Genetics is the study of genes — what they are, what they do, and how they work. Genes are made up of molecules inside the nucleus of a cell that are strung together in such a way that the sequence carries information: that information determines how living organisms inherit phenotypic traits,
(features) determined by the genes they received from their parents and
thereby going back through the generations. For example, offspring produced by sexual reproduction
usually look similar to each of their parents because they have
inherited some of each of their parents' genes. Genetics identifies
which features are inherited, and explains how these features pass from generation to generation. In addition to inheritance, genetics studies how genes
are turned on and off to control what substances are made in a cell - gene expression; and how a cell divides - mitosis or meiosis.
Some phenotypic traits can be seen, such as eye color while others can only be detected, such as blood type
or intelligence. Traits determined by genes can be modified by the
animal's surroundings (environment): for example, the general design of a
tiger's stripes is inherited, but the specific stripe pattern is
determined by the tiger's surroundings. Another example is a person's
height: it is determined by both genetics and nutrition.
Genes are made of DNA, which is divided into separate pieces called chromosomes. Humans have 46: 23 pairs, though this number varies between species, for example many primates have 24 pairs. Meiosis creates special cells, sperm in males and eggs in females, which only have 23 chromosomes. These two cells merge into one during the fertilization stage of sexual reproduction, creating a zygote in which a nucleic acid double helix divides, with each single helix occupying one of the daughter cells,
resulting in half the normal number of genes. The zygote then divides
into four daughter cells by which time genetic recombination has created a new embryo with 23 pairs of chromosomes, half from each parent. Mating and resultant mate choice result in sexual selection. In normal cell division (mitosis) is possible when the double helix separates, and a complement of each
separated half is made, resulting in two identical double helices in one
cell, with each occupying one of the two new daughter cells created
when the cell divides.
Chromosomes all contain four nucleotides, abbreviated C (cytosine), G (guanine), A (adenine), or T (thymine), which line up in a particular sequence and make a long string. There
are two strings of nucleotides coiled around one another in each
chromosome: a double helix. C on one string is always opposite from G on the other string; A is
always opposite T. There are about 3.2 billion nucleotide pairs on all
the human chromosomes: this is the human genome. The order of the nucleotides carries genetic information, whose rules are defined by the genetic code,
similar to how the order of letters on a page of text carries
information. Three nucleotides in a row - a triplet - carry one unit of
information: a codon.
The genetic code not only controls inheritance: it also controls gene expression,
which occurs when a portion of the double helix is uncoiled, exposing a
series of the nucleotides, which are within the interior of the DNA.
This series of exposed triplets (codons) carries the information to
allow machinery in the cell to "read" the codons on the exposed DNA,
which results in the making of RNA molecules. RNA in turn makes either amino acis or microRNA, which are responsible for all of the structure and function of a living
organism; i.e. they determine all the features of the cell and thus the
entire individual. Closing the uncoiled segment turns off the gene.
Heritability means the information in a given gene is not always exactly the same in
every individual in that species, so the same gene in different
individuals does not give exactly the same instructions. Each unique
form of a single gene is called an allale: different forms are collectively called polymorphisms.
As an example, one allele for the gene for hair color and skin cell
pigmentation could instruct the body to produce black pigment, producing
black hair and pigmented skin; while a different allele of the same
gene in a different individual could give garbled instructions that
would result in a failure to produce any pigment, giving white hair and
no pigmented skin: albinism. Mutations
are random changes in genes creating new alleles, which in turn produce
new traits, which could help, harm, or have no new effect on the
individual's likelihood of survival; thus, mutations are the basis for evolution.
By
Aparna S M
By
Aparna S M
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