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The Gene Explained | Super Gene
Special | 2m 58sVideo has Closed Captions
See what happens if DNA code gets deleted, put in the wrong place, or switched.
Computer code is finicky. If one line, or if one character is off, then the whole program can go sideways. Genetic code isn't much different. In this episode, we see what happens if code gets deleted, put in the wrong place, or switched with other code.
Funding for KEN BURNS PRESENTS THE GENE: AN INTIMATE HISTORY has been provided by Genentech, 23andMe, Cancer Treatment Centers of America, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Gray Foundation, American Society of...
![The Gene](https://image.pbs.org/contentchannels/COI6JLK-white-logo-41-qNmxShh.png?format=webp&resize=200x)
The Gene Explained | Super Gene
Special | 2m 58sVideo has Closed Captions
Computer code is finicky. If one line, or if one character is off, then the whole program can go sideways. Genetic code isn't much different. In this episode, we see what happens if code gets deleted, put in the wrong place, or switched with other code.
How to Watch The Gene
The Gene is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
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![The Gene Explained](https://image.pbs.org/curate-console/404dd365-ed51-42aa-a3fc-f8cebb55a83f.jpg?format=webp&resize=860x)
The Gene Explained
What the heck is a gene, anyway? This animated series won’t get you a PhD, but it does clear up a few mysteries about how genes work and what they might look like in the future. (Microscope not required.)More from This Collection
The Gene Explained | The Gene That Transformed
Video has Closed Captions
What terrifying things go on inside of chrysalis, and what dark role do genes play? (3m 9s)
The Gene Explained | Is That a Banana in Your Genes?
Video has Closed Captions
Humans are indeed genetically related to bananas (as well as slugs), but how exactly? (3m 21s)
The Gene Explained | Invasion of the Gene Snatchers
Video has Closed Captions
How do viruses work? Sort of like an alien invasion that replaces our cell’s genetic code. (3m 1s)
The Gene Explained | Gene Damage
Video has Closed Captions
What goes on in our DNA to make us grow grey hair, wrinkles and less than healthy DNA? (3m 25s)
The Gene Explained | A Big Wooly Gene
Video has Closed Captions
In this episode, we delve into the difficulties of resurrecting extinct animals. (3m)
The Gene Explained | What the Gene Is That?
Video has Closed Captions
See how scientists are expanding the DNA alphabet & what to look for in the search for E.T (3m 6s)
The Gene Explained | Good Genes Gone Bad
Video has Closed Captions
What causes cancer and ways to calm down those "good genes that have gone bad." (2m 58s)
The Gene Explained | Gene Whiz! It's a Boy!
Video has Closed Captions
If you're curious about the origin of boys, look no further than the Y chromosome. (2m 49s)
The Gene Explained | Gene Strike!
Video has Closed Captions
Take a peek into the body's war room during the heat of battle with cancer. (2m 24s)
The Gene Explained | Gene Filled Donuts
Video has Closed Captions
How DNA's mysterious instructions buried in a gene become the actual nose on a face. (2m 14s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(funky music) (Male rat mumbling) ♪ Mutant mutant super powered mutant ♪ (Male rat giggles) - What are you doing?
- I'm making myself into a ♪ Super powered mutant ♪ - Super powered?
- Venom spitting, stinger stinging (giggles).
- Look man, I don't know what you're mixing there but you are just gonna end up a puddle of hair.
- No, I'm going to change my DNI.
- Okay, well, good luck.
Wait did you mean DNA?
You're going to change your DNA?
- That's what I said.
- Do you know how hard it is to change DNA?
DNA is a tough code to crack.
The cell it's housed in has all kinds of fail safes to keep hackers out.
- [Male Rat] All right, hit me.
I'm plugged in and ready to break the code.
- I doubt it but okay.
DNA tells the body how to make the proteins that make us.
Each unit of code is three letters long but the last letter doesn't always matter.
Think of it like a silent E. Sometimes you need it to get the right word but not always.
That means you can change a letter in the code and still end up just like you are.
- [Male Rat] But it could change something, right?
- [Female Rat] Sure but you're not gonna get flashy changes that way.
- [Male Rat] Ooh, what about deleting a letter?
I bet that'll get flashy changes.
- [Female Rat] Oh, it will give you changes called a frameshift mutation, making all the codes wrong and creating chaos.
- Oh, sweet, frameshift mutation it is!
- [Female Rat] More like this.
- [Male Rat] Well, how'd the viper get its venom or the scorpion get its stinger or the baboon get its red butt?
(baboon farts) - [Female Rat] They probably got their powers the hard way, lots of small mutations over a long time.
Take the scorpion.
Its venom might've started out as a duplication code that doesn't really have a purpose and it's left to go wild.
So maybe it mutates again and produces a protein that is a little more toxic.
That could happen again and again until the venom is really nasty.
- That's exactly what I want.
- [Female Rat] Well, even if that kind of change was possible, it's something that only your great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great grandkids would get to enjoy.
- Oh, sweet!
(upbeat jazz music)
Funding for KEN BURNS PRESENTS THE GENE: AN INTIMATE HISTORY has been provided by Genentech, 23andMe, Cancer Treatment Centers of America, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Gray Foundation, American Society of...