DNA, abbreviation of
deoxyribonucleic acid,
DNA [Credit:
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]organic chemical of complex molecular structure
that is found in all prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells and in many viruses. DNA
codes genetic information for the transmission of inherited traits.
A brief treatment of
DNA follows. For full treatment, see genetics: DNA and the genetic code.
DNA: part of
polynucleotide chain [Credit: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]The chemical DNA
was first discovered in 1869, but its role in genetic inheritance was not
demonstrated until 1943. In 1953 James Watson and Francis Crick determined that
the structure of DNA is a double-helix polymer, a spiral consisting of two DNA
strands wound around each other. Each strand is composed of a long chain of
monomer nucleotides. The nucleotide of DNA consists of a deoxyribose sugar
molecule to which is attached a phosphate group and one of four nitrogenous
bases: two purines (adenine and guanine) and two pyrimidines (cytosine and
thymine). The nucleotides are joined together by covalent bonds between the
phosphate of one nucleotide and the sugar of the next, forming a
phosphate-sugar backbone from which the nitrogenous bases protrude. One strand
is held to another by hydrogen bonds between the bases; the sequencing of this
bonding is specific—i.e., adenine bonds only with thymine, and cytosine only
with guanine.
DNA origami [Credit:
Science in Seconds (www.scienceinseconds.com) (A Britannica Publishing
Partner)]The configuration of the DNA molecule is highly stable, allowing it to
act as a template for the replication of new DNA molecules, as well as for the
production (transcription) of the related RNA (ribonucleic acid) molecule. A
segment of DNA that codes for the cell’s synthesis of a specific protein is
called a gene.
Crick, Francis Harry
Compton: proposed DNA structure [Credit: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]DNA
replicates by separating into two single strands, each of which serves as a
template for a new strand. The new strands are copied by the same principle of
hydrogen-bond pairing between bases that exists in the double helix. Two new
double-stranded molecules of DNA are produced, each containing one of the
original strands and one new strand. This “semiconservative” replication is the
key to the stable inheritance of genetic traits.
Within a cell, DNA is
organized into dense protein-DNA complexes called chromosomes. In eukaryotes,
the chromosomes are located in the nucleus, although DNA also is found in
mitochondria and chloroplasts. In prokaryotes, which do not have a
membrane-bound nucleus, the DNA is found as a single circular chromosome in the
cytoplasm. Some prokaryotes, such as bacteria, and a few eukaryotes have
extrachromosomal DNA known as plasmids, which are autonomous, self-replicating
genetic material. Plasmids have been used extensively in recombinant DNA
technology to study gene expression.
The genetic material of
viruses may be single- or double-stranded DNA or RNA. Retroviruses carry their
genetic material as single-stranded RNA and produce the enzyme reverse
transcriptase, which can generate DNA from the RNA strand. Four-stranded DNA
complexes known as G-quadruplexes have been observed in guanine-rich areas of
the human genome.
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