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Life Science
DNA Structure

Life Science
Life Science


DNA Structure
Print DNA Structure Reading Comprehension with Sixth Grade Work

Print DNA Structure Reading Comprehension


Reading Level
     edHelper's suggested reading level:   grades 6 to 8
     Flesch-Kincaid grade level:   7.12

Vocabulary
     challenging words:    adenine, as-id, chromatid, cytosine, double-helix, guanine, helix, nucleotide, nucleotides, recessive, thymine, deoxyribonucleic, radiation, embryonic, blueprint, mutation


DNA Structure
By Cindy Grigg
  

1     An embryonic cell divides again and again. Where there was one cell there are two, then four, then eight, and so on. Each holds all the genetic information needed to create a new human being. Your fingernails grow nonstop, day in and day out. The cells of your fingernails somehow generate all of the protein that makes up your nails. How is this protein created? How, exactly, do these cells make copies of themselves? The answers to these questions are DNA replication and protein synthesis.
 
2     When organisms reproduce, traits are passed from parent to offspring. These traits are carried in DNA, the genetic material found in a cell's nucleus. DNA acts like a blueprint for the cells of an organism, instructing the cells how to put together materials to produce certain traits.
 
3     DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid (pronounced de-ox-ee-ribe-o-new-clee-ick as-id). It's made of just a few kinds of atoms: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and phosphorus. The traits that make organisms different from one another are coded for in their DNA. Chromosomes are made of DNA. Chromosomes are genetic structures that contain the information used to direct a cell's activities and make new cells. They are found in the nucleus of a cell.
 
4     A person has 46, or 23 pairs, of chromosomes. Our cells have two copies of each chromosome. One came from the mother, and one from the father. The chromosome starts as half of the familiar X. As the cell grows, it replicates the DNA to make the other half of the X, which is identical. When the cell divides, each daughter cell receives half of each chromosome (called a chromatid). The two copies of the gene are alike on one chromosome but the "matching" pair of chromosomes may have slightly different genes (dominant or recessive alleles) as one came from the mother and one from the father. The dominant gene of the two is the one that is expressed. For example, if one parent gives a gene that carries the trait for blue eye color and the other parent gives a gene that carries the trait for brown eye color, the child would have brown eyes. The trait for brown eye color is dominant, and that is the color that would be expressed in the child.

Paragraphs 5 to 11:
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