Genetics is the biology of heredity, and geneticists are the scientists and researchers who study hereditary processes such as the inheritance of traits, distinctive characteristics, and diseases. Genetics considers the biochemical instructions that convey information from generation to generation. Tremendous strides in science and technology have enabled geneticists to demonstrate that some genet…
The study of genetics—the inheritance of traits in living organisms—is a basic concept in biology. The same processes that provide the mechanism for organisms to pass genetic information to their offspring lead to the gradual change of species over time, which in turn produces biodiversity (the variety of life and the genetic differences among living organisms) and the evolution of n…
The term "evolution" has multiple meanings; it is most generally used to describe the theory that all organisms are linked via descent to a common ancestor. Evolution also refers to the gradual process during which change occurs. In biology it is the theory that groups of organisms, such as species, change or develop over long periods of time so that their descendants differ from the…
Although genetics clearly controls many of an organism's traits, it is simplistic and incorrect to assume that organisms, including humans, are completely defined by their genes. While there are some phenotypes (observable traits) that are exclusively controlled by either genetics or environment, most are influenced by a complex interaction of the two. Modern genetic study defines environme…
It has long been known that heredity affects health. Genetics, the study of single genes and their effects on the body and mind, explains how and why certain traits such as hair color and blood types run in families. Genomics, a discipline that is only about two decades old, is the study of more than single genes; it considers the functions and interactions of all the genes in the genome. In terms…
Over the course of the last decade, the definitions of health and disease have been transformed by advances in genetics. Genetic testing has enabled researchers and clinicians to detect inherited traits, diagnose heritable conditions, determine and quantify the likelihood that a heritable disease will develop, and identify genetic susceptibility to familial disorders. Many of the strides made in g…
In 1953 James Watson and Francis Crick described the double helical structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Their molecular DNA structure was published in Nature on April 25, 1953, in an article that was little more than one page. Their article ushered in a new age of discovery in genetics and laid the foundation for the sequencing of the human genome. The word "genome" was derived…
The Human Genome Project defines three distinct types of cloning. The first is the use of highly specialized deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) technology to produce multiple, exact copies of a single gene or other segment of DNA to obtain sufficient material to examine for research purposes. This process produces cloned collections of DNA known as clone libraries. The second kind of cloning involves the…
The dawn of the new millennium saw explosive advances in biotechnology. Technological breakthroughs offered scientists and physicians unprecedented opportunities to develop previously inconceivable solutions to pressing problems in agriculture, environmental science, and medicine. Simultaneously, researchers, politicians, ethicists, theologians, and the public were challenged to assess, analyze, a…
Rapid advances in genetics and its applications pose new and complicated ethical, legal, regulatory, and policy issues for individuals and society. The issues society must consider include how to protect and manage genetic information and who should have access to it; the consequences of knowledge about personal genetic information for individuals; and the repercussions of genomic information for …
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There are many published accounts of the history of genetics, but some of the most exciting versions were written by the pioneering researchers themselves. Although many sources were used to construct the historical overview and highlights contained in this book, James Watson's The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA (New York: Simon & Schuster, …