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Types of Mutations: Transitions, Transversions, and Frameshift mutation

Mutations caused by chemical and physical mutagens are classified based on how they alter the DNA sequence. The two major types of base substitution mutations are transitions and transversions. A third category, frameshift mutations, involves insertion or deletion of bases rather than substitution. This post defines each type and classifies the mutations produced by five commonly tested mutagens: EMS, 5-bromouracil, acridine orange, X-rays, and H₂O₂ with Fe²⁺.

What Are Transitions and Transversions?

Both transitions and transversions are types of point mutations — changes affecting a single base pair in the DNA sequence. They differ in whether the chemical class (purine or pyrimidine) of the replaced base is preserved or altered.

Definition — Transition

A transition is a base substitution in which one purine is replaced by another purine (A ↔ G), or one pyrimidine is replaced by another pyrimidine (C ↔ T). The chemical class of the base is preserved.

Definition — Transversion

A transversion is a base substitution in which a purine is replaced by a pyrimidine, or a pyrimidine is replaced by a purine. The chemical class of the base changes.

Possible Transitions and Transversions

There are 2 possible transitions and 4 possible transversions. Transversions are geometrically more disruptive.

TypeExchangeBase Class Change?Examples
TransitionPur ↔ Pur OR Pyr ↔ PyrNoA↔G, C↔T
TransversionPur ↔ PyrYesA↔C, A↔T, G↔C, G↔T

Classification of Each Mutagen

1. EMS (Ethyl Methanesulfonate)

  • Type: Alkylating agent
  • Mutation Class: Transition
  • Net Change: G:C → A:T
  • Key Lesion: O⁶-ethylguanine mispairs with thymine
  • Repair: MGMT

Note: Additional alkylation at N-7 of guanine and N-3 of adenine leads to depurination or strand breaks, but these are not the principal mutagenic lesions for base substitution.


2. 5-Bromouracil (5-BU)

  • Type: Base analogue (thymine analogue)
  • Mutation Class: Transition
  • Net Change: A:T → G:C (primary)
  • Key Lesion: Tautomeric shift (keto → enol) causes mispairing with guanine
  • Repair: Mismatch repair

Note: 5-BU produces bidirectional transitions (A:T ↔ G:C), though A:T → G:C is predominant.


3. Acridine Orange

  • Type: Intercalating agent
  • Mutation Class: Frameshift
  • Net Change: +1 or −1 base (insertion or deletion)
  • Key Lesion: Intercalation distorts helix, causing polymerase to add or skip a nucleotide
  • Repair: Mismatch repair

Important: No base substitution occurs. Not classified as transition or transversion.


4. X-Rays

  • Type: Ionizing radiation
  • Mutation Class: Chromosomal breaks / DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs)
  • Net Change: Deletions, translocations, inversions, indels at break sites
  • Key Lesion: Double-strand breaks via hydroxyl radicals (·OH) and direct ionization
  • Repair: NHEJ or HR

Note: X-rays are clastogenic agents. They are not defined by specific base substitution patterns.


5. H₂O₂ with Fe²⁺ (Fenton Reaction)

  • Type: Oxidative mutagen
  • Mutation Class: Transversion
  • Net Change: G:C → T:A
  • Key Lesion: ·OH oxidizes guanine → 8-oxoG (syn conformation) mispairs with adenine
  • Repair: OGG1 (eukaryotes), MutM/MutY system (prokaryotes)

Note: The G:C → T:A transversion is a signature mutation of oxidative stress.


Final Summary: Mutagens and types of mutations

MutagenMutagen ClassPrimary LesionMutation CategoryNet ChangeRepair Mechanism
EMSAlkylating agentO⁶-ethylguanineTransitionG:C → A:TMGMT
5-BUBase analogueTautomeric shiftTransitionA:T → G:CMismatch repair
Acridine OrangeIntercalating agentHelix distortionFrameshift±1 baseMismatch repair
X-raysIonizing radiationDNA double-strand breaksChromosomalStructural alterationsNHEJ / HR
H₂O₂ + Fe²⁺Oxidative mutagen8-oxoGTransversionG:C → T:AOGG1 / MutM

Key Points for Exam

📌1. Transition = Purine ↔ Purine OR Pyrimidine ↔ Pyrimidine
📌2. Transversion = Purine ↔ Pyrimidine
📌3. Frameshift = Insertion or deletion of bases

📌 EMS → Transition (G:C → A:T)
📌 5-BU → Transition (A:T → G:C)
📌 Acridine orange → Frameshift mutation
📌 X-rays → DNA strand breaks (not a base substitution)
📌 H₂O₂ + Fe²⁺ → Transversion (G:C → T:A)

📌 Key difference between X-rays and H₂O₂+Fe²⁺: Both produce ·OH radicals, but X-rays cause primarily strand breaks while Fenton reaction produces primarily 8-oxoG base lesions. This difference determines their mutation classification.


This version keeps all the essential information, removes the step‑by‑step mechanism charts, and is much simpler to read and review.

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