English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If you take a piece of paper or anything, and fold it or bend it, it becomes thicker. However, if you unravel a DNA molecule it is 3 feet in length. When it is folded in the nucleus it is 1 millionth of an inch. How can that happen?

2007-02-04 12:41:11 · 3 answers · asked by 007 2 in Science & Mathematics Biology

3 answers

DNA isn't folded but wound up in a spiral(technically a double helix), it doesn't decrease in size, but in length.
if you take a piece of thread and wind it all around your finger and compare it's length when it's all streched out, then you'll know what i mean.
God bless,
gabe

2007-02-04 12:58:19 · answer #1 · answered by gabegm1 4 · 1 0

it doesn't decrease in size; it decreases in length. a human cell would have over a meter of DNA if it was stretched out, but if u keep folding it, it becomes thicker yes, but not as long, and so it can fit inside a cell.

2007-02-04 12:45:06 · answer #2 · answered by kz 4 · 0 0

theoretically if paper was strong enough you could fold it so tight that it does not gain any thickness and that is the same way dna works

2007-02-04 12:46:13 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers