The Role of Nucleic Acids in Heredity
The Role of Nucleic Acids in Heredity
The Role of Nucleic Acids in Heredity
DNA is found in every cell of living beings and is essential to the identity of any
organism, from Euglena viridis, the small unicellular being on the border between
plants and animals, to Homo sapiens sapiens, contemporary man.
DNA is the "recipe" necessary for the synthesis of proteins, organic molecules
essential for living organisms;
1. A DNA molecule contains areas called genes, areas without function, as well
as areas with a still unknown role.
3. The "steps" are actually of only four kinds, uniting pairs of nitrogenous
bases, which can be four different types of organic molecules, adenine
(denoted A), cytosine (C), guanine (G) and thymine (T);
Heredity is the property of all living organisms belonging to a species to give birth
to similar offspring or the ability of organisms to transmit certain hereditary
characters to the offspring , either through asexual reproduction or sexual
reproduction. Through the process of heredity, genetic variations accumulate and
can lead to evolution by natural selection of phenotypes (according to Darwin's
theory of evolution).
Hereditary characteristics are transmitted from generation to generation through
DNA, a molecule that preserves genetic information.
Before dividing a cell by mitosis, dna is copied, otherwise the resulting cell
inherits the DNA sequence. The part of a DNA molecule that specifies a single
functional unit is called a gene. Inside a cell, DNA chains form condensed
structures called chromosomes. Organisms inherit genetic material from parents in
the form of homologous chromosomes, which are made up of unique
combinations of DNA sequences. The specific place of a DNA sequence on a
chromosome is called the locus (plural, loci). Differences between different places
from one individual to another are called alleles. DNA sequences can be altered by
mutations, which lead to the production of new alleles. If the mutation occurs in
the sequence of a gene, then the new allele can affect the phenotype of the
individual. Some phenotypes are the consequences of a single allele, but most
phenotypes are complex and are controlled by several genes interacting with each
other.