Exons And Introns
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Proteins Are Trans-acting But Sites On Dna Are Cis-acting
 KEY TERMS:cis configuration describes two sites on the same molecule of DNA. trans configuration of two sites refers to their presence on two different molecules of DNA (chromosomes). A cis-acting site affects the activity only of sequences on its own... 
  
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Mutations May Cause Loss-of-function Or Gain-of-function
 KEY TERMS:A null mutation completely eliminates the function of a gene. Leaky mutations leave some residual function, for instance when the mutant protein is partially active (in the case of a missense mutation), or when read-through produces a small... 
  
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A Gene Codes For A Single Polypeptide
 KEY TERMS:A homomultimer is a protein composed of identical subunits. A heteromultimer is a protein that is composed of nonidentical subunits (coded by different genes). KEY CONCEPTS: The one gene : one enzyme hypothesis summarizes the basis of modern... 
Biology