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2. Genes
Special segments of the DNA are known as genes. In classical Mendelian genetics
genes are traditionally thought of as controlling some trait. Variants of the
gene, known as alleles are responsible for the different traits observed. Thus,
one uses the notation A and a for the alleles that control, say, smooth coat
or rough coat in an animal. A specific individual might have genetic makeup
AA, Aa (equivalent to aA), or aa. If the physical appearance or phenotype of
the animal with AA and Aa is different from the appearance of an animal with
aa, then the allele A is known as dominant and the allele a is known as recessive.
Furthermore, the phenotype of the animal, smooth coat or rough coat, does not
always allow one to determine the genotype of the animal. (In some cases, for
example, BB, Bb, and bb, the three genotypes may correspond to three different
phenotypes.) The gene responsible for a particular trait will be associated
with a particular location, historically called a locus, on a chromosome. The
corresponding loci on homologous chromosomes can have identical alleles or different
alleles. A group of people might have many alleles at this locus but a specific
individual can have at most 2. Genes which are on different chromosomes or which
are far apart on the same chromosome usually are inherited independently. However,
genes that are in close proximity on a chromosome are subject to linkage.
The modern conception of an allele for a gene is that it is a particular linear
section of a DNA molecule. This linear stretch of DNA is associated with the
production of a specific protein, by spelling out which amino acids (see below
for more detail) make up the protein. (Pioneers in developing the relation between
genes and enzymes, which are special proteins that catalyze (accelerate) chemical
reactions, were George Beadle, Edward Tatum, and Max Delbrück. However,
not all genes make enzymes.) We now understand that sometimes genes have sections
that are involved in protein production (exons) and other sections which must
be snipped out (introns) before protein production starts. Furthermore, genes
have sections that are involved with the regulation process by which the proteins
are made, leading to expressions such as genes being turned on or turned off.
Among the most remarkable properties of the DNA molecule is that the sister
strands of nucleotides which make up the double helix can be thought of as written
in a four-letter alphabet A, C, G, and T which denote specific types of nucleotides.
(A nucleotide is a section of a DNA molecule (or RNA molecule, see below) which
consists of a sugar, a base containing nitrogen, and a phosphate section.)

A schematic of the DNA showing helical strands and how the the nucleotide
are paired.
(This image is used with the permission from the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI))
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