Gene
Gene
Molecular techniques that detect the presence and even the activity of genetic material are now a central part of forensic science . Exquisitely sensitive techniques can amplify and detect even small regions of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA ) that are present on objects such as cigarette butts or glass , or found underneath fingernails, as three examples.
Besides identifying the genetic material, modern-day forensic science techniques permit the detection of the fundamental unit of heritable genetic information (the gene), and can use genes to single out a person.
A gene is an individual element of an organism's genome and determines a trait or characteristic by regulating biochemical structure or a metabolic process.
Genes are segments of nucleic acid, consisting of a specific sequence and number of the chemical units of nucleic acids, the nucleotides. In most organisms the nucleic acid is DNA, although in retroviruses the genetic material is composed of ribonucleic acid (RNA). Some genes in a cell are active more or less all the time, which means that they are continuously transcribed and provide a constant supply of their protein product. These are the "housekeeping" genes that are always needed for basic cellular reactions. Others may be rendered active or inactive depending on the needs and functions of the organism under particular conditions. The signal that masks or unmasks a gene can come from outside the cell, for example, from a steroid hormone or a nutrient, or it can come from within the cell itself as a result of the activity of other genes. In both cases, regulatory substances can bind to the specific DNA sequences of the target genes to control the synthesis of transcripts.
In a paper published in 1865, Gregor Mendel (1823–1884), advanced a theory of inheritance dependent on material elements that segregate independently from each other in sex cells. Before Mendel's findings, inherited traits were thought to be passed on through a blending of the mother and father's characteristics, much like a blending of two liquids. The term "gene" was coined later by the Danish botanist Wilhelm Johannsen (1857–1927), to replace the variety of terms used up until then to describe hereditary factors. His definition of the gene led him to distinguish between genotype (an organism's genetic makeup) and phenotype (an organism's appearance). Before the chemical and physical nature of genes were discovered they were defined on the basis of phenotypic expression, and algebraic symbols were used to record their distribution and segregation. Because sexually reproducing, eukaryotic organisms possess two copies of an inherited factor (or gene), one acquired from each parent, the genotype of an individual for a particular trait is expressed by a pair of letters or symbols. Each of the alternative forms of a gene is also known as an allele. Dominant and recessive alleles are denoted by the use of higher and lower case letters. It can be predicted mathematically, for example, that a single
allele pair will always segregate to give a genotype ratio 1AA:2Aa:1aa, and the phenotype ratio 2A:1aa (where A represents both AA and Aa since these cannot be distinguished phenotypically if dominance is complete).
In 1910, the American geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866–1945) began to uncover the relationship between genes and chromosomes. He discovered that genes were located on chromosomes and that they were arranged linearly and associated in linkage groups, all the genes on one chromosome being linked. For example, the genes on the X and Y chromosomes are said to be sex-linked because the X and Y chromosomes determine the sex of the organisms; in humans X determines femaleness and Y determines maleness. Nonhomologous chromosomes possess different linkage groups, whereas homologous chromosomes have identical linkage groups in identical sequences. The distance between two genes of the same linkage group is the sum of the distances between all the intervening genes. A schematic representation of the linear arrangement of linked genes, with their relative distances of separation, is known as a genetic map. In the construction of such maps, the frequency of recombination during crossing over is used as an index of the distance between two linked genes.
The molecular structure and activity of genes can be modified by mutations and the smallest mutational unit is now known to be a single pair of nucleotides, also known as a muton. Mutations used to be detected biochemically, typically by the failure of an organism to grow in a given food source due to the presence of the non-functional gene. Now, machines that automatically determine the arrangement of the nucleotide building blocks in the genetic material (a process called sequencing ) allow mutations to be detected and, potentially, to match DNA with a victim or suspect.
see also DNA; DNA fingerprint; Genetic code; PCR (polymerase chain reaction).
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Williamson & Associates Papua Guinea Survey Complete.
PR Newswire; 3/15/2005; 700+ words
; ...completed a survey to characterize sulfide deposits in Papua New Guinea approximately 60 km west northwest of Rabaul in the...operating in 6000m depths and taking 30m cores. In 1997, Papua New Guinea was the first country in the world to grant exploration...
