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Big, muscular people look as if they can resist anything. But they can have
allergies or asthma, or be injured by chemicals, too. And the bigger they come,
the more skin the sun can burn! Most of us, for example, can get sunburned on a bright day. Your reaction will be greater if you are outside, without much on, for a long time. Your reaction will be less if you cover your exposed skin with lots of sun screen. How badly you burn can depend on your age and previous exposure. (Babies and toddlers need a lot more protection.) Finally, if one or both of your parents burn very easily, they may have passed that sensitivity to you in your genes. |
| Genes are the instructions -- the marching orders -- that direct our growth,
what we look like, and how we react to things in our world, or environment.
Each human - whether infant, child, teen or adult - has 70,000 pairs of these orders, or genes. They tell our bodies' cells what to be and how to behave. Do you remember transformer toys? You twisted them one way and they were space ships. You twisted them another way and they became robot warriors. Well, under the genes' orders, the cells become the ultimate in transformer robots. The genes instruct our original dab of cells, as they divide, to become different - muscle, bone, lung, or brain cells, or part of a toe. As a result of what the cells become and do, we grow. And we stand and run and catch footballs and dance - more or less with grace and skill. We breathe. We think! |
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| The complete package of genes for an animal - what makes a dog a dog - is
called its genome. These packages or genomes are why people give birth to
babies, dogs to puppies, and cats to kittens. Many of the genes in other animals are similar to those in humans. After all, people and animals, like our dogs, all have to do certain things, like digesting food, so we need a similar gene for that. When we are loyal, frisky and bright-eyed - and tip over garbage cans - maybe it's those shared genes? |
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Getting features from our parentsis called our heredity, the sum of our genes. But our genes alone will not determine all things, like size. A child who is sick for a long time or doesn't eat well, for example, may not grow as tall as his or her parents.The reverse can happen, too. Good nutrition, clean air and water, vaccines, and simple hand washing can prevent diseases and help a kid soar above shorter parents. In such ways, the substances you touch and breathe, and your personal habits and nutrition play important roles. Along with your genes, the good and bad things in your world help decide who you are, how you feel and whether you get sick or stay well. |
| Proteins -- not just beans and a big, juicy steak, but a key to all
life! There are thousands of proteins, each made up, in part, of nitrogen, the colorless gas that makes up most of our air. Proteins are found in animal muscle (steak) and skin, bone and all the "stuff" of life, every cell of an animal or plant. They are also what make the body work: They are necessary for the chemical reactions that make muscles flex, brains think, and stomachs produce digestive fluids. Think of genes as the orders or plans for a house. (This house could be your body, your dog 's body or your petunia plant.) Picture the proteins as not only the nuts and bolts, plaster and concrete, wood beams and floors, but also as the workers that create and assemble these things and set the furnace and lights and gas stove to working. |
| How small are your genes? When you stuff yourself into a pair of tight jeans, think about how your 70,000 gene pairs are stuffed by the thousands into 23 pairs of long capsules called chromosomes -- which are in every one of our cells. Even chromosomes are invisible to the naked eye. When these paired chromosomes have been stained, however, they can be seen under a very good magnifying microscope. Here 's some trivia that could win a prize on a TV quiz: "Chromo" is a Greek word for "color" or "stain," and "some" (rhymes with "home") is Greek for "body." |
| And remember that the natural substances we encounter can sometimes change a
gene. Scientists say that some of our genes were modified by conditions hundreds
of years ago and were passed to us from our great, great grandparents.
Today, the chemicals or X-rays we need and use also can affect genes, especially if people are careless about how they handle these things. Smoking causes changes in the genes of our lungs and other places in the body. Such a poison can garble a gene's code. The poison can affect the message that a gene sends to cells to tell them what to do, how to assemble, and how to grow. It can undermine the cell's way of correcting mistakes that can occur in the DNA - the chemical chain that carries our genes. |
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What gene variations make people respond differently?Researchers are studying how different people respond differently to harmful substances. They have found that common differences in genes can affect the human body's responses.For example, some genes signal the making of proteins called enzymes, in the lungs. Ordinarily these enzymes, or active substances, destroy some of the cancer-causing substances in tobacco smoke. But researchers have found a gene variation that may reduce these enzymes and make people more susceptible to lung cancer. |
| Something similar may happen in emphysema (em-fizz-ZEEM-a), a disease in which a person's lung tissue deteriorates and he or she has a hard time breathing. Tobacco smoke, solvents used in factories, and other chemicals and air pollutants can produce changes in lung tissue and cells and even in the molecules the cells are made of. Variations of a gene may mean more - or less - production of an enzyme that protects against these changes. |
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| A few people may have a variation that make them very resistant to a
chemical. A few may have a variation that gives them a high chance of being hurt by the same substance. Most of us may be somewhere in between. |
The Environmental Genome Project meshes with the Human Genome Project, which seeks to
map every one of the 70,000 or more genes in humans - the whole instruction book
for "human beings." (About half the human genes have now been
located.)
The newer "Environmental Genome Project" looks at genes that
have already been located. These particular genes have been shown to play a role
in how we react to environmental substances. Scientists want to see how these
genes differ in different people, what percentage of us have which variations,
and what these variations mean in terms of our reactions.
These are not
genes that give clear orders for a disease regardless of other factors. Instead,
these genes determine our weakness or strength in the face of various metals,
natural and human-made chemicals, radiation, and such. They are called
"susceptibility genes."

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