Explain DNA Sequence Encoding
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Biology › Explain DNA Sequence Encoding
A student compares DNA to written language: letters form words, and the order of letters changes meaning (CAT vs. TAC). Which statement best matches this analogy to DNA?
DNA stores information because A always pairs with T and C always pairs with G, similar to how every word must have the same letters
DNA stores information mainly in how tightly it is coiled, similar to how bold font changes a word’s meaning
DNA stores information in the number of hydrogen bonds, similar to how the number of pages changes a story’s meaning
DNA stores information in the sequence of A, T, G, and C, similar to how letter order forms different words
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order). A gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein. The information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! The analogy of letters forming words matches how base order in DNA forms different genetic 'words' or instructions. Choice B correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice A fails because coiling (like chromatin packing) regulates access but doesn't store the primary information—sequence does. Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways. (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish). (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes). (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein. The SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence. The DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order. Change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions. With 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build! This is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
DNA is sometimes described as a biological “code.” In this idea, what does a DNA base sequence most directly specify?
Instructions that can be used to build proteins (and help control cell functions)
The exact number of cells an organism will have at birth
The shape of the DNA molecule only, not any instructions
A fixed list of traits that cannot be influenced by the environment
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order). A gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein. The information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! As a 'code,' DNA sequences directly specify instructions for proteins and cell functions. Choice A correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice B fails because DNA doesn't specify exact cell numbers; that's influenced by other factors. Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways. (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish). (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes). (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein. The SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence. The DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order. Change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions. With 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build! This is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
A textbook states: “DNA stores genetic information in the sequence of nucleotide bases.” Which statement is the best interpretation of this idea?
The information is stored in the order of A, T, G, and C, which can specify instructions for building cellular products.
The information is stored in how tightly the DNA is coiled, not in the bases themselves.
The information is stored in the bonds between sugar molecules in the backbone.
The information is stored only in the overall length of DNA, regardless of the base order.
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order); a gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein; the information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! The textbook quote about nucleotide base sequence is interpreted by linking base order to storage of instructions for cellular products like proteins. Choice B correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice A fails by suggesting coiling stores info, but that's chromatin packing—actual data is in base sequence, so differentiate structure from code! Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways; (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish); (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes); (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein—the SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence; the DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order; change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions; with 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build—this is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
DNA is sometimes compared to digital information storage. In this analogy, what is most like the “data” being stored?
The number of times DNA has been copied during cell division.
The fact that DNA is located in the nucleus.
The specific sequence of bases (A, T, G, C) along the DNA strand.
The thickness of the DNA molecule.
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order); a gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein; the information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! Comparing DNA to digital storage, the stimulus emphasizes how base order serves as the core data, directly tying to encoded genetic messages. Choice B correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice A fails by pointing to nuclear location, which is about containment, not encoding— the data is in the sequence itself, so keep that distinction clear! Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways; (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish); (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes); (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein—the SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence; the DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order; change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions; with 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build—this is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
A teacher writes two “words” using DNA’s four-letter alphabet: Word 1: AAGTCC; Word 2: AACTGC. Both words are six letters long. What is the best reason these two DNA “words” could mean different things to a cell?
Because the cell ignores base order and reads only the total number of bases.
Because DNA messages depend on the sequence order; different arrangements of bases can encode different instructions.
Because proteins determine the DNA sequence, so DNA does not actually store information.
Because DNA can only encode information if it contains equal numbers of A, T, G, and C.
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order); a gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein; the information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! The teacher's DNA 'words' AAGTCC and AACTGC, both six bases long, can mean differently due to order, linking sequence arrangements to varied cellular interpretations. Choice A correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice B fails by requiring equal base numbers, but unequal counts can still form unique sequences—concentrate on arrangement for the right perspective! Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways; (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish); (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes); (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein—the SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence; the DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order; change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions; with 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build—this is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
A researcher compares two genes and finds that Gene X and Gene Y are the same length but have many bases in different positions. What does this most strongly suggest about the information in these genes?
They store information mainly in the hydrogen bonds between paired bases, so base positions do not matter.
They likely store different instructions because different base sequences can encode different genetic information.
They store information only if their bases appear in alphabetical order.
They must store the same instructions because only gene length determines genetic information.
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order); a gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein; the information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! For genes X and Y with same length but differing base positions, this suggests varied sequences encode distinct information, connecting order differences to unique genetic instructions. Choice A correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice B fails by claiming length alone determines info, but sequences of equal length can differ vastly—emphasize order over length for accuracy! Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways; (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish); (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes); (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein—the SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence; the DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order; change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions; with 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build—this is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
A gene is a segment of DNA that provides instructions for making a specific product in the cell (often a protein). What makes one gene different from another gene?
Different genes are defined mainly by having different numbers of DNA strands (some are single-stranded, some are double-stranded).
Different genes have the same sequence, but the cell reads them in random order to create different proteins.
Different genes have different base sequences (different orders of A, T, G, and C), which can specify different instructions.
Different genes are made of different kinds of sugars in the DNA backbone.
