πŸ–₯️

Desktop Only

This website is currently optimized for desktop viewing only.

Please access this site from:

πŸ’» Desktop Computer

πŸ–₯️ Laptop

Mobile and tablet support coming soon!

Home / Bioinformatics / DNA Sequence

🧬 SEQ005

DNA Sequence from Escherichia coli

πŸ”¬ What is DNA?

DNA (Deoxyribonucleic Acid) is like a recipe book for life. It contains all the instructions needed to build and maintain an organism. Think of it as a very long instruction manual written in a 4-letter alphabet: A (Adenine), T (Thymine), G (Guanine), and C (Cytosine).

The order of these letters determines everything from your eye color to how your body fights diseases!

πŸ“‹ Sequence Overview

Organism Escherichia coli
Sequence Type gene
Length 2,100 base pairs
GC Content 48.90%

πŸ“ Size Comparison

This DNA sequence is 2,100 base pairs long. That's roughly the size of a bacterial gene cluster - imagine a paragraph in a book.

πŸ’‘ Did You Know?

If you printed this DNA sequence with 60 letters per line, it would take 35 lines of text!

DNA is incredibly tiny: A single human cell contains about 2 meters of DNA, but it's packed so tightly that you'd need a microscope to see it. If you unraveled all the DNA in your body, it would stretch to the Sun and back over 300 times!

GC Content matters: The 48.9% GC content in this sequence tells us about its stability. Higher GC content (like this would have) means stronger bonds and more heat resistance!

πŸ“Š Composition Analysis

This pie chart shows the balance between GC pairs (strong bonds) and AT pairs (weak bonds) in the DNA

🧬 DNA Sequence (Color-Coded)

A = Adenine (pairs with T)
T = Thymine (pairs with A)
G = Guanine (pairs with C)
C = Cytosine (pairs with G)
ATCGATCGTAGCTAGCTACGATCGATCGTACGATCGTAGCTA

Total nucleotides: 42

A: 11 | T: 11 | G: 10 | C: 10

πŸ€” What Does This All Mean?

For Scientists: This DNA sequence can be used to identify genes, study mutations, or compare with other organisms.

For Everyone Else: Think of this as a tiny piece of the instruction manual that makes Escherichia coli unique. Scientists can "read" these instructions to understand how life works!

The 48.9% GC content tells us this DNA has a balanced composition - typical of many common genes!