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RL: Wales v Papua Guinea scores
Newspaper article from: AAP Sports News (Australia); 11/13/2000; 175 words
; ...England, Nov 12 AFP - Scorers in the Rugby League World Cup quarter-final between Wales and Papua New Guinea here on Sunday: Wales 22 bt Papua New Guinea 8 (ht: 20-2) WALES (Critchley, Briers, Davies tries; Harris 5 goals) PAPUA NEW GUINEA...
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PAPUA NUEVA GUINEA: CUESTIONADAS ELECCIONES EN ISLA SEPARATISTA.(TT: Papua New Guinea: questioned elctions in separatist island.)
News Wire article from: Noticias en Español; 3/29/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...separatista isla Bougainville, de Papua Nueva Guinea, celebrar elecciones en abril...segn la constitucin nacional de Papua Nueva Guinea porque, entre otras cosas...Bougainville es parte integral de Papua Nueva Guinea" como su vigsima provincia...
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PAPUA NEW GUINEA: GOVERNMENT RATCHETS UP FIGHT AGAINST AIDS.
News Wire article from: Interpress Service; 12/5/2007; 700+ words
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Papua New Guinea Oil Markets Investment Opportunities, Market Analysis and Forecasts to 2020.
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The Papua New Guinea Oil and Gas Markets: Examine Investment Opportunities, Analysis and Forecasts to 2020.
M2 Presswire; 8/20/2008; 700+ words
; ...20 August 2008-Research and Markets: The Papua New Guinea Oil and Gas Markets: Examine Investment Opportunities...in each the country. Key Topics Covered: - Papua New Guinea Energy Report - Papua New Guinea Fiscal Regime - Papua New Guinea ...
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Will Papua New Guinea become a 'failed state'?A downward spiral
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune; 4/8/2003; ; 700+ words
; 00-00-0000 Papua New Guinea is rich in natural...future of Papua New Guinea are growing...barely improved in Papua New Guinea since independence...right of Papua New Guinea to make...donors has enabled Papua New Guinea to ...
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Papua New Guinea Has Much to Offer to Foreign Investors.
Newspaper article from: Korea Times (Seoul, Korea); 9/16/2000; 700+ words
; Papua New Guineans will celebrate...institutions of governance in Papua New Guinea are very much entrenched...licensing fees that Papua New Guinea obtains from the...investors. The current Papua New Guinea Government which came into...
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Papua New Guinea Gas Markets Investment Opportunities, Market Analysis and Forecasts to 2020.
M2 Presswire; 6/8/2009; 700+ words
; ...PRESSWIRE-8 June 2009-Research and Markets: Papua New Guinea Gas Markets Investment Opportunities, Market...Key Topics Covered: 1 Table of Contents 2 Papua New Guinea Energy Sector 3 Papua New Guinea Fiscal Regime 4 Papua New Guinea ...
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PAPUA NEW GUINEA: GOVERNMENT RATCHETS UP FIGHT AGAINST AIDS
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 12/5/2007; 700+ words
; ...English News Wire 12-05-2007 By Kevin Pamba MADANG, Papua New Guinea, Dec. 5, 2007 (IPS/GIN) -- Experts have been warning Papua New Guinea for a decade that the country is at risk of an AIDS...
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Papua New Guinea
Encyclopedia entry from: Worldmark Encyclopedia of National Economies
PAPUA NEW GUINEA Independent State of Papua New Guinea COUNTRY OVERVIEW LOCATION AND SIZE. Papua New...movement on the island of Bougainville, the location of one of Papua New Guinea's largest mines, led to sabotage and closure of the mine...
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PAPUA NEW GUINEA
Book article from: Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
PAPUA NEW GUINEA, also Papua Niugini . A state in the south-west Pacific, occupying the eastern half of the island of New Guinea and some 600 islands, the largest of which are New Britain, New...
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Papua
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Papua or Irian Jaya , province...641,430, including West Papua prov.), c.162,000 sq...580 sq km, including West Papua prov., see below), Indonesia...most of the western half of New Guinea and a number of offshore islands...
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Territory of Papua
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Territory of Papua see Papua New Guinea .
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New Guinea
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
New Guinea , island, c.342,000 sq mi (885...sections: the Indonesian provinces of Papua and West Papua in the west and the independent country of Papua New Guinea in the east. The island is c.1,500...
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