what does non synonymous mutation means?
3
0
Entering edit mode
4.9 years ago

I am currently a IT student and try to become a bioinformatician, and that is, I have a little knowledge of molecular biology. Now, perhaps my question is so dumb, but It took several days and I still coundnt see the solution. To my understanding, nonsynonymous mutation is a mutation that alters the amino acid sequence of a protein. Now, I have mutation groups including: missense, silent, splice-site, nonsense, splice-region, TSS, nonstop mutation and indel, and I think that, missense, nonsense and indel are three kinds of non-synonymous mutation. Is It correct or not? Please correct me if I am wrong. Thank in advance.

nonsynonymous mutation mutation Molecular biology • 4.1k views
ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode
4.9 years ago
Emily 24k

"Non-synonymous" is typically used as a synonym for "missense", it's used specifically to describe the situation where a codon changes so that it encodes a different amino acid. This is in contrast to a "synonymous" variant where the codon changes but it still encodes the same amino acid.

"Nonsense" is where it changes to a stop codon. Even though this changes the amino acid sequence, it is considered separately to missense/non-synonymous variants because it is more severe.

"Indel" is a classification of a type of variant, rather than a consequence of the variant. An "indel" just means that some bases are inserted or deleted. It may or may not fall within a protein coding region, which means it may or may not affect the amino acid sequence. Within a protein coding sequence it may be an "in-frame insertion/deletion", which means that the number of bases inserted/deleted is a multiple of three, meaning that amino acids are simply inserted/deleted, and only those amino acids are affected. Or it can be a "frameshift insertion/deletion", which means that it's not a multiple of three, and will mess up all the codons downstream of it. Frameshifts are usually more severe than in-frame, which are in turn more severe than indels outside of a protein.

"Nonsynonymous" is quite out-of-date terminology and is not the standard phrasing used by Sequence Ontology.

ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
4.9 years ago

many Thank @Emily and @JC. Very clear and comprehensive!

ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 1967 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6