• Home
  • Blog
  • Incoming Courses
  • Print Calendar
  • Web Page
  • Social media
    • facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • youtube
  • Procedimientos y Reglamentos
  • Cursos
    Any question?
    33 3825 5838
    [email protected]
    Login
    culturalenlinea.comculturalenlinea.com
    • Home
    • Blog
    • Incoming Courses
    • Print Calendar
    • Web Page
    • Social media
      • facebook
      • Twitter
      • Instagram
      • youtube
    • Procedimientos y Reglamentos
    • Cursos

      Reading of the Day

      • Home
      • Blog
      • Reading of the Day
      • 10 Interesting DNA Facts

      10 Interesting DNA Facts

      • Posted by Gustavo Cruz
      • Date May 7, 2021

      By Anne Marie Helmenstine│ ThoughtCo│2 min

      View Original

      DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid codes for your genetic make-up. There are lots of facts about DNA, but here are 10 that are particularly interesting, important, or fun.

      DNA helix
      KTSDESIGN/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY / Getty Images
      1. Even though it codes for all the information that makes up an organism, DNA is built using only four building blocks, the nucleotides adenine, guanine, thymine, and cytosine.
      2. Every human being shares 99% of their DNA with every other human.
      1. If you put all the DNA molecules in your body end to end, the DNA would reach from the Earth to the Sun and back over 600 times (100 trillion times six feet divided by 92 million miles).
      2. A parent and child share 99.5% of the same DNA.
      3. You have 98% of your DNA in common with a chimpanzee.
      4. If you could type 60 words per minute, eight hours a day, it would take approximately 50 years to type the human genome.
      5. DNA is a fragile molecule. About a thousand times a day, something happens to it to cause errors. This could include errors during transcription, damage from ultraviolet light, or any of a host of other activities. There are many repair mechanisms, but some damage isn’t repaired. This means you carry mutations! Some of the mutations cause no harm, a few are helpful, while others can cause diseases, such as cancer.
      6. Scientists at Cambridge University believe humans have DNA in common with the mud worm and that it is the closest invertebrate genetic relative to us. In other words, you have more in common, genetically speaking, with a mud worm than you do with a spider or octopus or cockroach.
      1. Humans and cabbage share about 40-50% common DNA.
      2. Friedrich Miescher discovered DNA in 1869, although scientists did not understand DNA was the genetic material in cells until 1943. Prior to that time, it was widely believed that proteins stored genetic information.
      • Share:
      Admin bar avatar
      Gustavo Cruz

      Previous post

      The History of Pepsi Cola
      May 7, 2021

      Next post

      Who Decides What's in the Dictionary?
      May 7, 2021

      You may also like

      William Shakespeare
      Poem vs. Sonnet: What’s the Difference?
      27 May, 2023
      Technology
      Always Do This Before Letting Someone Borrow Your Phone
      18 June, 2022
      HEALTH
      Important reasons why you should be drinking lemon water every morning
      17 June, 2022

      Upcoming Courses

      Sep
      16
      -
      Sep
      16
      16 de Septiembre
      16 de Septiembre
      Instituto Cultural Mexicano Norteamericano de Jalisco A.C.

      Event

      Holiday September 16 No Class...

      Time of Event

      Start

      Sep 16, 2024

      End

      Sep 16, 2024

      Organizer

      Academic Department

      3338255838 ext. 113

      Venue

      Instituto Cultural Mexicano Norteamericano de Jalisco A.C.
      Av Enrique Díaz de León Sur 300 Guadalajara , Jalisco 44160 Mexico
      Instituto Cultural Mexicano Norteamericano de Jalisco A.C.
      • Privacy
      • Terms
      • Sitemap
      icmn_logotipo
      33 3825 5838
       
      [email protected]

      Like Us On Facebook

      facebook_face1

      Nuestros maestros

      es el activo mas valioso!

      Our Courses

      ICMNJ by https://culturalenlinea.com/ Powered by WordPress.

      Login with your site account

      Lost your password?