An abbreviation for deoxyribonucleic acid, one of the two types of NUCLEIC ACID that occur in nature. It is the fundamental genetic material of all CELLS, and is present in the nucleus of the cell where it forms part of the CHROMOSOME and acts as the carrier of genetic information. The molecule is very large, with a molecular weight of several millions, and consists of two single chains of nucleotides (see NUCLEIC ACID) which are twisted round each other to form a double helix (or spiral). The genetic information carried by DNA is encoded along one of these strands. A GENE, which represents the genetic information needed to form protein, is a stretch of DNA containing, on average, around 1,000 nucleotides paired in these two strands.
To allow it to fulfil its vitally important function as the carrier of genetic information in living cells, DNA has the following properties. It is stable, so that successive generations of species maintain their individual characteristics, but not so stable that evolutionary changes cannot take place. It must be able to store a vast amount of information: for example, an animal cell contains genetic information for the synthesis of over a million proteins. It must be duplicated exactly before each cell division to ensure that both daughter cells contain an accurate copy of the genetic information of the parent cells (see CELLS; GENETIC CODE).
Because of the uniqueness of an individual's DNA, it has been widely used for identification purposes – for example by forensic scientists involved in crime detection.