LiveScience Topic:
DNA and Genes

Genes are the blueprints of life. 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.<p> First established in 1985 by Sir Alec Jeffreys, DNA testing has become an increasingly popular method of identification and research. The applications of DNA testing, or DNA fingerprinting within forensic science is often what most people think of when they hear the phrase. Popularized by television and cinema, using DNA to match blood, hair or saliva to criminals is one purpose of testing DNA. It is also frequently used for other benefits, like wildlife studies, paternity testing, body identification, and in studies pertaining to human dispersion.<p> While most aspects of DNA are identical in samples from all human beings, concentrating on identifying patterns called microsatellites reveals qualities specific and unique to the individual. During the early stages of this science, a DNA test was performed using an analysis called restriction fragment length polymorphism. Because this process was extremely time consuming and required a great deal of DNA, new methods like polymerase chain reaction and amplified fragment length polymorphism have been employed.<p> The benefits of DNA testing are ample. In 1987, Colin Pitchfork became the first criminal to be caught as a result of DNA testing. The information provided with DNA tests has also helped wrongfully incarcerated people like Gary Dotson and Dennis Halstead reclaim their freedom.

The University of British Columbia's Wine Research Center may have found a way to solve the problem of wine allergies.
The long-awaited sequencing of the banana genome might help save the yellow fruit from imminent collapse.
They live in arsenic levels that would kill most organisms.
New research suggests "arsenic-eating" bacteria rely on phosphorus after all.
Here's LiveScience's ten favorite genome sequencing projects, and what they've taught us about animals.
Adventurous field work expands knowledge of evolution and could help save endangered species.
A protein machine unwinds DNA molecules
A massive project reveals genetic secrets of the brain.
Memory formation in fruit flies is simpler than once thought. Could this be true for humans, too?
One stallion spread a sprinting gene throughout the thoroughbred population.
Blood tests can accurately predict a baby's sex, but some urine tests are worse than flipping a coin.
A genomics company says an accidental screenshot gave them vital information, but scientists disagree.
More evidence that early humans got busy with Neanderthals.
Modern polar bears all seem to share some genes. It just so happens these genes come from an Irish brown bear living over 20,000 years ago.
We each possess 60 new mutations, any of which could make major changes in our appearance or behavior. The genetic mistakes are the driving force of evolution.
Researchers are beginning to investigate transcription factor proteins and their role in gene sequencing.
Those with the neurologic disease were at higher risk for also contracting the most dangerous form of skin cancer.
This isolated island is home to amazing creatures that live nowhere else on Earth.