AS.020.305 Midterm: cell bio final study sheet (dragged) 9

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Fewer than one in 1000 accidental base changes in dna results in a permanent mutation; the rest are eliminated with remarkable efficiency by dna repair. Without*dna*repair,*spontaneous*dna*damage*would*rapidly*change*dna*sequences: for example, the dna of each human cell loses about 5000 purine bases (adenine and guanine) every day because their n-glycosyl linkages to deoxyribose hydrolyze, a spontaneous reaction called depurination. Similarly, a spontaneous deamination of cytosine to uracil in dna occurs at a rate of about 100basesper cell per day. The mutations would then be propagated throughout subsequent cell generations. Such a high rate of random changes in the dna sequence would have disastrous consequences for an organism. The*dna*double*helix*is*readily*repaired*: the double-helical structure of dna is ideally suited for repair because it carries two separate copies of all the genetic information-one in each of its two strands.

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