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DNA
Living things are made of millions of tiny self-contained components called cells. Inside of each cell
are long and complex molecules calledDNA.[6] DNA stores information that tells the cells how to
create that living thing. Parts of this information that tell how to make one small part or characteristic
of the living thing red hair, or blue eyes, or a tendency to be tall are known as genes.
Every cell in the same living thing has the same DNA, but only some of it is used in each cell. For
instance, some genes that tell how to make parts of the liver are switched off in the brain. What
genes are used can also change over time. For instance, a lot of genes are used by a child early in
pregnancy that are not used later.
A living thing has two copies of each gene, one from its mother, and one from its father.[7] There can
be multiple types of each gene, which give different instructions: one version might cause a person
to have blue eyes, another might cause them to have brown. These different versions are known
as alleles of the gene.
Since a living thing has two copies of each gene, it can have two different alleles of it at the same
time. Often, one allele will be dominant, meaning that the living thing looks and acts as if it had only
that one allele. The unexpressed allele is called recessive. In other cases, you end up with
something in between the two possibilities. In that case, the two alleles are called co-dominant.
Most of the characteristics that you can see in a living thing have multiple genes that influence them.
And many genes have multiple effects on the body, because their function will not have the same
effect in each tissue. The multiple effects of a single gene is called pleiotropism. The whole set of
genes is called the genotype, and the total effect of genes on the body is called the phenotype.
These are key terms in genetics.