| 
			  
			
 
			
			 by Robert Roy Britt
 
			LiveScience Managing Editor05 July 2008
 
			from
			
			LiveScience Website 
			  
			
  
			Scientists are 
			reporting synthesis of the world's first DNA molecule  
			made almost of 
			entirely artificial parts.  
			The discovery could 
			be used in the fields of gene therapy  
			and other futuristic 
			high-tech advances, such as nano-sized computers.  
			Credit: Courtesy of 
			Masahiko Inouye 
			Chemists claim to have created the world's first DNA molecule made 
			almost entirely of artificial parts.
 
 The finding could lead to improvements in gene therapy, futuristic 
			nano-sized computers, and other high-tech advances, the Japanese 
			researchers say. DNA, popularly illustrated as a double helix, holds 
			the blueprints of life (below insert) and controls what every living 
			organism becomes and how it functions.
 
			 
			Scientists have tried for years to 
			develop
			
			artificial versions of DNA in order 
			to take advantage of its amazing information storage capabilities. 
			Already, DNA has been harnessed to 
			
			create simple electronic circuits.
			
 DNA uses just four basic building blocks, known as bases, to 
			code proteins used in cell functioning and development. Other 
			researchers have crafted DNA molecules with a few artificial parts.
 
			  
			  
				
					
						| 
						
 Genes - The Instruction Manuals 
						for Life
 by Corey 
						Binns
 29 May 2006
 
						from
						
						LiveScience Website
 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.
 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.
 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 in above image), 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.
 |  
			
 But  
			Masahiko
			 Inouye and colleagues at the University 
			of Toyama used stitched together four entirely new, artificial bases 
			inside the sugar-based framework of a DNA molecule, creating 
			unusually stable, double-stranded structures resembling natural DNA, 
			they say.
 
 Like natural DNA, the new rip-offs were right-handed and some easily 
			formed triple-stranded structures.
 
				
				"The unique chemistry of these 
				structures and their high stability offer unprecedented 
				possibilities for developing new biotech materials and 
				applications," the researchers said in a statement. 
			The breakthrough will be detailed in the 
			July 23 issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society. 
				
				"The artificial DNA might be applied 
				to a future extracellular genetic system with information 
				storage and amplifiable abilities," the researchers write.   |