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{{otheruses4|the general scientific term|the scientific journal|Genetics (journal)}}
{{dablink|This article is about the United States denomination known as "United Church of Christ." For other merged denominations see [[United and uniting churches]]. For other churches that have the words "Church" and "Christ" in their name, see [[Church of Christ (disambiguation)]].}}
{{seeintro}}
'''Genetics''' (from [[Ancient Greek]] {{Polytonic|γενετικός}} ''{{lang|grc-Latn|genetikos}}'', “genitive” and that from {{Polytonic|γένεσις}} ''{{lang|grc-Latn|genesis}}'', “origin”<ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2321880 Genetikos, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, "A Greek-English Lexicon", at Perseus]</ref><ref>[http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2321873 Genesis, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, "A Greek-English Lexicon", at Perseus]</ref><ref>[http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=Genetic&searchmode=none Online Etymology Dictionary]</ref>), a discipline of [[biology]], is the [[science]] of [[heredity]] and [[Genetic variation|variation]] in living [[organism]]s.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.60 Chapter 1 (Genetics and the Organism): Introduction]</ref><ref name=Hartl_and_Jones>Hartl D, Jones E (2005)
</ref> The fact that living things inherit traits from their parents has been used since [[prehistoric]] times to improve crop plants and animals through [[selective breeding]]. However, the modern science of genetics, which seeks to understand the process of inheritance, only began with the work of [[Gregor Mendel]] in the mid-nineteenth century.<ref name=Weiling>{{cite journal| author=Weiling F| title=Historical study: Johann Gregor Mendel 1822–1884|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics| volume=40| issue=1|pages=1–25; discussion 26 |year=1991 |pmid=1887835| doi=10.1002/ajmg.1320400103}}</ref> Although he did not know the physical basis for heredity, Mendel observed that organisms inherit traits in a [[Countable set|discrete]] manner&mdash;these basic units of inheritance are now called [[gene]]s.
[[Image:DNA Overview2.png|thumb|right|upright|[[DNA]], the molecular basis for inheritance. Each strand of DNA is a chain of [[nucleotides]], matching each other in the center to form what look like rungs on a twisted ladder.]]


Genes correspond to regions within [[DNA]], a molecule composed of a chain of four different types of [[nucleotides]]&mdash;the sequence of these nucleotides is the genetic information organisms inherit. DNA naturally occurs in a double stranded form, with nucleotides on each strand complementary to each other. Each strand can act as a template for [[DNA replication|creating]] a new partner strand&mdash;this is the physical method for making copies of genes that can be inherited.
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The sequence of nucleotides in a gene is translated by [[cell (biology)|cells]] to produce a chain of [[amino acid]]s, creating [[protein]]s&mdash;the order of amino acids in a protein corresponds to the order of nucleotides in the gene. This is known as the [[genetic code]]. The amino acids in a protein determine how it folds into a three-dimensional shape; this structure is, in turn, responsible for the protein's function. Proteins carry out almost all the functions needed for cells to live. A change to the DNA in a gene can change a protein's amino acids, changing its shape and function: this can have a dramatic effect in the cell and on the organism as a whole.
{{Infobox Christian denomination
| name = United Church of Christ
| image = United Church of Christ logo.png
| imagewidth = 137px
| caption =
| main_classification = [[Protestant]]
| orientation = [[Mainline (Protestant)|Mainline]]
| polity = modified [[Congregationalist polity|Congregationalist]] and [[presbyterian polity|Presbyterian]]
| founder =
| founded_date = 1957
| founded_place =
| separated_from =
| parent =
| merger = [[Evangelical and Reformed Church]] and the [[Congregational Christian Churches]]
| separations =
| associations = [[Churches Uniting In Christ]]<br>[[National Council of Churches]]<br>[[World Alliance of Reformed Churches]]<br>[[World Council of Churches]]
| area = [[United States]]
| congregations = 5,518
| members = 1.2 million
| footnotes =
}}


Although genetics plays a large role in the appearance and behavior of organisms, it is the combination of genetics with what an organism experiences that determines the ultimate outcome. For example, while genes play a role in determining a person's [[human height|height]], the [[nutrition]] and [[health]] that person experiences in childhood also have a large effect.
The '''United Church of Christ''' ('''UCC''') is a [[mainline Protestant|mainline]] [[Protestantism|Protestant]] [[Christian denomination]] principally in the [[United States]], generally considered within the [[Reformed churches|Reformed]] tradition, and formed in 1957 by the union of two denominations, the '''[[Evangelical and Reformed Church]]''' and the '''[[Congregational Christian Churches]]'''.


==History==
According to the 2007 yearbook, the United Church of Christ has approximately 1.2 million members and is composed of approximately 5,518 local congregations.
{{main|History of genetics}}


[[Image:Sexlinked inheritance white.jpg|right|thumb|Morgan's observation of sex-linked inheritance of a mutation causing white eyes in ''[[Drosophila]]'' led him to the hypothesis that genes are located upon chromosomes.]]
Like denominations within the Reform tradition in general, the UCC organizes itself along congregational lines overseen by synods.


Genetics also has to do with cloning, which is exactly two people that are alike, it is an interesting topic we all say. Although the science of genetics began with the applied and theoretical work of [[Gregor Mendel]] in the mid-1800s, other theories of inheritance preceded Mendel. A popular theory during Mendel's time was the concept of [[blending inheritance]]: the idea that individuals inherit a smooth blend of traits from their parents. Mendel's work disproved this, showing that traits are composed of combinations of distinct genes rather than a continuous blend. Another theory that had some support at that time was the [[inheritance of acquired characteristics]]: the belief that individuals inherit traits strengthened by their parents. This theory (commonly associated with [[Jean-Baptiste Lamarck]]) is now known to be wrong&mdash;the experiences of individuals do not affect the genes they pass to their children.<ref>Lamarck, J-B (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from [http://www.search.eb.com/eb/article-273180 Encyclopædia Britannica Online] on [[2008-03-16]].</ref> Other theories included the [[pangenesis]] of [[Charles Darwin]] (which had both acquired and inherited aspects) and [[Francis Galton]]'s reformulation of pangenesis as both particulate and inherited.<ref>[[Peter J. Bowler]], ''The Mendelian Revolution: The Emergency of Hereditarian Concepts in Modern Science and Society'' (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989): chapters 2 and 3.</ref>
Although similar in name, the UCC denomination is theologically and, for the most part, historically distinct from the [[Churches of Christ]], a loose affiliation of conservative congregations<ref name="CCCC-Members">{{cite web | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= |date=[[2005-10-17]]| year=2005 | month=10 | url=http://www.adherents.com/largecom/fam_cccc.html | title=Famous members of the Christian Churches and Churches of Christ | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=Adherents.com | language= | accessdate=2006-12-24 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref> that arose primarily from the Stone-Campbell [[Restoration Movement]] in the 19th century.


===Mendelian and classical genetics===
==Origins of the United Church of Christ==
The modern science of genetics traces its roots to [[Gregor Johann Mendel]], a German-Czech Augustinian [[monk]] and scientist who studied the nature of inheritance in plants. In his paper "Versuche über Pflanzenhybriden" ("[[Experiments on Plant Hybridization]]"), presented in 1865 to the ''Naturforschender Verein'' (Society for Research in Nature) in [[Brünn]], Mendel traced the inheritance patterns of certain traits in pea plants and described them mathematically.<ref name="mendel">{{cite journal | author=Mendel, GJ | title=[[Experiments on Plant Hybridization|Versuche über Pflanzen-Hybriden]] | journal=Verhandlungen des naturforschenden Vereins Brünn| volume=4 | pages=3–47|year=1866}} (in English in 1901, J. R. Hortic. Soc. 26: 1–32) [http://www.mendelweb.org/Mendel.html English translation available online]</ref> Although this pattern of inheritance could only be observed for a few traits, Mendel's work suggested that heredity was particulate, not acquired, and that the inheritance patterns of many traits could be explained through simple rules and ratios.


The importance of Mendel's work did not gain wide understanding until the 1890s, after his death, when other scientists working on similar problems [[Hugo de Vries|re-discovered]] his research. [[William Bateson]], a proponent of Mendel's work, coined the word ''genetics'' in 1905.<ref>genetics, ''n.'', Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd ed. </ref><ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.jic.ac.uk/corporate/about/bateson.htm | title=Letter from William Bateson to Alan Sedgwick in 1905| publisher=The John Innes Centre| accessdate=2008-03-15| author=Bateson W}}. Note that the letter was to an [[Adam Sedgwick (zoologist)|Adam Sedgwick]], a zoologist at [[Trinity College, Cambridge]], not "Alan", and not to be confused with the renown British geologist, [[Adam Sedgwick]], who lived some time earlier.</ref> (The adjective ''genetic'', derived from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word ''genesis'' - ''γένεσις'', "origin" and that from the word ''genno'' - ''γεννώ'', "to give birth", predates the noun and was first used in a biological sense in 1860.)<ref>genetic, ''adj.'', Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd ed. </ref> Bateson popularized the usage of the word ''genetics'' to describe the study of inheritance in his inaugural address to the Third International Conference on Plant Hybridization in London, England, in 1906.<ref name="bateson_genetics">{{cite conference | author=Bateson, W |title=The Progress of Genetic Research |editor=Wilks, W (editor) | booktitle=Report of the Third 1906 International Conference on Genetics: Hybridization (the cross-breeding of genera or species), the cross-breeding of varieties, and general plant breeding|publisher=Royal Horticultural Society | location=London | year=1907}}
In 1957, the United Church of Christ formed through the union of the Evangelical and Reformed Church with the General Council of Congregational Christian Churches.
:Initially titled the "International Conference on Hybridisation and Plant Breeding", Wilks changed the title for publication as a result of Bateson's speech.</ref>


After the rediscovery of Mendel's work, scientists tried to determine which molecules in the cell were responsible for inheritance. In 1910, [[Thomas Hunt Morgan]] argued that genes are on [[chromosomes]], based on observations of a sex-linked white eye mutation in fruit flies.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Moore JA| title=Thomas Hunt Morgan—The Geneticist| journal=American Zoologist| year=1983| volume=23| issue=4| pages=855–865| url=http://icb.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/23/4/855| doi=10.1093/icb/23.4.855}}</ref> In 1913, his student [[Alfred Sturtevant]] used the phenomenon of [[genetic linkage]] to show that genes are arranged linearly on the chromosome.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Sturtevant AH| year=1913| title=The linear arrangement of six sex-linked factors in Drosophila, as shown by their mode of association| journal=Journal of Experimental Biology| volume=14| pages=43–59}} [http://www.esp.org/foundations/genetics/classical/holdings/s/ahs-13.pdf PDF from Electronic Scholarly Publishing]</ref>
* The '''[[Evangelical and Reformed Church]]''' was formed in 1934 by the merger of the Reformed Church in the United States and the Evangelical Synod of North America:
** The '''[[Evangelical and Reformed Church#Reformed Church in the U.S.|Reformed Church in the United States]]''' carried out the tradition of the [[Germany|German]] version of the [[Reformed churches|Reformed]]/[[Calvinist]] movement, which some commentators have characterized as less rationalistically doctrinal than its [[Netherlands|Dutch]] and [[British people|British]] counterparts. The German Reformed Church employed the [[Heidelberg Catechism]] as its primary, if not sole, confession. Its roots trace mostly to 18th-century immigrants hailing primarily from areas near the [[Rhine River]] in [[Germany]], but also from certain parts of [[Switzerland]]. The denomination had strong concentrations in [[Pennsylvania]], northern [[Maryland]], and eastern [[Ohio]], but was also present in more scattered patterns in states to the west and south.
** The '''[[Evangelical Synod of North America]]''' traced its roots to later waves of 19th- and early 20th-century German immigration, which settled primarily in the Midwest (especially [[Missouri]], [[Illinois]], [[Wisconsin]], [[Indiana]], and [[Michigan]]). Members of this group largely came from the Evangelical Church of the Union, which formed in 1817 as a union of the [[Lutheran]] and [[Reformed churches]] in [[Prussia]]. The group often identified as primarily Lutheran (usually depending upon a local pastor's preference and/or background), but held a mixture of both Lutheran and Reformed beliefs and practices&mdash;so much so as to prevent this group from merging with other Lutheran bodies. Evangelicals looked to both the Reformed [[Heidelberg Catechism]] and [[Luther's Small Catechism]] as their confessions (and eventually developed an "Evangelical Catechism" for confirmation training of youth, which merged views of both).
*The '''[[Congregational Christian Churches]]''' came together in 1931 by the union of:
**The '''[[Congregational church]]es''', a tradition within the [[Reformed]] family whose organizational structure was [[congregationalism|congregationalist]], thus separating them from the theologically-similar [[Presbyterians]]. This denomination was centered in [[New England]] (being the state churches of [[Massachusetts]], [[New Hampshire]], and [[Connecticut]] from colonial times until the early 19th century). The church spread wherever New Englanders migrated, including significant numbers in the [[Great Lakes]] region of the [[Midwest]] (including [[Ohio]], [[Michigan]], [[Illinois]], [[Iowa]], [[Minnesota]], [[Wisconsin]], etc.). <br>The Congregational churches traced their colonial-era origins to two [[England|English]] dissenting Protestant groups: the [[separatist]] ''[[Pilgrims]]'', who established [[Plymouth Colony]] in 1620; and the ''[[Puritans]]'' of the [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]], who landed in 1629 and 1630 and settled [[Boston]]. At the time of the 1957 formation of the UCC, several hundred Congregational churches declined to join. Most of those congregations joined either one of two alternative bodies: the [[National Association of Congregational Christian Churches]] (a body formed as a direct reaction to the 1957 UCC merger) and the [[Conservative Congregational Christian Conference]] (which came into being as a result of the [[fundamentalist]] movement in the early 20th century).
** A portion of the American frontier [[Restoration Movement]] known as the '''[[Congregational Christian Churches#The Christian Churches .28.22Connection.22.29|Christian Churches]]''', which derived from separate but related movements in [[North Carolina]] and [[Virginia]], and [[New England]], at the turn of the 19th century. Also known as the [[Christian Connection]] and identified with [[James O'Kelly]], this loosely-defined group comprised a number of frontier movements that broke away from more established [[White Anglo-Saxon Protestant|Anglo-Saxon]] denominations (namely [[Presbyterian]], [[Methodist]] and [[Baptist]]) because they desired less rigid requirements of doctrine and church polity/organization. Adherents declared the [[Bible]] (especially the [[New Testament]]) as the sole doctrinal guide and claimed "no creed but Christ." The ''Christian Church'' movement, by far the smallest of the four main traditions that became the United Church of Christ, was part of the family of similar movements which severed along largely liberal-conservative lines as the [[Disciples of Christ|Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)]] denomination, the conservative independent [[Independent Christian Churches/Churches of Christ|Christian Churches]], and the separatist, [[Churches of Christ]]. As suggested above, confusion of the UCC with the [[Churches of Christ]] has caused substantial identity problems for both groups in some parts of the United States.<ref>See, ''e.g.,'' [http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=14882235&BRD=1377&PAG=461&dept_id=172922&rfi=6 "Local churches say no tie with United Church of Christ"].</ref> The Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) maintains full communion with the UCC.<ref>In the words of Paul A. Crow Jr., "This ecumenical partnership----like all expressions of Christian unity----carries an aura both of celebration and struggle" {Crow, "United Church of Christ----Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) Ecumenical Partnership" in [[Douglas A. Foster]], Paul B. Blowers, Anthony L. Dunnavant, & D. Newell Williams, eds., ''Encyclopedia of the Stone-Campbell Movement'' (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2004), ISBN 0-8028-3898-7, p. 754}. Enthusiasm for the "full communion" and the [[Churches Uniting in Christ]] is weakest among theologically conservative individual [[Disciples of Christ|Disciples]] and an association of conservative congregations known as the [http://www.disciple-heritage.org/ Disciples Heritage Fellowship]. For more detail on the historical relationships among the UCC and the churches of the Stone-Campbell [[Restoration Movement]], see [[Douglas A. Foster|Foster]], Blowers, Dunnavant, & Williams, esp. pp. 753-754 for Crow's full article and pp. 190-191 for Thomas H. Olbricht's "[[Christian Connection]]" article.</ref>


<span id="molecular" /><!--anchor for link, please do not remove-->
''Hidden Histories in the United Church of Christ'' (two volumes; 1987, ISBN 0-8298-0753-5) edited by Barbara Brown Zikmund chronicles the heritages and denominational traditions that are have come to be a part of the UCC in addition to the 'big four' (Evangelical, Reformed, Congregational, Christian) detailed above. Volume one is available online,<ref name="UCC-About">{{cite web | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= |date= | year= | month= | url=http://www.ucc.org/aboutus/histories/index.html | title=Hidden Histories in the United Church of Christ | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=ucc.org | language= | accessdate=2006-12-24 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref> while the second volume is available from [[United Church Press]].<ref>[http://www.unitedchurchpress.com United Church Press]</ref>
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===Molecular genetics===
==Doctrine and Beliefs==
[[Image:JamesDWatson.jpg|thumb|[[James D. Watson]] (''pictured'') and [[Francis Crick]] determined the structure of DNA in 1953.]]
===Statements of doctrine and beliefs===
Although genes were known to exist on chromosomes, chromosomes are composed of both protein and DNA&mdash;scientists did not know which of these was responsible for inheritance. In 1928, [[Frederick Griffith]] discovered the phenomenon of [[Transformation (genetics)|transformation]] (see [[Griffith's experiment]]): dead bacteria could transfer genetic material to "transform" other still-living bacteria. Sixteen years later, in 1944, [[Oswald Theodore Avery]], [[Colin McLeod]] and [[Maclyn McCarty]] identified the molecule responsible for transformation as [[DNA]].<ref name=Avery_et_al>{{cite journal| author=Avery OT, MacLeod CM, and McCarty M| title=Studies on the Chemical Nature of the Substance Inducing Transformation of Pneumococcal Types: Induction of Transformation by a Desoxyribonucleic Acid Fraction Isolated from Pneumococcus Type III| journal=Journal of Experimental Medicine| year=1944| volume=79| issue=1| pages=137–158| doi=10.1084/jem.79.2.137}}[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33226?dopt=AbstractPlus 35th anniversary reprint available]</ref> The [[Hershey-Chase experiment]] in 1952 also showed that DNA (rather than protein) was the genetic material of the viruses that infect bacteria, providing further evidence that DNA was the molecule responsible for inheritance.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Hershey AD, Chase M| year=1952| title=Independent functions of viral protein and nucleic acid in growth of bacteriophage| journal=The Journal of General Physiology| volume=36| pages=39–56| doi= 10.1085/jgp.36.1.39| pmid=12981234}}</ref>
The UCC uses four words to describe itself: "[[Christian]], [[Reformed churches|Reformed]], [[Congregational]] and [[Protestantism|Evangelical]]." The church's diversity and adherence to covenantal polity (rather than government by regional elders or bishops) give individual congregations a great deal of freedom in the areas of worship, congregational life, and doctrine.


