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A patient's genetic analysis reveals a mutation in a gene regulatory region rather than in the protein-coding sequence. The genetic counselor explains this affects when and how much protein is produced. What does this demonstrate about gene expression control?
Question 6 options:
Only protein-coding sequences affect gene expression; regulatory regions serve no functional purpose
Gene regulation is not important because all genes should be expressed at the same level always
Gene expression involves regulatory mechanisms that control protein production beyond just the coding sequence
Regulatory mutations never cause genetic conditions because they don't change protein structure
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"Gene expression involves regulatory mechanisms that control protein production beyond just the coding sequence."
Explanation: mutations in promoters, enhancers, UTRs, splice sites, etc. can change when, where, or how much protein is made without altering the protein's amino-acid sequence.
Explanation: mutations in promoters, enhancers, UTRs, splice sites, etc. can change when, where, or how much protein is made without altering the protein's amino-acid sequence.
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