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Genes: The Instruction Manuals for
Life
By
Corey Binns
Special to LiveScience
posted: 29 May 2006
08:01 am ET
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A gene
is a how-to book for making one
product—a protein. Proteins perform
most life functions, and make up almost
all cellular structures. Genes control
everything from hair color to blood
sugar by telling cells which proteins to
make, how much, when, and where.
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Genes exist in most cells. Inside a cell is a
long strand of the chemical DNA
(deoxyribonucleic acid). A DNA sequence is a
specific lineup of chemical base pairs along its
strand. The part of DNA that determines what
protein to produce and when, is called a gene.
Inside genes
The term gene, first created by Danish
botanist Wilhelm Johannsen in 1909, comes from
the Greek word for origin, genos.
The number of genes in an organism's complete
set of DNA, called a genome, varies from species
to species. More complex organisms have more
genes. A virus has a few hundred genes.
Honeybees have about 15,000 genes. Scientists
estimate that humans have around 25,000 genes.
Each gene has many parts. The protein-making
instructions come from short sections called
exons. Longer "nonsense" DNA, known as introns,
flank the exons. Genes also include regulatory
sequences. Although scientists don't fully
understand their function, regulatory sequences
help turn genes on.
Each gene helps determine different
characteristics of an individual, such as nose
shape. Full of information, genes pass similar
traits from one generation to the next. That's
how your cousin inherited grandpa's nose.
Peas in a pod
The "Father of Genetics," Gregor Mendel, was
an Austrian monk who experimented with plants
growing in his monastery. He studied inheritance
in pea plants during the 1860s.

A model of double helix
structure of DNA with its base pairs
that link in myriad ways to create the
various blueprints for life as we know
it. Image courtesy
3DScience.com. |
Mendel observed that when he bred plants that
had green pea pods with plants that had yellow
pea pods, all of the offspring had green pods.
When Mendel bred the second generation with one
another, some of the baby pods had green pods
and some had yellow pods.
He discovered that a trait, or phenotype,
could disappear in one generation and could
reappear in a future generation.
Individuals have two copies of each gene, one
inherited from each parent. Mendel explained how
these copies interact to determine which trait
is expressed.
In all peas there is a gene for pod color.
The pod color gene has green and yellow
versions, or alleles. Mendel's green pod alleles
are dominant, and the yellow pod alleles are
recessive. In order to express a recessive form
of the trait (yellow), individuals must inherit
recessive alleles from both parents.
A plant that inherits one green allele and
one yellow allele will be green. But it can
still pass the recessive yellow allele onto its
offspring. That's how some of Mendel's pea pods
came out yellow.
More to it
Human diseases such as sickle cell anemia are
passed down in a similar way.
However, genetics don't always work so
simply. Most genetics and instances of heredity
are more complex than what Mendel saw in his
garden.
It often takes more than a single gene to
dictate a trait; and one gene can make
instructions for more than trait. The
environment, from the weather outside to an
organism's body chemistry, plays a large role in
dictating traits too.
http://www.livescience.com/humanbiology/060529_mm_genes.html
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... article gives the lowdown on genes,
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Research Communications. Research Papers.
Find articles in ... Genes Dev. 2006
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publishes research papers of general
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Genes can be as short as 1000
base pairs or as long as several hundred
thousand base pairs. ... estimate for
the number of genes in humans has
decreased as ...
______________________________
Genes are the units of heredity in
living organisms. They are encoded in the
organism's genetic material (usually DNA or
RNA), and control the physical development
...
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It's all in the genes! ... Genes
are the things that determine physical
traits ... about 25,000 to 35,000 genes,
which carry information that determines your
...