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1) Back mutation - true wild type

2) Intragenic suppressor - compensating mutation in same gene

3) Extragenic suppressor - compensating mutation in different gene

These possibilities can be distinguished in that a revertant that arose by suppression will still carry the starting mutation (now masked by the suppressor mutation), whereas a back mutation will produce a true wild type phage. The general test is to cross the revertant to wild type and to note whether mi- recombinants are observed. A back mutation crossed to wild type will not produce any mi- progeny, whereas a revertant that results from an extragenic suppressor will produce many mi- recombinants. Intragenic suppressors will produce an intermediate result that sometimes can be difficult to distinguish from a back mutation in practice. For example, an intragenic suppressor that lies very close to the original mi- mutation may be able to produce mi- recombinants in principle, but these recombinants may be too rare to be readily observed.

Nonsense suppressor

An important class of extragenic suppressor mutations can suppress nonsense mutations by changing the ability of the cells to read a nonsense codon as codon for an amino acid. Such extragenic revertants were originally isolated by selecting for reversion of amber (UAG) mutations in two different genes. Since simultaneous back mutations at two different sites is highly improbable, the most frequent mechanism for suppression is a single mutation in the gene for a tRNA that changes the codon recognition portion of the tRNA. (For example, one of several possible nonsense suppressors occurs in the gene for a serine tRNA (tRNAser). One of six tRNAser normally contains the anticodon sequence CGA which recognizes the serine codon UCG by convention sequences which are given in the 5’ to 3’ direction.

A mutation that changes the anticodon to CUA allows the mutant tRNAser to recognize a UAG codon and insert tryptophan when a UAG codon appears in a coding sequence.

Recognition of UCG (serine codon) Recognition of UAG(stop codon) by wild type tRNAser by amber suppressor mutant tRNAser (*)

mRNA: 5’——————UCG——————3’ 5’————UAG––——————3’

The presence of an amber suppressing mutation is usually designated Su+ whereas a wild-type (nonsuppressing) strain would be designated Su-.

Example: Pam designates an amber (nonsense) mutation in the λ phage P gene, which is required for λ phage DNA replication. When λ Pam phage are grown on E. coli with an amber suppressor (Su+), the phage multiply normally; but when λ Pam phage infect a nonsuppressing host (Su–), the phage DNA cannot replicate.

The combined use of amber mutations and an amber suppressor produces a conditional mutant, which is a mutant that is expressed under some circumstances but not under others. Conditional mutants are especially useful for studying mutations in essential genes. Another kind of conditional mutation is a temperature sensitive mutation for which the mutant trait is exhibited at high temperature but not at low temperature. In a sense, auxotrophic mutations are also conditional because auxotrophic mutants can be grown in the presence of the required nutrient, but the mutants will not grow when the nutrient is not provided.

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Source:  OpenStax, Genetics. OpenStax CNX. Jul 29, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10782/1.1
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