Understanding GeneticsUnderstanding GeneticsUnderstanding GeneticsUnderstanding Genetics
HomeFeature StoryGenetics in the NewsEthics & IssuesAsk a GeneticistAt Home ActivitiesAbout the Museum Exhibition

What Is a Gene?

How Do Genes Work?

It Runs in the Family:
Genes and Human
Difference

When Genes Go Bad: Mutations and Disease

Genetic Testing

Making Medicines

New Therapies

Ethics

X-ray Diffraction

X-Ray Vision

Figuring out the structure of DNA was a major challenge for scientists working in the mid-20th century. DNA is tiny, just two nanometers across, 2000 times thinner than a human hair. That's too small to see clearly with even the best light microscope.

The picture above-an x-ray diffraction pattern-helped solved the mystery. British chemist Rosalind Franklin made this image by shooting a beam of x-rays at a DNA sample, then capturing on film a record of how the x-rays were bent, or diffracted.

Biophysicists James Watson and Francis Crick analyzed the picture and concluded that it must have been made by a double-stranded helix, the now-familiar twisted ladder shape of DNA. They announced their results in 1953, and later won the Nobel Prize.

What Is a Gene?

Look closely at the chromosomes and you'd see that each is made of bundles of looping coils. If you unraveled these coils, you'd have a six-foot long double strand of deoxyribonucleic acid-DNA.

DNA is a twisted double strand of nucleotides-adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T).

DNA is a twisted double strand of nucleotides-adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T).

Believe it or not, if you took all of the DNA in all of your cells and laid it out end to end, it would stretch to the moon and back about 130,000 times.

A DNA molecule is a twisted ladder-like stack of building blocks called nucleotides. There are four types of DNA nucleotides-adenine, cytosine, guanine, and thymine-or A, C, G, and T, for short.

If you could peer into any one of your body's 50 trillion cells, you'd find a fantastically complex and busy world. At the center of this world you'd find a nucleus containing 46 molecules called chromosomes-23 from your mother and 23 from your father. These chromosomes are basically an instruction set for the construction and maintenance of... you.

These two long stacks of building blocks fit together like two sides of zipper, but there's a rule involved: adenine only pairs with thymine, and cytosine only pairs with guanine. So each rung in the DNA ladder is a pair of nucleotides, and each pair is either an A stuck to a T or a C stuck to a G.

You've got six billion of these pairs of nucleotides in each of your cells, and amongst these six billion nucleotide pairs are roughly 30,000 genes. A gene is a distinct stretch of DNA that determines something about who you are. (More on that later.) Genes vary in size, from just a few thousand pairs of nucleotides (or "base pairs") to over two million base pairs.


footer graphic Home | Feature Story | Genetics in the News | Ethics & Issues
Ask a Geneticist | At Home Activities | About the Museum Exhibition
footer graphic
This project was supported by a Science Education Partnership Award (SEPA) from the NCRR, NIH. Its content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of NCRR or NIH

The Tech Museum of Innovation 201 South Market Street San Jose, CA 95113
(408) 294-TECH   info@thetech.org
© 1994-2004 The Tech Museum of Innovation - All rights reserved.