[[James D. Watson]] and [[Francis Crick]] determined the structure of DNA in 1953, using the [[X-ray crystallography]] work of [[Rosalind Franklin]] that indicated DNA had a [[helical]] structure (i.e., shaped like a corkscrew).<ref>{{cite book |title=The Eighth Day of Creation: Makers of the Revolution in Biology |last=Judson |first=Horace |middle=Freeland |authorlink=Horace Freeland Judson |year=1979 |publisher=Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press |isbn=0-87969-477-7 |pages=51–169}}</ref><ref name=watsoncrick_1953a>{{cite journal| author=Watson JD, Crick FHC| title=[[Molecular structure of Nucleic Acids]]: A Structure for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid| journal=Nature| year=1953| volume=171| issue=4356| pages=737–738|format=PDF| url=http://www.nature.com/nature/dna50/watsoncrick.pdf| doi=10.1038/171737a0}}</ref> Their double-helix model had two strands of DNA with the nucleotides pointing inward, each matching a complementary nucleotide on the other strand to form what looks like rungs on a twisted ladder.<ref name=watsoncrick_1953b>{{cite journal| author=Watson JD, Crick FHC| title=Genetical Implications of the Structure of Deoxyribonucleic Acid| journal=Nature| volume=171| issue=4361| year=1953| pages=964–967|format=PDF| url=http://www.nature.com/nature/dna50/watsoncrick2.pdf| doi=10.1038/171964b0}}</ref> This structure showed that genetic information exists in the sequence of nucleotides on each strand of DNA. The structure also suggested a simple method for duplication: if the strands are separated, new partner strands can be reconstructed for each based on the sequence of the old strand.
The motto of the United Church of Christ comes from [[John 17:21|John 17:21: "That they may all be one."]] The denomination's official literature uses broad doctrinal parameters, honoring creeds and confessions as "testimonies of faith" rather than "tests of faith," and emphasizes freedom of individual conscience and local church autonomy. Indeed, the relationship between local congregations and the denomination's national headquarters is covenantal rather than hierarchical: local churches have complete control of their finances, hiring and firing of clergy and other staff, and theological and political stands.


Although the structure of DNA showed how inheritance worked, it was still not known how DNA influenced the behavior of cells. In the following years, scientists tried to understand how DNA controls the process of [[protein]] production. It was discovered that the cell uses DNA as a template to create matching [[messenger RNA]] (a molecule with nucleotides, very similar to DNA). The nucleotide sequence of a messenger RNA is used to create an [[amino acid]] sequence in protein; this translation between nucleotide and amino acid sequences is known as the [[genetic code]].
In the United Church of Christ, creeds, confessions, and affirmations of faith function as ''"testimonies to faith"'' around which the church gathers rather than as "tests of faith" rigidly prescribing required doctrinal consent. As expressed on the United Church of Christ constitution:


With this molecular understanding of inheritance, an explosion of research became possible. One important development was chain-termination [[DNA sequencing]] in 1977 by [[Frederick Sanger]]: this technology allows scientists to read the nucleotide sequence of a DNA molecule.<ref name=sanger_et_al>{{cite journal| journal=Nature| year=1977| title=DNA sequencing with chain-terminating inhibitors| author=Sanger F, Nicklen S, and Coulson AR| volume=74| issue=12| pages=5463–5467 | doi = 10.1073/pnas.74.12.5463| pmid=271968}}</ref> In 1983, [[Kary Banks Mullis]] developed the [[polymerase chain reaction]], providing a quick way to isolate and amplify a specific section of a DNA from a mixture.<ref name=saiki_et_al>{{cite journal| title=Enzymatic Amplification of β-Globin Genomic Sequences and Restriction Site Analysis for Diagnosis of Sickle Cell Anemia| year=1985| journal=Science| author=Saiki RK, Scharf S, Faloona F, Mullis KB, Horn GT, Erlich HA, Arnheim N| volume=230| issue=4732| pages=1350–1354 |pmid=2999980| doi=10.1126/science.2999980}}</ref> Through the pooled efforts of the [[Human Genome Project]] and the parallel private effort by [[Celera Genomics]], these and other techniques culminated in the sequencing of the human [[genome]] in 2003.<ref name=human_genome_project />
<blockquote>The United Church of Christ acknowledges as its sole Head, Jesus Christ, Son of God and Savior. It acknowledges as kindred in Christ all who share in this confession. It looks to the Word of God in the Scriptures, and to the presence and power of the Holy Spirit, to prosper its creative and redemptive work in the world. It claims as its own the faith of the historic Church expressed in the ancient creeds and reclaimed in the basic insights of the Protestant Reformers. It affirms the responsibility of the Church in each generation to make this faith its own in reality of worship, in honesty of thought and expression, and in purity of heart before God. In accordance with the teaching of our Lord and the practice prevailing among evangelical Christians, it recognizes two sacraments: Baptism and the Lord's Supper or Holy Communion.<ref name="UCC-constitution">{{cite web | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= |date= | year= | month= | url=http://www.ucc.org/about-us/constitution-of-the-ucc.html | title=Constitution and Bylaws of the United Church of Christ | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=ucc.org | language= | accessdate=2008-01-25 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref></blockquote>


==Features of inheritance==
The denomination, therefore, looks to a number of historic confessions as expressing the common faith around which the church gathers, including:
===Discrete inheritance and Mendel's laws===
*the [[Apostles' Creed]],
{{main|Mendelian inheritance}}
*the [[Nicene Creed]],
[[Image:Punnett square mendel flowers.svg|right|thumb|A Punnett square depicting a cross between two pea plants heterozygous for purple (B) and white (b) blossoms]]
*the [[Heidelberg Catechism]] (inherited from both the German Reformed and German Evangelical heritages),
At its most fundamental level, inheritance in organisms occurs by means of discrete traits, called [[gene]]s.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.199 Chapter 2 (Patterns of Inheritance): Introduction]
*[[Luther's Small Catechism]] (inherited from the German Evangelical heritage),
</ref> This property was first observed by [[Gregor Mendel]], who studied the segregation of heritable traits in [[pea|pea plants]].<ref name="mendel" /><ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.200 Chapter 2 (Patterns of Inheritance): Mendel's experiments]
*the [[Kansas City Statement of Faith]] (a 1913 statement in the Congregationalist tradition),
</ref> In his experiments studying the trait for flower color, Mendel observed that the flowers of each pea plant were either purple or white - and never an intermediate between the two colors. These different, discrete versions of the same gene are called [[allele]]s.
*the [[Evangelical Catechism]] (a 1927 catechism in the German Evangelical tradition), and
*the [[Statement of Faith of the United Church of Christ]] (written at the founding of the denomination).


In the case of pea plants, each organism has two alleles of each gene, and the plants inherit one allele from each parent.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.484 Chapter 3 (Chromosomal Basis of Heredity): Mendelian genetics in eukaryotic life cycles]
===Studies and surveys of beliefs===
</ref> Many organisms, including humans, have this pattern of inheritance. Organisms with two copies of the same allele are called [[homozygous]], while organisms with two different alleles are [[heterozygous]].
In 2001, Hartford Institute for Religion Research did a '''"Faith Communities Today (FACT)"''' study<ref name="UCC-denom ident">{{cite web | last=Lang | first=Andy | authorlink= | coauthors= |date= | year=2001 | month=April | url=http://www.ucc.org/ucnews/apr01/identity.htm | title=Denominational identity still important | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=ucc.org | language= | accessdate=2006-12-24 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref> that included a survey of United Church of Christ beliefs. Among the results of this were findings that in the UCC, 5.6 percent of the churches responding to the survey described their members as "very liberal or progressive," 3.4 percent as "very conservative," 22.4 percent as "somewhat liberal or progressive," and 23.6 percent as "somewhat conservative" Those results suggested a nearly equal balance between liberal and conservative congregations. The self-described "moderate" group, however, was the largest at 45 percent. Other statistics found by the Hartford Institute show that 53.2% of members say "the Bible" is the highest source of authority, 16.1% say the "Holy Spirit," 9.2% say "Reason," 6.3% say "Experience," and 6.1% say "Creeds."


