Genes make proteins The function of genes is to provide the information needed to make molecules called
proteins in cells. Cells are the smallest independent parts of organisms: the human body contains about 100 trillion cells, while very small organisms like
bacteria are just a single cell. A cell is like a miniature and very complex factory that can make all the parts needed to produce a copy of itself, which happens when cells
divide. There is a simple division of labor in cells—genes give instructions and proteins carry out these instructions, tasks like building a new copy of a cell, or repairing the damage. Each type of protein is a specialist that only does one job, so if a cell needs to do something new, it must make a new protein to do this job. Similarly, if a cell needs to do something faster or slower than before, it makes more or less of the protein responsible. Genes tell cells what to do by telling them which proteins to make and in what amounts. into RNA, and this RNA then
translated into protein. A protein consists of a chain of
amino acid molecules, of which there are 20 types. This chain folds up into a compact shape, rather like an untidy ball of string. The shape of the protein is determined by the sequence of amino acids along its chain, and it is this shape that determines what the protein does. The information in DNA is held in the sequence of the repeating units along the DNA chain. These units are four types of
nucleotides (A, T, G and C) and the sequence of nucleotides stores information in an alphabet called the
genetic code. When a gene is read by a cell the DNA sequence is copied into a very similar molecule called
RNA (this process is called
transcription). Transcription is controlled by other DNA sequences (such as
promoters), which show a cell where genes are, and control how often they are copied. The RNA copy made from a gene is then fed through a structure called a
ribosome, which translates the sequence of nucleotides in the RNA into the correct sequence of amino acids and joins these amino acids together to make a complete protein chain. The new protein then folds up into its active form. The process of moving information from the language of RNA into the language of amino acids is called
translation. . DNA is unwound and
nucleotides are matched to make two new strands. If the sequence of the nucleotides in a gene changes, the sequence of the amino acids in the protein it produces may also change—if part of a gene is deleted, the protein produced is shorter and may not work anymore.
Genes are copied Genes are copied each time a cell divides into two new cells. The process that copies DNA is called
DNA replication. Mutations produce new alleles of genes. Sometimes these changes stop the functioning of that gene or make it serve another advantageous function, such as the melanin genes discussed above. These mutations and their effects on the traits of organisms are one of the causes of
evolution. ==Genes and evolution==