
DNA
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) was discovered in the late 1800s, but its role as the material of heredity was not elucidated for fifty years after that. It occupies a central and critical role in the cell as the genetic information in which all the information required to duplicate and maintain the organism. All information necessary to maintain and propagate life is contained within a linear array of four simple bases: adenine, guanine, thymine, and cytosine.
DNA was first described as a monotonously uniform helix, generally called B-DNA. However, we now know that DNA can adopt many different shapes and conformations. Moreover, many of these alternative shapes have biological importance. Thus, the DNA is not simply an informational repository, from which information flows through RNA into proteins. Rather, structural information exists within the specific sequence patterns of the bases. This structural information dictates the interaction of DNA with proteins to carry out processes of DNA replication, transcription into RNA, and repair of errors or damage to the DNA.
The Components of Dna
DNA is composed of purine (adenine and guanine) and pyrimidine (cytosine and thymine) bases, each connected through a ribose sugar to a phosphate backbone. Many variations are possible in the chemical structure of the bases and the sugar, and in the structural relationship of the base to the sugar that result in differences in helical shape and form. The most common DNA helix, B-DNA, is a double helix of two DNA strands with about 10.5 base pairs per helical turn.
Bases and Base Pairs
The four bases found in DNA are shown in Figures 1 and 2. The purines and pyrimidines are the informational molecules of the genetic blueprint for the cell. The two sides of the helix are held together by hydrogen bonds between base pairs. Hydrogen bonds are weak attractions between a hydrogen atom on one side and an oxygen or nitrogen atom on the other. Hydrogen atoms of amino groups serve as the hydrogen bond donor while the carbonyl oxygens and ring nitrogens serve as hydrogen bond acceptors. The specific location of hydrogen bond donor and acceptor groups gives the bases their specificity for hydrogen bonding in unique pairs. Thymine (T) pairs with adenine (A) through two hydrogen bonds, and cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G) through three hydrogen bonds (Figure 2). T does not normally pair with G, nor does C normally pair with A.
Deoxyribose Sugar
In DNA the bases are connected to a β-D-2-deoxyribose sugar with a hydrogen atom at the 2′ ("two prime") position. The sugar is a very dynamic part of the DNA molecule. Unlike the nucleotide bases, which are planar and rigid, the sugar ring is easily bent and twisted into various conformations (which exist in different structural forms of DNA). In canonical B-DNA, the accepted and most common form of DNA, the sugar configuration is known as C2′ endo.
Nucleosides and Nucleotides
The term "nucleoside" refers to a base and sugar. "Nucleotide," on the other hand, refers to the base, sugar, and phosphate group (Figure 1). A bond, called the glycosidic bond, holds the base to the sugar and the 3′-5′ ("three prime-five prime") phosphodiester bond holds the individual nucleotides together. Nucleotides are joined from the 3′ carbon of the sugar in one nucleotide to the 5′ carbon of the sugar of the adjacent nucleotide. The 3′ and the 5′ ends are chemically very distinct and have different reactive properties. During DNA replication, new nucleotides are added only to the 3′ OH end of a DNA strand. This fact has important implications for replication.
The Structure of Double-Stranded Dna
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Millions of people around the world can trace their ancestry back several generations or more through oral history, family documents or government records of such events as marriages and births. In the United States, genealogy has become a popular pursuit especially for descendants of immigrants who are interested in knowing where their forefathers originated. These genealogical researchers are being aided these days by DNA tests that can sometimes help them bridge gaps left in the paper trail. Sometimes these tests can lead to surprises.
A laboratory technician prepares samples for DNA testing
Roberta Estes has a long list of European family surnames that she has encountered in her search through family records and public documents.
But through DNA testing she found out that she also has genetic links to sub-Saharan Africa and Native American Indians, bringing her closer to others who descend from those lines.
One of Roberta's lines has the surname Younger and many people with this name assume that they are related to the infamous 19th century Missouri outlaw band led by Cole Younger. But Roberta says DNA tests have shown not all Youngers are related.
Pointing to her research Roberta says, "There is the Cole Younger and the Younger gang line and then there is another line, even though they both come out of Virginia and Maryland at about the same time, but the DNA has proven that they are two distinct and separate lines."
DNA tests are most useful in determining genetic links between people who may have little documentation or oral history to guide them. Adrian Williams leads a group of people with the surname Williams, the third most common surname in the United States. There are many branches of the Williams line that may not be related to one another. But Adrian says a DNA test has helped him find connections with others who share his surname.
"Although it could not tell us explicitly that that Reuben was the brother of my George,” says Adrien, “when you take the testing along with all the circumstantial evidence, that makes [bridges] the gap."
"DNA is nothing more than a tool in the toolkit for the genealogist who has run into a paper trail roadblock," says Bennett Greenspan, President and Chief Executive Officer of Family Tree DNA, the Houston-based company that is considered the world leader in genetic testing for genealogical research. "With DNA testing we are able to unravel that history book that is contained within the cells of all of us."
The history contained in human genes also links every person on earth to a common genetic origin in Africa. Natural variations in the genes occurred over time as people migrated out of Africa, according to Adrian Williams.
"As that population started expanding, they started migrating. So you have Africa here and then you get these fingers of migration out around the world. As that migration is happening, that DNA is also evolving and it is mutating and it is changing."
Family Tree DNA is now working with the National Geographic Society on a large-scale program to trace the migrations of humankind. One of the experts assisting in this and in the use of DNA for genealogical studies is Professor Michael Hammer, head of the Genomics Analysis and Technology Core at the University of Arizona.
"We do carry mutations that go back a million years in our genome. We also carry mutations that are specific to a particular population,” says Hammer. “Those mutations probably arose in the past few thousand years after that population diverged and separated from their common ancestral population."
Professor Hammer participated in one genealogical study with Jewish people who come from the Cohen line and through oral tradition trace their lineage to the ancient Hebrew priests. He says the Y chromosome test, which shows genetic links from father to son through many generations, were applied to the research question.
"If two people come from different communities but are both Cohen, would they share a Y chromosome type, more so than you would expect by chance if you sampled two random people from the Jewish population? The answer is yes."
But Professor Hammer says the use of DNA tests also can tell us how all the various genetic lines have crossed and combined over thousands of years.
"Just by the nature of human migration and mixing in the past, we have not remained separated and isolated on different continents all these years. We do have a history of migration and our genome will reflect that," said the professor.
Genetic researchers, driven to some extent by demand from people doing genealogical research, keep coming up with new tests and new ways of tracing our genetic connections with one another.