The set of alleles for a given organism is called its [[genotype]], while the observable trait the organism has is called its [[phenotype]]. When organisms are heterozygous, often one allele is called [[Dominant allele|dominant]] as its qualities dominate the phenotype of the organism, while the other allele is called [[Recessive allele|recessive]] as its qualities recede and are not observed. Some alleles do not have complete dominance and instead have [[Dominance relationship#Incomplete dominance|incomplete dominance]] by expressing an intermediate phenotype, or [[Dominance relationship#Codominance|codominance]] by expressing both alleles at once.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.630 Chapter 4 (Gene Interaction): Interactions between the alleles of one gene]
David Roozen, director of the Hartford Institute for Religion Research who has studied the United Church of Christ, said surveys show the national church's pronouncements are often more liberal than the views in the pews, but that its governing structure is set up to allow such disagreements.<ref name="Divided">{{cite web | last=Smith | first=Peter | authorlink= | coauthors= |date=[[2006-11-05]] | year=2006 | month=November | url=http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061105/NEWS01/611050403/1008/NEWS01 | title=United Church of Christ Divided | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=courier-journal.com | language= | accessdate=2006-12-24 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref>
</ref>


When a pair of organisms [[sexual reproduction|reproduce sexually]], their offspring randomly inherit one of the two alleles from each parent. These observations of discrete inheritance and the segregation of alleles are collectively known as [[Mendelian inheritance#Law of Segregation|Mendel's first law]] or the Law of Segregation.
Starting in 2003, a task force commissioned by General Synod 24 studied the diverse Worship habits of UCC churches. The study can be found online<ref name="Summary-2005">{{cite web | last=Fowler | first=Sidney D. | authorlink= | coauthors=Marjorie H. Royle |date=[[2005-06-27]] | year=2005 | month=June | url=http://www.ucc.org/worship/witgf/ss2005.pdf | title=Worshiping into God's Future: Summaries and Strategies 2005 | format=.pdf | work= | pages= |publisher=ucc.org | language= | accessdate=2006-12-27 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref> and reflects statistics on attitudes towards Worship, Baptism, and Communion, such as "Laity (70%) and clergy (90%) alike overwhelmingly describe worship “as an encounter with God that leads to doing God’s work in the world.” "95 percent of our congregations use the [[Revised Common Lectionary]] in some way in planning or actual worship and preaching" and "96 percent always or almost always have a [[sermon]], 86 percent have a [[Children's message|time with children]], 95 percent have a time of sharing joys and concerns, and 98 percent include the [[Lord's Prayer|Prayer of Our Savior/Lord’s Prayer]]." Clergy and laity were invited to select two meanings of baptism that they emphasize. They were also to suggest the meaning that they thought their entire church emphasized. Baptism as an “entry into the Church Universal” was the most frequent response. Clergy and laity were also invited to identify two meanings of Holy Communion that they emphasize. While clergy emphasized Holy Communion as “a meal in which we encounter God’s living presence,” laity emphasized “a remembrance of Jesus’ last supper, death, and resurrection.”


===Other theological publications and colloquiums. ===
===Notation and diagrams===
[[Image:Pedigree-chart-example.svg|thumb|240px|Genetic pedigree charts help track the inheritance patterns of traits.]]
Theological seminars, journals, and publications of the UCC may be helpful to understand the theologies of the UCC, but while they disseminate various theological opinions and news, none is used to speak authoritatively about church beliefs.
Geneticists use diagrams and symbols to describe inheritance. A gene is represented by a letter (or letters)—the capitalized letter represents the dominant allele and the recessive is represented by lowercase.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://faculty.users.cnu.edu/rcheney/Genetic%20Notation.htm| title=Genetic Notation| author=Richard W. Cheney| accessdate=2008-03-18}}</ref> Often a "+" symbol is used to mark the usual, non-mutant allele for a gene.


In fertilization and breeding experiments (and especially when discussing Mendel's laws) the parents are referred to as the "P" generation and the offspring as the "F1" (first filial) generation. When the F1 offspring mate with each other, the offspring are called the "F2" (second filial) generation. One of the common diagrams used to predict the result of cross-breeding is the [[Punnett square]].
In 1977, a group of theologians called together by the Office of Church Life and Leadership (OCLL) issued a statement titled “Toward Sound Teaching in the United Church of Christ.” In 1983, thirty-nine UCC seminary faculty wrote a letter to the Church in a similar vein, “A Most Difficult and Urgent Time.” In 1984, marking the fiftieth anniversary of the Barmen Declaration of the Confessing Church in Germany that resisted cultural captivity, a grassroots group of UCC pastors organized a theological colloquy in Craigville, Massachusetts (the Craigville Colloquy). Its 160 participants issued a Witness Statement calling for faithfulness to the Church’s central founding tenets. The colloquies have continued annually, addressing subjects that range from the Trinity, the sacraments and the faith and order of the UCC, to war and peace and biomedical ethics. According to a 2004 speech by current president [[John Thomas]], "a group of prominent United Church of Christ theologians set forth an agenda as urgent today as it was then: ''Convinced as we are that our church, along with the American churches generally, is excessively accommodated to cultural values and perceptions, our thinking revolved around the conviction that the ministry of the church must become more intentional and disciplined in teaching the faith of the church, in valuing its theological tradition and in responding to the present place of the church in culture.''"


When studying human genetic diseases, geneticists often use [[pedigree chart]]s to represent the inheritance of traits.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.229 Chapter 2 (Patterns of Inheritance): Human Genetics]</ref> These charts map the inheritance of a trait in a family tree.
Concurrent with these sentiments, the late 1970s/early 1980s brought the launch of several theological publications to include Prism and New Conversations.


===Interactions of multiple genes===
'''New Conversations,''' an "annual" magazine of the United Church of Christ's Board for Homeland Ministries (BHM) that is actually published less often than annually.<ref>[http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=322 A New Spirituality: Shaping Doctrine at the Grass Roots<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The last known edition was 2002's "Medical Technology and Christian Decision Making dealing with [[bioethics]]". The BHM has produced several issues of “New Conversations” dealing with Asian Americans, Micronesians, and Native Hawaiian Issues.<ref>[http://www.ucc.org/synod/pdfs/report-pre1.pdf]</ref>
[[Image:Galton-height-regress.png|thumb|right|Human height is a complex genetic trait. [[Francis Galton]]'s data from 1889 shows the relationship between offspring height as a function of mean parent height. While correlated, remaining variation in offspring heights indicates environment is also an important factor in this trait.]]


Organisms have thousands of genes, and in sexually reproducing organisms assortment of these genes are generally independent of each other. This means that the inheritance of an allele for yellow or green pea color is unrelated to the inheritance of alleles for white or purple flowers. This phenomenon, known as "[[Mendelian inheritance#Law of Independent Assortment|Mendel's second law]]" or the "Law of independent assortment", means that the alleles of different genes get shuffled between parents to form offspring with many different combinations.(Some genes do not assort independently, demonstrating [[genetic linkage]], a topic discussed later in this article.)
* Volume 1: (Spring/Summer, 1975),
* Volume 4: no 2 (Fall 1979) &ndash; Topic: "Order and Identity in the United Church of Christ"
* Volume 5: No. 2, (Fall 1980) &ndash; Topic: "The Design of Faith"
* Volume 6: (Spring 1982)
* Volume 11: (Fall 1988) &ndash; Topic: "National Service" New Conversations.
* (Winter/Spring 1989) &ndash; Topic: American Missionary Association and [[Amistad]]
* Spring 1995 &ndash; Topic: "Don't Ask Questions"
* Volume 15, Number 3 (1993) &ndash; Topic: "New Conversations: Confronting and Combatting Christian Anti-Judaism" ed. by Nanette M. Roberts
* Volume 17, no. 2 (Summer 1995) &ndash; Topic: "The Church and the Public School"
* Fall 2002 &ndash; Topic: "Medical Technology and Christian Decision Making"


