You'll need:
- 2 long sweets like Strawberry Lances or similar
- A few handfuls of soft sweets, like Jelly Babies
- About 10 cocktail sticks .
What to do:
1) Sort the jelly babies into colours. Keep four of the groups and eat the rest.
2) Pair up the jelly babies so that one colour always goes with another. e.g. red with green and yellow with purple.
3) Stick the pairs onto a cocktail stick like you are making mini-jelly baby kebabs.
4) The attach the jelly baby kebabs to the long sweets. Carry on doing this until you have something that looks a bit like a ladder.
5) Pick up your ladder and give it a twist.
Hey presto a model of DNA made from sweets!
So what does it all mean?
DNA contains the information needed to build a living thing. That info is recorded in the form of four bases called adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine (usually abbreviated to A,T,G and C). In my model each of the coloured jelly babies represent one of these bases. So lets say yellow is A, purple is T, green is G and red is C. In DNA the base T always pairs up opposite A, whilst C pairs with G. And to represent that I paired yellow with purple and green with red.
The DNA molecule then twists up to form a cork screw like (helical) shape, hence the twist I gave it at the end.
Our model of DNA represents just a tiny fragment of a real DNA molecule. In reality DNA could be billions of bases long (and I couldn't get hold of that many jelly babies).
thank you Mark for this post combining Food and Biology!
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