A bit has already been said about how nucleic acids - or
      DNA, one type of nucleic acid - hold the information from which proteins
      are made.  Obviously, there's more to it than that.
      
      
  Nucleic acids are another type of polymer,
      another long string of repeating subunits.  The subunits in this case
      are 
      nucleotides, which are themselves made up of three
      pieces:  a five-carbon ribose sugar - ribose or deoxyribose,
      which is where the names of the 2 types come from;  a phosphate group that actually
      links the string of sugars together;  and one of five possible nitrogenous
      bases, attached to the sugar and capable of 
  cross-linking to bases
      on other strings.  Three of the five bases, adenine, cytosine,
      and guanine, are found in both DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid)
      and RNA (Ribonucleic Acid);  the remaining two are
      similar, but thymine (not to be confused with thiamine, the
      vitamin) is found only on DNA while uracil takes the same
      "spot" on RNA.
      In RNA, the polymer is a single string, commonly
      called a strand;  DNA is double-stranded,
      held by hydrogen bonds in a helix and cross-connected between bases on
      strands "running" in opposite directions, so there is a
      double helix.  The cross connections are very
      particular:  adenine on one side only bonds to thymine on the
      other (and vice versa), while cytosine only bonds to guanine. 
      This means that if you know which base is on one side, you can accurately
      predict which one is on the other.  Adenine will only link to thymine
      in DNA and uracil in RNA;  cytosine only links to guanine (and vice
      versa).  This set-up of complementary
      strands produces excellent copying potential:  copies of
      DNA are made by separating strands and then building new ones across from
      each old one, and the new strands will be duplicates of the "peeled
      off" strands.
Briefly, with details elsewhere, DNA
      carries the genes, codes from which proteins can be built. 
      Genes exist as stretches of DNA (or multiple stretches that can be
      combined) on very long structures called 
  chromosomes. 
      Chromosomes carry more than just genes (and any given chromosome will
      house hundreds to thousands of separate genes):  one of the
      cutting-edge aspects of genetics is figuring out what all of the
      "extra" DNA is there for.  In a story that is sadly all too
      common, 
  until recently the extra DNA was called "Junk DNA,"
      which shows how a common hypothesis following, "we can't figure out
      why this is here," is "well, then it must have no purpose."  
  Much of that unknown has been explained:  there are templates for 
  many functional RNA molecules, remnants of viral DNA long shut off, and 
  many bits that are essentially molecular parasites, existing just to 
  reproduce and spread among the genome.
The coding process depends upon codons,
      three-base sequences along one strand of the DNA that convey three basic
      codes:  a) one codon for where the gene code starts;  b) various
      codons that can each be
  translated into an amino acid in the protein
      sequence;  c)  one codon for where the gene sequence ends. 
      This means that any coding gene has three times more bases in the sequence
      (+ 6, for the start and stop codons) than the protein will have amino
      acids.  Except, of course, that this is biology, and the truth is
      much more complicated and confusing then that.
While DNA for the most part has a single basic form and
      function, RNA has a range of roles, mostly involving the middle steps
      between DNA sequence and protein sequence.  When a protein must be
      made in a cell, the two strands of the gene responsible are
      separated.  On the actual code strand, a strand of messenger
      RNA (mRNA) is made in a step called transcription. 
      The mRNA then moves to where the actual protein will be made (ribosomes, cell structures
      which themselves have RNA in their construction), and a small type of RNA
      performs most of the next step, translation.  It is 
      transfer
      RNA (tRNA), with a codon-based connector on one end and an amino
      acid carrier on the other, that allows base sequence code to become amino
      acid sequence reality.
RNA molecules can be active beyond their coding and
      decoding roles, but not much is known yet about that aspect of the
      molecules.  Recent research hints that short-strand RNA molecules,
      called microRNAs, may be used by many types of cells to
      block the replication of RNA viruse
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