Often different genes can interact in a way that influences the same trait. In the [[Blue-eyed Mary]] (''Omphalodes verna''), for example, there exists a gene with alleles that determine the color of flowers: blue or magenta. Another gene, however, controls whether the flowers have color at all: color or white. When a plant has two copies of this white allele, its flowers are white - regardless of whether the first gene has blue or magenta alleles. This interaction between genes is called [[epistasis]], with the second gene epistatic to the first.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.644 Chapter 4 (Gene Interaction): Gene interaction and modified dihybrid ratios]</ref>
'''Prism''' is a theological journal of the United Church of Christ published jointly by the seven seminaries of the United Church of Christ, and produced twice a year.<ref>[http://worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/issn/0887-5049 ISSN 0887-5049]</ref> A journal for the whole church, Prism offers "serious theological reflection from a diversity of viewpoints on issues of faith, mission, and ministry." Prism was founded in 1985, and is edited by [[Clyde Steckel]], United Seminary's emeritus professor of theology, and [[Elizabeth Nordbeck]] of Andover Newton Theological School.<ref>[http://www.unitedseminary-mn.org/resources/publications.asp United Theological Seminary - Publications From United<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


Many traits are not discrete features (eg. purple or white flowers) but are instead continuous features (eg. human height and skin color). These [[Quantitative trait locus|complex traits]] are the product of many genes.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Mayeux R| title=Mapping the new frontier: complex genetic disorders| journal=The Journal of Clinical Investigation |volume=115 |issue=6 |pages=1404–1407 |year=2005 |pmid=15931374 | doi = 10.1172/JCI25421 <!--Retrieved from Yahoo! by DOI bot-->}}</ref> The influence of these genes is mediated, to varying degrees, by the environment an organism has experienced. The degree to which an organism's genes contribute to a complex trait is called [[heritability]].<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.4009 Chapter 25 (Quantitative Genetics): Quantifying heritability]</ref> Measurement of the heritability of a trait is relative - in a more variable environment, the environment has a bigger influence on the total variation of the trait. For example, human height is a complex trait with a heritability of 89% in the United States. In Nigeria, however, where people experience a more variable access to good nutrition and health care, height has a heritability of only 62%.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Luke A, Guo X, Adeyemo AA, Wilks R, Forrester T, Lowe W Jr, Comuzzie AG, Martin LJ, Zhu X, Rotimi CN, Cooper RS|title=Heritability of obesity-related traits among Nigerians, Jamaicans and US black people|journal=Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord|year=2001|volume=25|issue=7|pages=1034–1041|doi=10.1038/sj.ijo.0801650}} [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11443503?dopt=Abstract Abstract from NCBI]</ref>
'''The Living Theological Heritage of the United Church of Christ''' an 835-page, 7-volume set edited by Rev. Barbara Brown Zikmund and a team of 13 editors, four associate editors and an editorial board of seven.<ref>(ISBN 0-8298-1113-3)</ref> The materials, which span the first century through the 20th century, were included in the volumes because, according to editors, they had impacted the shaping the UCC's theological identity.


==Molecular basis for inheritance==
===UCC beliefs expressed to the World Council of Churches===
===DNA and chromosomes===
In 1982 the [[World Council of Churches]] published "Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry"<ref name="WCC-BEM">{{cite web | last= World Council of Churches |year=1982 | month= | url=http://www.oikoumene.org/index.php?id=2638 | title=Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry (Faith and Order Paper No. 111, the “Lima Text”) }}</ref>, a document that has served as a foundation for many ecumenical recognition agreements. As a WCC member church, the United Church of Christ issued a response as part of the process to work toward a statement of common theological perspectives.<ref name="CCCC-responseBEM">{{cite web | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= |date=| year= | month= | url=http://www.ucc.org/assets/pdfs/85-uccresponse-bem.pdf | title=A United Church OF Christ Response to Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=ucc.org | language= | accessdate=2006-12-26 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref>
{{Main|DNA|Chromosome}}
[[Image:DNA chemical structure.svg|thumb|right|The [[molecular structure]] of DNA. Bases pair through the arrangement of [[hydrogen bonding]] between the strands.]]


The [[molecular]] basis for genes is [[deoxyribonucleic acid]] (DNA). DNA is composed of a chain of [[nucleotides]], of which there are four types: [[adenine]] (A), [[cytosine]] (C), [[guanine]] (G), and [[thymine]] (T). Genetic information exists in the sequence of these nucleotides, and genes exist as stretches of sequence along the DNA chain.<ref name=Pearson_2006>{{cite journal |author=Pearson H |title=Genetics: what is a gene? |journal=Nature |volume=441 |issue=7092 |pages=398–401 |year=2006 |pmid=16724031 |doi=10.1038/441398a}}</ref> [[Virus]]es are the only exception to this rule—sometimes viruses use the very similar molecule [[RNA]] instead of [[DNA]] as their genetic material.<ref>{{cite book | title=Microbiology| last=Prescott| first=L| year=1993| publisher=Wm. C. Brown Publishers| isbn=0697013723}}</ref>
==Polity/organizational structure==
===System and ethos of polity===
Quoting the United Church of Christ Constitution, "The basic unit of the life and organization of the United Church of Christ is the [[local church]]." An interplay of wider interdependence with local [[Wiktionary:autonomy|autonomy]] characterizes the organization of the UCC. Each "setting" of the United Church of Christ relates ''covenantally'' with other settings, their actions speaking "to but not for" each other.


DNA normally exists as a double-stranded molecule, coiled into the shape of a [[double-helix]]. Each nucleotide in DNA preferentially pairs with its partner nucleotide on the opposite strand: A pairs with T, and C pairs with G. Thus, in its two-stranded form, each strand effectively contains all necessary information, redundant with its partner strand. This structure of DNA is the physical basis for inheritance: [[DNA replication]] duplicates the genetic information by splitting the strands and using each strand as a template for synthesis of a new partner strand.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.1523 Chapter 8 (The Structure and Replication of DNA): Mechanism of DNA Replication]</ref>
The ''ethos'' of United Church of Christ organization is considered "[[covenant]]al." The ''structure'' of UCC organization is a mixture of the [[Congregationalist church governance|congregational]] and [[Presbyterian church governance|presbyterian]] [[Ecclesiastical polity|polities]] of its predecessor denominations. With ultimate authority on most matters given to the local church, many see United Church of Christ polity as closer to congregationalism; however, with ordination and pastoral oversight conducted by Associations, and General Synod representation given to Conferences instead of congregational delegates, certain presbyterian similarities are also visible.


Genes are arranged linearly along long chains of DNA sequence, called [[chromosomes]]. In [[bacteria]], each cell has a single circular chromosome, while [[eukaryote|eukaryotic]] organisms (which includes plants and animals) have their DNA arranged in multiple linear chromosomes. These DNA strands are often extremely long; the largest human chromosome, for example, is about 247&nbsp;million [[base pair]]s in length.<ref>{{cite journal|title=The DNA sequence and biological annotation of human chromosome 1|author=Gregory SG et al.|year=2006|journal=Nature|volume=441 | doi = 10.1038/nature04727 <!--Retrieved from Yahoo! by DOI bot-->|pages=315–321}} [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v441/n7091/full/nature04727.html free full text available]</ref> The DNA of a chromosome is associated with structural proteins that organize, compact, and control access to the DNA, forming a material called [[chromatin]]; in eukaryotes, [[chromatin]] is usually composed of [[nucleosome]]s, repeating units of DNA wound around a core of [[histone]] proteins.<ref>Alberts et al. (2002), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=mboc4.section.608 II.4. DNA and chromosomes: Chromosomal DNA and Its Packaging in the Chromatin Fiber]</ref> The full set of hereditary material in an organism (usually the combined DNA sequences of all chromosomes) is called the [[genome]].
===Local churches===
[[Image:First Congregational United Church of Christ copyright Kaihsu Tai 20080203.jpg|thumb|right|[http://FirstChurchLB.org First Congregational Church] of [[Long Beach, California]], a local church of the United Church of Christ.]]
The basic unit of the United Church of Christ is the ''local church'' (also often called the ''congregation''). Local churches have the freedom to govern themselves, establishing their own internal organizational structures and theological positions. Thus, local church governance varies widely throughout the denomination; some congregations, mainly of Congregational origin, have numerous relatively-independent "boards" that oversee different aspects of church life, while others have one central "church council" or "consistory" (especially in former Evangelical and Reformed parishes) that handles most or all affairs, while still others have structures incorporating aspects of both, or other alternative organizational structures entirely.


While [[haploid]] organisms have only one copy of each chromosome, most animals and many plants are [[diploid]], containing two of each chromosome and thus two copies of every gene.<ref name=haploid_diploid>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.484 Chapter 3 (Chromosomal Basis of Heredity): Mendelian genetics in eukaryotic life cycles]</ref> The two alleles for a gene are located on identical [[Locus (genetics)|loci]] of sister [[chromatids]], each allele inherited from a different parent.
Local churches also have the freedom to hire and dismiss their own pastors and other leadership. However, unlike purely congregational polities, the association has the main authority to [[Ordination|ordain]] clergy and grant standing to clergy coming to a church from another association or another denomination (this authority is exercised "in cooperation with" the person being ordained/called and the local church that is calling them). Local churches are aided in searching for and calling ordained clergy through a denominationally-coordinated "search-and-call" system, usually facilitated by staff at the conference level.


