New thinking - they aren't gene mutations - they are variants. What is a gene variant and how do variants occur? Email this page to a friend Facebook Twitter Pinterest Download PDF A gene variant is a permanent change in the DNA sequence that makes up a gene. This type of genetic change used to be known as a gene mutation, but because changes in DNA do not always cause disease, it is thought that gene variant is a more accurate term. Variants can affect one or more DNA building blocks (nucleotides) in a gene. Gene variants can be inherited from a parent or occur during a person’s lifetime: Inherited (or hereditary) variants are passed from parent to child and are present throughout a person’s life in virtually every cell in the body. These variants are also called germline variants because they are present in the parent’s egg or sperm cells, which are also called germ cells. When an egg and a sperm cell unite, the resulting fertilized egg cell contains DNA from both parents. Any variants that are present in that DNA will be present in the cells of the child that grows from the fertilized egg. Non-inherited variants occur at some time during a person’s life and are present only in certain cells, not in every cell in the body. Because non-inherited variants typically occur in somatic cells (cells other than sperm and egg cells), they are often referred to as somatic variants. These variants cannot be passed to the next generation. Non-inherited variants can be caused by environmental factors such as ultraviolet radiation from the sun or can occur if an error is made as DNA copies itself during cell division. Some genetic changes are described as new (de novo) variants; these variants are recognized in a child but not in either parent. In some cases, the variant occurs in a parent’s egg or sperm cell but is not present in any of their other cells. In other cases, the variant occurs in the fertilized egg shortly after the egg and sperm cells unite. (It is often impossible to tell exactly when a de novo variant happened.) As the fertilized egg divides, each resulting cell in the growing embryo will have the variant. De novo variants are one explanation for genetic disorders in which an affected child has a variant in every cell in the body, but the parents do not, and there is no family history of the disorder. More... https://medlineplus.gov/genetics/understanding/mutationsanddisorders/genemutation/#:~:text=A%20gene%20variant%20is%20a,is%20a%20more%20accurate%20term.