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DNA, Genes & How Life Stores Information - Printable Version

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DNA, Genes & How Life Stores Information - Leejohnston - 11-17-2025

Thread 7 — DNA, Genes & How Life Stores Information
From Nucleotides to Traits — The True Architecture of Biological Information

All living organisms — bacteria, plants, animals, humans — rely on a single universal
information system: DNA.

This thread explains:
• what DNA actually is 
• how it stores information 
• how genes work 
• how your body reads the instructions 
• why mutations can be good, bad, or neutral 
• and why DNA is the closest thing biology has to computer code



1. What DNA Really Is

DNA = deoxyribonucleic acid 
A long molecule shaped like a double helix.

It is built from four “letters” called nucleotides:
• A = Adenine 
• T = Thymine 
• C = Cytosine 
• G = Guanine 

These letters are arranged in sequences that act like instructions.

Example: 
ATG-GCT-TTA-CCC…

Each sequence has meaning — just like letters form words.



2. Genes — The Real Instructions for Life

A gene is a specific sequence of DNA that contains instructions for making:
• a protein 
• or a functional RNA molecule 

Proteins are the machines of life — they build structures, run chemical reactions,
and regulate your cells.

So genes → proteins 
Proteins → traits 

That’s the fundamental logic of biology.



3. Chromosomes — DNA Packed for Storage

Your DNA is long — about 2 metres stretched out. 
Your cells pack it tightly into structures called chromosomes.

Humans have:
• 23 pairs (46 total) 
• 22 autosome pairs 
• 1 pair of sex chromosomes (XX or XY)

Each chromosome carries thousands of genes.



4. How DNA Is Read — The Central Dogma

Cells use a two-step process:

Step 1 — Transcription 
DNA → mRNA (messenger RNA) 
The gene is copied into a portable version.

Step 2 — Translation 
mRNA → Protein 
Ribosomes read the RNA in groups of three bases called codons.

Each codon = one amino acid.

Example: 
• AUG = Methionine (start codon) 
• GAA = Glutamate 
• UGA = Stop codon

These amino acids form long chains → fold into proteins.



5. Why Proteins Determine Everything

Proteins control:
• metabolism 
• growth 
• immune responses 
• hormones 
• brain function 
• muscle contraction 
• cell division 
• DNA repair 
• everything else

The structure of a protein is dictated by the DNA sequence — a tiny change can
alter shape, function, or efficiency.



6. Mutations — Not Always Bad

A mutation is simply a change in DNA sequence.

Mutations can be:
• Neutral — no effect 
• Beneficial — increase survival 
• Harmful — cause disease 

Examples:
• Blue eyes = harmless mutation 
• Lactose tolerance = beneficial mutation 
• Sickle cell disease = harmful but also protective against malaria 

Mutations = the raw material for evolution.



7. Gene Regulation — Why All Your Cells Aren’t Identical

Every cell in your body has the same DNA. 
But different cells activate different genes.

Examples:
• Skin cells express keratin genes 
• Muscle cells express actin & myosin genes 
• Brain cells express neurotransmitter genes

Gene switches called transcription factors determine what each cell becomes.



8. Epigenetics — Changing Gene Activity Without Changing DNA

Chemical marks can attach to DNA:
• turning genes ON or OFF 
• affected by stress, diet, sleep, environment, age 

Example: 
Identical twins have identical DNA but different epigenetics as they age.

Epigenetics bridges biology and environment.



9. How DNA Copies Itself — Replication

Before each cell divides, DNA must be duplicated.

The process:
• DNA unzips 
• each strand serves as a template 
• new complementary strands form (A pairs with T, C pairs with G)

Replication is extremely accurate due to repair enzymes.



10. Why DNA Is the Master Blueprint of Life

DNA is:
• long-term storage 
• self-copying 
• stable 
• error-resistant 
• universal across all life 
• capable of mutation → evolution 
• a programmable information system 

In simple terms:

DNA is biology’s operating system.

Every living thing is running a program written in four letters.



Written by LeeJohnston & Liora — The Lumin Archive Research Division