[[Image:Zell-substanz-book-illustrations.jpg|thumb|left|[[Walther Flemming]]'s 1882 diagram of eukaryotic cell division. Chromosomes are copied, condensed, and organized. Then, as the cell divides, chromosome copies separate into the daughter cells.]]
===Associations===
An exception exists in the [[sex chromosome]]s, specialized chromosomes many animals have evolved that play a role in determining the sex of an organism.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.222 Chapter 2 (Patterns of Inheritance): Sex chromosomes and sex-linked inheritance ]</ref> In humans and other mammals, the Y chromosome has very few genes and triggers the development of male sexual characteristics, while the X chromosome is similar to the other chromosomes and contains many genes unrelated to sex determination. Females have two copies of the X chromosome, but males have one Y and only one X chromosome - this difference in X chromosome copy numbers leads to the unusual inheritance patterns of [[sex-linked]] disorders.
{{seealso|Associations of the United Church of Christ}}
Local churches are typically gathered together in regional bodies called ''Associations''. Local churches often give financial support to the association to support its activities. The official delegates of an association are all ordained clergy within the bounds of the association together with lay delegates sent from each local church. The association provides primary oversight and authorization of ordained and other authorized ministers. The association ordains new ministers, holds ministers' standing in covenant with local churches, and is responsible for disciplinary action. [In a few instances where there is only one association within a conference, or where the associations within a conference have agreed to dissolve, the Conference (below) assumes the association's functions.]


===Conferences===
===Reproduction===
{{main|Asexual reproduction|Sexual reproduction}}
{{seealso|Conferences of the United Church of Christ}}
Local churches also are members of larger ''[[Conferences of the United Church of Christ|Conferences]]'', of which there are 38 in the United Church of Christ. A conference typically contains multiple associations; if no associations exist within its boundaries, the conference exercises the functions of the association as well. Conferences are supported financially through local churches' contribution to "Our Church's Wider Mission", the United Church of Christ's denominational support system. Conferences provide the primary support for the search-and-call process by which churches select ordained leadership and often provide significant programming resources for their constituent churches. Conferences, like associations, are congregationally representative bodies, with each local church sending ordained and lay delegates.


When cells divide, their full genome is copied and each daughter cell inherits one copy. This process, called [[mitosis]], is the simplest form of reproduction and is the basis for [[asexual reproduction]]. Asexual reproduction can also occur in multicellular organisms, producing offspring that inherit their genome from a single parent. Offspring that are genetically identical to their parents are called [[clones]].
===General Synod===
{{seealso|Resolutions of the United Church of Christ}}


[[Eukaryotic]] organisms often use [[sexual reproduction]] to generate offspring that contain a mixture of genetic material inherited from two different parents. The process of sexual reproduction alternates between forms that contain single copies of the genome ([[haploid]]) and double copies ([[diploid]]).<ref name=haploid_diploid /> Haploid cells fuse and combine genetic material to create a diploid cell with paired chromosomes. Diploid organisms form haploids by dividing, without replicating their DNA, to create daughter cells that randomly inherit one of each pair of chromosomes. Most animals and many plants are diploid for most of their lifespan, with the haploid form reduced to single cell [[gamete]]s.
The denomination's churchwide deliberative body is the ''[[General Synod]]'', which meets every two years. The General Synod consists of delegates elected from the Conferences (distributed proportionally by conference size) together with the boards of directors of each of the four covenanted ministries (see below, under National Offices).


Although they do not use the haploid/diploid method of sexual reproduction, [[bacteria]] have many methods of acquiring new genetic information. Some bacteria can undergo [[Bacterial conjugation|conjugation]], transferring a small circular piece of DNA to another bacterium.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.1304 Chapter 7 (Gene Transfer in Bacteria and Their Viruses): Bacterial conjugation]</ref> Bacteria can also take up raw DNA fragments found in the environment and integrate them into their genome, a phenomenon known as [[transformation (genetics)|transformation]].<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.1343 Chapter 7 (Gene Transfer in Bacteria and Their Viruses): Bacterial transformation]</ref> This processes result in [[horizontal gene transfer]], transmitting fragments of genetic information between organisms that would be otherwise unrelated.
While General Synod provides the most visible voice of the "stance of the denomination" on any particular issue, the covenantal polity of the denomination means that General Synod speaks ''to'' local churches, associations, and conferences, but not ''for'' them. Thus, the other settings of the church are allowed to hold differing views and practices on all non-constitutional matters.


===Recombination and linkage===
General Synod considers three kinds of resolutions:
{{Main|Chromosomal crossover|Genetic linkage}}
* '''Pronouncements''': A Pronouncement is a statement of Christian conviction on a matter of moral or social principle and has been adopted by a two-thirds vote of a General Synod.
[[Image:Morgan crossover 2 cropped.png|thumb|right|[[Thomas Hunt Morgan]]'s 1916 illustration of a double crossover between chromosomes]]
*'''Proposals for Action''': A Proposal for Action is a recommendation for specific directional statements and goals implementing a Pronouncement. A Proposal for Action normally accompanies a Pronouncement. (See link above regarding Pronouncements.)
* '''Resolutions and Other Formal Motions''' Which may consist of the following three types:
**''Resolutions of Witness'': A Resolution of Witness is an expression of the General Synod concerning a moral, ethical, or religious matter confronting the church, the nation, or the world, adopted for the guidance of the officers, Associated, or Affiliated Ministries, or other bodies as defined in Article VI of the Bylaws of the United Church of Christ; the consideration of local churches, Associations, Conferences, and other bodies related to the United Church of Christ; and for a Christian witness to the world. It represents agreement by at least two-thirds of the delegates voting that the view expressed is based on Christian conviction and is a part of their witness to Jesus Christ.
** ''Prudential Resolutions'': A Prudential Resolution establishes policy, institutes or revises structure or procedures, authorizes programs, approves directions, or requests actions by a majority vote.
** ''Other Formal Motions''


The diploid nature of chromosomes allows for genes on different chromosomes to [[independent assortment|assort independently]] during sexual reproduction, recombining to form new combinations of genes. Genes on the same chromosome would theoretically never recombine, however, were it not for the process of [[chromosomal crossover]]. During crossover, chromosomes exchange stretches of DNA, effectively shuffling the gene alleles between the chromosomes.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.929 Chapter 5 (Basic Eukaryotic Chromosome Mapping): Nature of crossing-over]</ref> This process of chromosomal crossover generally occurs during [[meiosis]], a series of cell divisions that creates haploid [[germ cells]] that later combine with other germ cells to form child organisms.
===National offices: covenanted, associated, and affiliated ministries===
As agents of the General Synod, the denomination maintains national offices comprising four "covenanted ministries", one "associated ministry", and one "affiliated ministry". The current system of national governance was adopted in 1999 as a restructure of the national setting, consolidating numerous agencies, boards, and "instrumentalities" that the UCC, in the main, had inherited from the Congregational Christian Churches at the time of merger, along with several created during the denomination's earlier years.


The probability of chromosomal crossover occurring between two given points on the chromosome is related to the distance between them. For an arbitrarily long distance, the probability of crossover is high enough that the inheritance of the genes is effectively uncorrelated. For genes that are closer together, however, the lower probability of crossover means that the genes demonstrate [[genetic linkage]] - alleles for the two genes tend to be inherited together. The amounts of linkage between a series of genes can be combined to form a linear [[Genetic linkage#Linkage mapping|linkage map]] that roughly describes the arrangement of the genes along the chromosome.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.899 Chapter 5 (Basic Eukaryotic Chromosome Mapping): Linkage maps]</ref>
====Covenanted ministries====
These structures carry out the work of the General Synod and support the local churches, associations, and conferences. The head executives of these ministries comprise the five member ''Collegium of Officers'', which are the non-hierarchical official officers of the denomination. (The Office of General Ministries is represented by both the General Minister, who serves as President of the denomination, and the Associate General minister). According the UCC office of communication press release at the time of restructure, "In the new executive arrangement, the five will work together in a Collegium of Officers, meeting as peers. This setting is designed to provide an opportunity for mutual responsibility and reporting, as well as ongoing assessment of UCC programs." The main offices of the Covenanted ministries are at the "Church House", the United Church of Christ national headquarters at 700 Prospect Avenue in [[Cleveland, Ohio]].