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order); a gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein; the information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! Genes as instruction segments for products like proteins are distinguished by their unique base orders, connecting sequence variation to diverse cellular outputs. Choice A correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice B fails by claiming different sugars define genes, but all DNA uses the same deoxyribose sugar— the distinction is in base sequence, so clarify that to build your knowledge! Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways; (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish); (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes); (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein—the SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence; the DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order; change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions; with 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build—this is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
Consider this change in a DNA segment: Original: ATGCCGTT; Changed: ATGCTGTT. The two sequences differ by one base. Conceptually, why might this single change matter?
It might change the genetic information because changing the base order can change the message, like changing one letter in a word.
It matters only if the total length of the DNA changes; single-base substitutions do not affect information.
It matters only if the DNA becomes a different shape (not because of the sequence itself).
It cannot matter because any sequence with A, T, G, and C always encodes the same instructions.
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order); a gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein; the information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! The single-base change from ATGCCGTT to ATGCTGTT illustrates how altering order impacts encoding, linking to potential shifts in protein instructions like a misspelled word changing meaning. Choice B correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice A fails by saying sequence doesn't matter, but it absolutely does—any arrangement can encode uniquely, so reinforce that order is the code! Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways; (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish); (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes); (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein—the SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence; the DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order; change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions; with 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build—this is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
A student says, “If two DNA segments have the same number of A, T, G, and C bases, they must contain the same genetic information.” Which response best corrects the student?
Correct; the information is stored in the sugar-phosphate backbone, so base order does not matter.
Incorrect; genetic information is stored in the shape of the DNA helix, not in the bases.
Correct; genetic information depends only on the total amounts of each base, not on their arrangement.
Incorrect; genetic information depends on the order of bases, so the same base counts can still form different sequences with different instructions.
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order); a gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein; the information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! The student's claim about identical base counts implying same information is addressed by showing how sequence order, not just counts, encodes distinct instructions in DNA segments. Choice B correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice A fails by agreeing with the error that only totals matter, but order is key—gently correct by emphasizing permutations of the same bases create different codes! Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways; (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish); (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes); (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein—the SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence; the DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order; change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions; with 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build—this is how your DNA makes YOU unique!
Two short DNA segments are shown: Sequence 1: ATGCCG and Sequence 2: GCATCG. They contain the same four types of bases (A, T, G, C), but in a different order. Why can these two sequences store different genetic information?
Because information depends only on how many total bases are present, not their order.
Because the sugar-phosphate backbone (not the bases) is what carries the genetic instructions.
Because DNA only stores information when the bases are arranged alphabetically (A, C, G, T).
Because the specific order of bases acts like a code; different base orders can specify different instructions.
Explanation
This question tests your understanding of how DNA encodes genetic information through the specific order of nitrogenous bases (A, T, G, C) in sequences that provide instructions for building proteins and controlling cellular processes. DNA functions as an information storage molecule using a four-letter alphabet (the bases A, T, G, C) where the SEQUENCE—the specific order of these bases—encodes genetic instructions, just like the order of letters in words conveys meaning (CAT and ACT use the same letters but mean different things because of order); a gene is a specific segment of DNA with a particular base sequence that provides the complete instructions for making one protein: for example, the insulin gene has a unique sequence of about 1,400 base pairs that tells cells exactly how to build insulin protein, while the hemoglobin gene has a completely different sequence of about 1,800 base pairs specifying hemoglobin protein; the information is in the SEQUENCE—change even one base and you might change the protein produced, which is why DNA sequence is so critical to inheritance and why mutations (sequence changes) can have effects! For the two sequences ATGCCG and GCATCG, even though they use the same bases, their different orders connect to unique information storage, as the base arrangement dictates distinct instructions for protein synthesis or cellular functions. Choice B correctly explains that DNA encodes information through specific base sequences that determine protein instructions. Choice A fails because the sugar-phosphate backbone provides structure, not the genetic code, which is carried by the base order—keep focusing on sequence to avoid this common mix-up! Understanding DNA as information storage: think of DNA like a COOKBOOK analogy: (1) The four bases (A, T, G, C) are like four basic ingredients that can be arranged in countless ways; (2) Each gene is like one recipe—a specific sequence of bases (ingredients in specific order) that tells how to make one protein (one dish); (3) The entire DNA molecule is like the whole cookbook containing thousands of recipes (genes); (4) Just as changing the order of steps in a recipe changes the outcome, changing the order of bases in a gene changes the protein—the SEQUENCE is everything—same bases in different order = completely different instruction! Sequence specificity: why does order matter so much? Because proteins are built from amino acids in a specific sequence (like beads on a string in specific order), and the DNA base sequence determines the amino acid sequence; the DNA sequence ATGCCGTTAGCA (example) might specify: amino acid 1, then amino acid 2, then amino acid 3, etc. in that exact order; change the DNA sequence to ATGCTGTTAGCA (one base different: C→T in position 5) and you might get a different amino acid in that position, potentially changing how the protein folds and functions; with 20 different amino acids and proteins often 100+ amino acids long, the number of possible proteins is astronomical—and DNA sequence specifies exactly which one to build—this is how your DNA makes YOU unique!