
What are genes?
Your genes are the chemical codes that control everything about how your body works, how it's made, and what it looks like. People have over 20,000 different genes. Every cell in your body has a copy of each of your genes.
Cells are the microscopic building blocks of your body. Each of your organs is made of different types of cells. For example, you have nerve cells in your brain, liver cells in your liver, and cells in your stomach that make stomach acid. The way each cell grows and works is controlled by genes.
Some things in your body are controlled by just one gene. But most things, for example your height and weight, are controlled by many genes working together.
What are genes made of?
What are chromosomes?
Chromosomes are the structures within each cell that contain your genes. Each chromosome is a long string of DNA containing hundreds of genes all connected together. Cells contain 46 chromosomes arranged in 23 pairs. One of each pair of chromosomes comes from your mother and one comes from your father. That means half of your chromosomes (and half of your genes) came from each of your parents.
What is a genetic disorder?
A genetic disorder is a medical condition caused by a problem with your genes or chromosomes.
When you were conceived, an egg cell from your mother and a sperm cell from your father combined into one cell. That cell split into 2 cells. Then those 2 split into 4, and the 4 became 8, and so forth until a baby was formed of billions and billions of cells.
Each time the cells split, they had to make exact copies of each of your chromosomes with all their thousands of genes. Usually, the copies come out just fine, but sometimes there's an error. The error may be:
A mutation is an error in the copy of a single gene. A mutation in sperm cells if you're a man, or egg cells if you're a woman, can be passed on to your children. A mutation in any other type of cell can cause you problems, but you can't pass the mutation to your children. Mutations can be:
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Harmful: Many mutations cause problems
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Helpful: Rarely a mutation does something good like making you less likely to get a certain infection
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Neither harmful nor helpful: Most people have at least 100 mutated genes that don't seem to affect them
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Both harmful and helpful: For example, the mutation that causes sickle cell anemia also helps protect against malaria
A chromosome abnormality is an error copying a whole chromosome or a big piece of one. The result could be:
Chromosome abnormalities are almost always bad. Many result in a miscarriage (when you lose your baby before 20 weeks of pregnancy). A common chromosome abnormality that isn't fatal is Down syndrome.