==Gene expression==
* The '''Office of General Ministries (OGM)''' is responsible for administration, common services (technology, physical plant, etc), covenantal relations (ecumenical relations, formal relations to other settings of the church), financial development, and "proclamation, identity and communication". The current General Minister and President is the Rev. John Thomas and the current Associate General Minister is Ms. Edith Guffey.
*'''Local Church Ministries (LCM)''' is responsible for evangelism, stewardship and church finance, worship and education, Pilgrim Press and United Church Resources (the publishing house of the United Church of Christ), and parish life and leadership (authorization, clergy development, seminary relations, parish leadership, etc.). The current Executive Minister of Local Church Ministries is the Rev. Dr. Stephen L. Sterner
*'''Wider Church Ministries (WCM)''' is responsible for partner relations* (relations with churches around the world, missionary work, etc.), local church relations* (as relates to world ministries and missions), global sharing of resources, health and wholeness ministry, and global education and advocacy*. The starred '*' ministries are carried out through the Common Global Ministries Board, a joint instrumentality of the United Church of Christ and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), based in [[Indianapolis, Indiana]]. The current Executive Minister for Wider Church Ministries is the Rev. Cally Rogers-Witte.
*'''[[Justice and Witness Ministries]] (JWM)''' is responsible for ministries related to economic justice, human rights, justice for women and transformation, public life and social policy, and racial justice. In addition to its offices in Cleveland, JWM also maintains an office on [[Capitol Hill]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] The current Executive Minister for Justice and Witness Ministries is Rev. M. Linda Jaramillo. JWM also maintains an office called "Minister for Children, Families and Human Sexuality Advocacy" that promotes the [[Our Whole Lives]] [[sex education]] curriculum.


====Associated ministry====
===Genetic code===
{{Main|Genetic code}}
The '''Pension Boards of the United Church of Christ (PB)''' operates the employee benefits systems for all settings of the United Church of Christ, including health, dental, and optical insurance, retirement/pension systems, disability and life insurance, and ministerial assistance programs. The Pension Boards offices are located in [[New York City]], where the headquarters of all UCC national bodies had been located prior to their move to Ohio in the early 1990s.
[[Image:Genetic code.svg|thumb|right|The [[genetic code]]: DNA, through a [[messenger RNA]] intermediate, codes for protein with a triplet code.]]


Genes generally [[gene expression|express]] their functional effect through the production of [[proteins]], which are complex molecules responsible for most functions in the cell. Proteins are chains of [[amino acid]]s, and the DNA sequence of a gene (through RNA intermediate) is used to produce a specific protein sequence. This process begins with the production of an [[RNA]] molecule with a sequence matching the gene's DNA sequence, a process called [[transcription (genetics)|transcription]].
====Affiliated ministry====
The '''United Church Foundation (UCF)''' operates a collective financial management and investment system available to any setting of the United Church of Christ that wishes to place its assets with UCF. The United Church Foundation offices are also located in [[New York City]].


This [[messenger RNA]] molecule is then used to produce a corresponding amino acid sequence through a process called [[translation (biology)|translation]]. Each group of three nucleotides in the sequence, called a [[codon]], corresponds to one of the twenty possible amino acids in protein - this correspondence is called the [[genetic code]].<ref>{{cite book| title=Biochemistry| author=Berg JM, Tymoczko JL, Stryer L, Clarke ND| edition=5th edition| year=2002| publisher=W. H. Freeman and Company| location=New York}} [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=stryer.section.685 I. 5. DNA, RNA, and the Flow of Genetic Information: Amino Acids Are Encoded by Groups of Three Bases Starting from a Fixed Point]</ref> The flow of information is unidirectional: information is transferred from nucleotide sequences into the amino acid sequence of proteins, but it never transfers from protein back into the sequence of DNA&mdash;a phenomenon [[Francis Crick]] called the [[central dogma of molecular biology]].<ref name="crick1970">Crick, F (1970): [http://www.nature.com/nature/focus/crick/pdf/crick227.pdf Central Dogma of Molecular Biology] (PDF). ''Nature'' 227, 561–563. PMID 4913914 </ref>
The '''United Church of Christ Insurance Board''' is a nonprofit corporation collectively "owned" by 38 of the 39 [[Conferences of the United Church of Christ]]. It is run by a president/CEO and a 15-member Board, of with the full corporate board consisting of participating Conference ministers. The UCCIB administers a [[property insurance]] and [[liability insurance]] program serving the United Church of Christ and Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) churches and related entities.<ref>[http://www.insuranceboard.org/who.php United Church of Christ Insurance Board Who We Are<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


[[Image:Hb-animation2.gif|thumb|upright|right|The dynamic structure of hemoglobin is responsible for its ability to transport oxygen within mammalian blood.]]
==United Church News==
[[Image:Sickle cell hemoglobin shortened.png|right|thumb|upright|A single amino acid change causes hemoglobin to form fibers.]]
The denomination's official publication, ''United Church News,'' was begun in 1985 by the Rev. W. Evan Golder, founding editor. The current editor, the Rev. J. Bennett Guess, succeeded Golder in 2003 after serving as "minister for communication and mission education" for the UCC's [[Justice and Witness Ministries]].<ref>http://www.ecwr.org/thecable/03fall.pdf</ref>
The specific sequence of amino acids [[protein folding|results]] in a unique three-dimensional structure for that protein, and the three-dimensional structures of protein are related to their function.<ref>Alberts et al. (2002), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=mboc4.section.388 I.3. Proteins: The Shape and Structure of Proteins]</ref><ref>Alberts et al. (2002), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=mboc4.section.452 I.3. Proteins: Protein Function]</ref> Some are simple structural molecules, like the fibers formed by the protein [[collagen]]. Proteins can bind to other proteins and simple molecules, sometimes acting as [[enzyme]]s by facilitating [[chemical reaction]]s within the bound molecules (without changing the structure of the protein itself). Protein structure is dynamic; the protein [[hemoglobin]] bends into slightly different forms as it facilitates the capture, transport, and release of oxygen molecules within mammalian blood.


A single nucleotide difference within DNA can cause a single change in the amino acid sequence of a protein. Because protein structures are the result of their amino acid sequences, some changes can dramatically change the properties of a protein by destabilizing the structure or changing the surface of the protein in a way that changes its interaction with other proteins and molecules. For example, [[sickle-cell anemia]] is a human genetic disease that results from a single base difference within the coding region for the β-globin section of hemoglobin, causing a single amino acid change that changes hemoglobin's physical properties.<ref>{{cite web| title=How Does Sickle Cell Cause Disease?| url=http://sickle.bwh.harvard.edu/scd_background.html| date=2002-04-11| accessdate=2007-07-23| publisher=Brigham and Women's Hospital: Information Center for Sickle Cell and Thalassemic Disorders}}</ref> Sickle-cell versions of hemoglobin stick to themselves, stacking to form fibers that distort the shape of red blood cells carrying the protein. These sickle-shaped cells no longer flow smoothly through blood vessels, having a tendency to clog or degrade, causing the medical problems associated with this disease.
''United Church News'' is published by the Office of Communication, United Church of Christ, which is related to the Proclamation, Identity and Communication Ministry of the United Church of Christ, led by the Rev. Robert Chase of Lakewood, Ohio. Chase began work at the UCC’s national offices in Cleveland in April 1999.


Some genes are transcribed into RNA but are not translated into protein products - these are called [[non-coding RNA]] molecules. In some cases, these products fold into structures which are involved in critical cell functions (eg. [[ribosomal RNA]] and [[transfer RNA]]). RNA can also have regulatory effect through hybridization interactions with other RNA molecules (eg. [[microRNA]]).
Several regional editions are published by conferences as inserts to the nationally distributed edition. At its inception, the newspaper charged a subscription fee, but in the early 2000s this was discontinued in favor of free distribution. Recently, to save money, ''UCN'' reduced frequency of publication.{{Fact|date=August 2007}}


===Nature versus nurture===
Previous publications serving the UCC were ''United Church Herald'' (1958-1972) and ''A.D.'' (1972-1983). ''United Church Herald'' was, not surpiringly, a merger of the Congregational Christian Churches' ''Advance'' and the Evangelical and Reformed Church's ''Messenger.'' ''A.D.'' was a joint publication of the UCC and the [[United Presbyterian Church in the United States of America]]. ''A.D.'' was discontinued when the UPCUSA merged with the [[Presbyterian Church in the United States]] to form the present [[Presbyterian Church (USA)]], in order for the new denomination to establish its own official periodical.
[[Image:Niobe050905.jpeg|thumb|upright|Siamese cats have a temperature-sensitive mutation in pigment production.]]
Although genes contain all the information an organism uses to function, the environment plays an important role in determining the ultimate phenotype&mdash;a dichotomy often referred to as "[[nature vs. nurture]]." The phenotype of an organism depends on the interaction of genetics with the environment. One example of this is the case of temperature-sensitive mutations. Often, a single amino acid change within the sequence of a protein does not change its behavior and interactions with other molecules, but it does destabilize the structure. In a high [[temperature]] environment, where molecules are moving more quickly and hitting each other, this results in the protein [[Denaturation (biochemistry)|losing its structure]] and failing to function. In a low temperature environment, however, the protein's structure is stable and functions normally. This type of mutation is visible in the coat coloration of [[Siamese cat]]s, where a mutation in an enzyme responsible for pigment production causes it to destabilize and lose function at high temperatures.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Imes DL, Geary LA, Grahn RA, Lyons LA| year=2006 | title=Albinism in the domestic cat (''Felis catus'') is associated with a ''tyrosinase'' (''TYR'') mutation| journal=Animal Genetics| volume=37| issue=2| pages=175| url = http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1365-2052.2005.01409.x| format=Short Communication| accessdate=2006-05-29 | doi = 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2005.01409.x <!--Retrieved from URL by DOI bot-->}}</ref> The protein remains functional in areas of skin that are colder&mdash;legs, ears, tail, and face&mdash;and so the cat has dark fur at its extremities.


