Unconfigured Ad

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • ardmore
    Member
    • Jun 2011
    • 51

    A basic base pair (dna) question

    This question seems to be silly, but my major is not biology. So hopefully somebody can give me a plain explaintion.

    We all know a DNA for humanbeing has two chains.
    Can we say one chain comes from father, the other one is from mother?


    Thanks.
  • stefanoberri
    Member
    • Jan 2010
    • 35

    #2
    You are mixing two things.

    We have 22 pairs of chromosomes + 2 sex chromosomes. For each pair, one comes from the mother, the other from the father.
    Each chromosome is made by two long complementary DNA molecules. The famous double helix. However both the strands come from the same parent.
    Look up those terms in Wikipedia and follow relevant links for further details. Hope this helps.

    Comment

    • Joann
      Senior Member
      • Oct 2008
      • 230

      #3
      messages

      Also keep in mind that the message (that results in biological structure) is read from one strand of a double strand "chain" and that in the case when DNA is replicated during cell division in a growing organism, the double stranded chain unwinds to permit complementary duplication of each.

      Comment

      • ardmore
        Member
        • Jun 2011
        • 51

        #4
        Thanks for kind help.

        Comment

        • ardmore
          Member
          • Jun 2011
          • 51

          #5
          I still have something to ask. Example, suppose in chromsome 12(mother side) bp 50,000,000 to 50,000,004, the sequence data in one strand is "AGCT", so how about the other strand in the same position?

          Then how about the sequence in chromsome 12 father side, the same position?

          Comment

          • stefanoberri
            Member
            • Jan 2010
            • 35

            #6
            On the other STRAND OF THE SAME CHROMOSOME, it will say 'TCGA'.
            On the same (let's say plus) strand of the other chromosome (from the father) it is very likely to say 'AGCT', but it might have a variant allele and be 'ATCT'. If this is the case, the other STRAND of the father chromosome will be 'TAGA'.

            The two strand are ALWAYS complementary. if this is not the case, the cell will try to fix one of the two. The two chromosomes, however, can be different. They carry the same information but they might have two different versions (alleles) of a given piece of information.

            For instance you might have that your mother's chromosome, somewhere says you should be blood type A, your father's chomosome, in the SAME POSITION, says that you are blood type B and you end up being blood type AB

            Comment

            • ardmore
              Member
              • Jun 2011
              • 51

              #7
              So for SNP, does it refer to mother side chromsome or father side chromsome or both?

              Comment

              • stefanoberri
                Member
                • Jan 2010
                • 35

                #8
                either

                if you find a heterozygous SNP, it means one of the two chromosomes, for that position, had a nucleotide different from the reference genome. If it is a homozigous SNP it means that both are different from the reference genome. You can't tell if it is the mother's or the father's chromosome, uless you have the same information for the two parents as well.

                Comment

                • ardmore
                  Member
                  • Jun 2011
                  • 51

                  #9
                  I found a link at http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1175
                  Code:
                  Explanation by example:
                  
                  SNPs
                  
                  Heterozygous:
                  
                  GCTA
                  GCCA
                  
                  
                  Homozygous:
                  
                  GCTA
                  GCTA
                  What does it mean? The first line comes from one strand of (mother or father chromsome)? The second line comes from the reference genome?

                  Comment

                  • stefanoberri
                    Member
                    • Jan 2010
                    • 35

                    #10
                    ...

                    So, that link is right, but inclomplete as it assumes you know DNA is double stranded but just does not write the other strand, because you can get it yourself.
                    Here how it would look like reporting both strands

                    Heterozygous:

                    ...GCTA...
                    ...CGAT...


                    ...GCCA...
                    ...CGGT...


                    Homozygous:

                    ...GCTA...
                    ...CGAT...


                    ...GCTA...
                    ...CGAT...

                    Comment

                    • ardmore
                      Member
                      • Jun 2011
                      • 51

                      #11
                      Okay, for the safety, let me clarify it. Please correct me if I am wrong.
                      Code:
                      Heterozygous SNP:
                      
                      GCTA...strand 1 in mother chromsome
                      CGAT...strand 2 in mother chromsome
                      
                      
                      GCCA...strand 1 in father chromsome
                      CGGT...strand 2 in father chromsome
                      
                      Homozygous SNP:
                      
                      GCTA...strand 1 in mother chromsome
                      CGAT...strand 2 in mother chromsome
                      
                      GCTA...strand 1 in father chromsome
                      CGAT...strand 2 in father chromsome

                      Comment

                      • stefanoberri
                        Member
                        • Jan 2010
                        • 35

                        #12
                        that's right

                        Comment

                        • ardmore
                          Member
                          • Jun 2011
                          • 51

                          #13
                          One follow up question, I am using Plink software. Please look at http://pngu.mgh.harvard.edu/~purcell...data.shtml#ped
                          Code:
                          CHR          SNP   A1   A2          MAF       NM
                                  1         snp1    C    A         0.25        8
                                 23         snp2    C    A          0.2        5
                                 24         snp3    C    A            0        1
                                 25         snp4    C    A         0.25        8
                                 26         snp5    C    A            0        2
                          So
                          A1 comes strand 1, either mother or father chromsome.
                          A2 comes strand 2, either mother or father chromsome.

                          Comment

                          Latest Articles

                          Collapse

                          • SEQadmin2
                            Advanced Sequencing Platforms Tackle Neuroscience’s Toughest Genomics Problems
                            by SEQadmin2



                            Genomics studies in neuroscience face a special challenge due to the brain’s complexity and scarcity of samples. Mapping changes in cell type and state using conventional next-generation sequencing methods remains challenging. Advances in technologies like single-cell sequencing, spatial transcriptomics, and long-read sequencing have opened the door to deeper studies of the brain and diseases like Alzheimer’s, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and schizophrenia.
                            ...
                            07-09-2026, 11:10 AM
                          • SEQadmin2
                            Cancer Drug Resistance: The Lingering Barrier to Rising Survival
                            by SEQadmin2



                            Cancer survival rates have significantly increased in the last few decades in the United States, reaching a combined 70% 5-year survival rate by 2021. Behind this number, there are years of research to find new therapies, drug targets, and early detection methods. But there is one core challenge that keeps slowing down these advances, and it’s about drug resistance.

                            There is no single reason why many patients don’t respond to treatment as expected. Cancer is...
                            07-08-2026, 05:17 AM
                          • GATTACAT
                            Reply to Nine Things a Sample Prep Scientist Thinks About Before Sequencing
                            by GATTACAT
                            Love this - good data definitely starts from good input, and poor input can only give relatively poor data. I particularly like the mention of Nanodrop/absorbance based methods for quantification. It's such a toss up if you'll get an accurate reading or what amounts to a randomly generated number, and a lot of library/sequencing related issues can be traced back to poor quant.
                            07-01-2026, 11:43 AM

                          ad_right_rmr

                          Collapse

                          News

                          Collapse

                          Topics Statistics Last Post
                          Started by SEQadmin2, 07-13-2026, 10:26 AM
                          0 responses
                          24 views
                          0 reactions
                          Last Post SEQadmin2  
                          Started by SEQadmin2, 07-09-2026, 10:04 AM
                          0 responses
                          33 views
                          0 reactions
                          Last Post SEQadmin2  
                          Started by SEQadmin2, 07-08-2026, 10:08 AM
                          0 responses
                          21 views
                          0 reactions
                          Last Post SEQadmin2  
                          Started by SEQadmin2, 07-07-2026, 11:05 AM
                          0 responses
                          34 views
                          0 reactions
                          Last Post SEQadmin2  
                          Working...