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Sausage-shaped: chromosomes,
left and opposite, the focus of Willard's esoteric research,
are made up of tightly coiled strands of DNA
Photo: Adrian T. Sumner |
Without chromosomes, your cells would be
an untidy, malfunctioning mess. In fact, without chromosomes, you
would never have evolved to the pinnacle of supreme intellect that
enables you to read and appreciate this fine article.
Each cell in your body contains roughly six feet of string-like
DNA, the repository of your genetic information. Strung like beads
along the length of your DNA's molecular chains are some 20,000
encoded segments--genes--that form the blueprints for proteins.
Through a process called "gene expression," a gene copies
its genetic information in the form of a "messenger RNA" molecule.
The messenger RNA then wends its way to the cell's protein-making
machinery. There it acts as the blueprint for the proteins that
catalyze life-giving chemical reactions.
Rather than crumpling this critical genomic blueprint haphazardly
into the cell's nucleus, nature has evolved a neat method of winding
that DNA into precise spools around special proteins and packing
them ever so neatly into the sausage-shaped chromosomes that you
see under the microscope. This packing job, which would thrill
Martha Stewart, reduces the length of your six feet of DNA by some
10,000-fold.
You have twenty-three pairs of such well-ordered chromosomes--one
set each from Mom and Dad. And besides the garden-variety chromosomes,
you have two sex chromosomes--a pair of X chromosomes if you are
a female, and an X and a Y if you are male.
Each pair of chromosomes connects at a midpoint called the centromere--another
example of nature's orderly housekeeping. As each chromosome duplicates
itself during cell division, the centromere provides a critical
attachment point. Each cell sends out spindle fibers that grab
the duplicated chromosomes at the centromere and separate them
into the two new "daughter" cells.
In the earliest days of genetics, scientists faithfully, and, it
turned out, naively, believed the "central dogma" that
each gene provides the blueprint for one protein. The only "genetic
code" they thought existed was the one that specified how
a given sequence of DNA units provided the code for the structure
of a given protein.
However, in the last decade, scientists have come to the unsettling
realization that the cell is a far more intricate cryptographer
than they had ever dreamed. Besides the protein-making code, the
cell also uses other as yet unknown codes to read mysterious "epigenetic"--that
is, outside the genetic code--signals from the vast regions of
what had seemed like "junk" DNA that scientists had discovered
among genes. In fact, it's quite likely that within this "junk" lies
the very epigenetic information that enabled us to evolve into
humans.
www.dnai.org/index.htm
--Dennis Meredith
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