Environment also plays a dramatic role in effects of the human genetic disease [[phenylketonuria]].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/phenylketonuria.html| title=MedlinePlus: Phenylketonuria| accessdate=2008-03-15| publisher=NIH: National Library of Medicine}}</ref> The mutation that causes phenylketonuria disrupts the ability of the body to break down the amino acid [[phenylalanine]], causing a toxic build-up of an intermediate molecule that, in turn, causes severe symptoms of progressive mental retardation and seizures. If someone with the phenylketonuria mutation follows a strict diet that avoids this amino acid, however, they remain normal and healthy.
==Current issues in the United Church of Christ==
==="God Is Still Speaking" identity campaign===
{{main|God is Still Speaking}}


===Gene regulation===
[[Image:UCC branding logo.gif|frame|right|Example from UCC media branding campaign]] At the 2003 General Synod, the United Church of Christ began a campaign with "emphasis on expanding the UCC's name-brand identity through modern advertising and marketing."<ref name = "UCC-Billion">{{cite web | last=Winslow | first=William | authorlink= | coauthors= |date= | year=2003 | month=July-August | url=http://www.ucc.org/ucnews/aug03/billion.htm | title=UCC leader asks for $1 billion in annual giving by 2007 | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=ucc.org | language= | accessdate=2006-12-25 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref> that was formally launched Advent 2004. The campaign included coordinated program of evangelism and hospitality training for congregations paired with national and local television "brand" advertising, known as the "God is Still Speaking" campaign or "The Stillspeaking Initiative." The initiative was themed around the quote "Never place a period where God has placed a comma," and campaign materials, including print and broadcast advertising as well as merchandise, featured the quote and a large "comma," with a visual theme in red and black. United Church of Christ congregations were asked to "opt in" to the campaign, signifying their support as well as their willingness to receive training on hospitality and evangelism. An evangelism event was held in Atlanta in August 2005 to promote the campaign.<ref name = "UCC-Evangelism">{{cite web | last=Thomas | first=John | authorlink= | coauthors= |date= | year= | month= | url=http://www.ucc.org/evangelism/nee/index.html | title=National Evangelism Event | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=ucc.org | language= | accessdate=2006-12-25 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref> Several [[renewal group]]s panned the ad campaign for its efforts to create an [[Open and affirming|ONA]]/progressive perception of the UCC identity despite its actual majority in [[centrist]]/[[moderate]] viewpoints.<ref name = "Truths">[http://www.ucctruths.com/Archive/2004DecemberArchive.html December 2004 Archive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref name = "Witness">[http://www.biblicalwitness.org/pdf/Witness%25202005%2520Winter.pdf Witness 2005 - Winter<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> According to John Evans, associate professor of sociology at University of California, San Diego, "The UCC is clearly going after a certain niche in American society who are very progressive and have a particular religious vision that includes inclusiveness... They are becoming the religious brand that is known for this."<ref> name = "Evans"http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/16148802.htm</ref>
{{Main|Regulation of gene expression}}


The genome of a given organism contains thousands of genes, but not all these genes need to be active at any given moment. A gene is [[gene expression|expressed]] when it is being transcribed into mRNA (and translated into protein), and there exist many cellular methods of controlling the expression of genes such that proteins are produced only when needed by the cell. [[Transcription factor]]s are regulatory proteins that bind to the start of genes, either promoting or inhibiting the transcription of the gene.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Brivanlou AH, Darnell JE Jr |title=Signal transduction and the control of gene expression |journal=Science |volume=295 |issue=5556 |pages=813–818 |year=2002 |pmid=11823631 |doi=10.1126/science.1066355}}</ref> Within the genome of ''[[Escherichia coli]]'' bacteria, for example, there exists a series of genes necessary for the synthesis of the amino acid [[tryptophan]]. However, when tryptophan is already available to the cell, these genes for tryptophan synthesis are no longer needed. The presence of tryptophan directly affects the activity of the genes&mdash;tryptophan molecules bind to the [[trp repressor|tryptophan repressor]] (a transcription factor), changing the repressor's structure such that the repressor binds to the genes. The tryptophan repressor blocks the transcription and expression of the genes, thereby creating [[negative feedback]] regulation of the tryptophan synthesis process.<ref>Alberts et al. (2002), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=mboc4.section.1269#1270 II.3. Control of Gene Expression – The Tryptophan Repressor Is a Simple Switch That Turns Genes On and Off in Bacteria]</ref>
The first television advertisement in the campaign, the [http://www.ucc.org/god-is-still-speaking/televison-ads.html "Bouncers" advertisement], showed [[Bouncer (doorman)|bouncer]]s allowing a white, well-dressed family comprising a straight couple and two children into a church building while rejecting a number of others, including an African American female, a Latino male, a gay couple, and a person using a wheelchair. The text displayed on the screen says "Jesus didn't turn people away. Neither do we." In the initial December 2004 run, the [[NBC]] and [[CBS]] television networks refused to air an advertisement by the UCC, deeming it too controversial. The winter 2005 issue of The Witness (a renewal group publication) noted, ‘Some controversy continues about the controversy itself. Some reports indicate that NBC and CBS notified the UCC about its decision not to run the “bouncer” ads several months before the campaign launch date, while approving a second “little girl” ad which UCC officials chose not to use until three weeks into the month. All the press releases about this controversy have come from the UCC to coordinate with the release of the Ad. NBC and CBS have not commented, leading some to speculate that the creation of the controversy was an intentional effort to draw attention to the campaign. Ironically, the one major network to accept the Ad is FOX, which is generally considered to be less liberal than the three other networks.’<ref name = "Witness1,7">[http://www.biblicalwitness.org/pdf/Witness%25202005%2520Winter.pdf], pp. 1, 7.</ref>


[[Image:Zinc finger DNA complex.png|thumb|upright|right|Transcription factors bind to DNA, influencing the transcription of associated genes.]]
During [[Lent]] 2006, the UCC launched several sites prior to the release of the commercial, including [http://i.ucc.org/ iUCC.org], [http://www.uccvitality.org/index.php UCCVitality.org], [http://rejectionhurts.com RejectionHurts.com], [http://accessibleairwaves.org AccessibleAirwaves.org]. Also, at Buford’s request, the commercial was previewed by an estimated 800 people March 17-19 at the UCC’s New England Women’s Gathering. In January 2006, [[Sojourners Magazine]] published an inverview of Buford describing the commercial.<ref name = "Sojo">[http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=magazine.article&issue=soj0601&article=060142d Extravagant Welcome, Sojourners Magazine/January 2006<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> This Sojourners' information was subsequently published on several forums and blogs, (namely, [http://forums.ucc.org/viewtopic.php?t=1249&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=45&sid=28082f980adb71e7f5bd698c2616012c UCC forums], [http://philosophyovercoffee.blogspot.com/2006/03/description-of-new-ucc-commercial.html Philosophy over Coffee], [http://ucctruths.com/Archive/2006MarchArchive.html UCCTruths]). In reaction, the United Church news stated that "details of UCC's new TV ad [had] emerge[d] earlier than planned" and therefore issued a complete description of the ad a full week before its planned press conference.<ref name="ucc-TVad">{{cite web | last=Guess | first=J. Bennett | authorlink= | coauthors= |date=[[2006-03-21]] | year=2006 | month=March | url=http://news.ucc.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=493&Itemid=54 | title=Details of UCC's new TV ad emerge earlier than planned | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=ucc.org | language= | accessdate=2006-12-25 | accessyear= | curly= }}</ref>
Differences in gene expression are especially clear within [[multicellular organism]]s, where cells all contain the same genome but have very different structures and behaviors due to the expression of different sets of genes. All the cells in a multicellular organism derive from a single cell, differentiating into variant cell types in response to external and [[Cell signaling|intercellular signals]] and gradually establishing different patterns of gene expression to create different behaviors. As no single gene is responsible for the [[development (biology)|development]] of structures within multicellular organisms, these patterns arise from the complex interactions between many cells.


Within [[eukaryote]]s there exist structural features of [[chromatin]] that influence the transcription of genes, often in the form of modifications to DNA and chromatin that are stably inherited by daughter cells.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Jaenisch R, Bird A| title=Epigenetic regulation of gene expression: how the genome integrates intrinsic and environmental signals| journal=Nature Genetics| volume=33| issue=3s| pages=245–254 | doi = 10.1038/ng1089 <!--Retrieved from Yahoo! by DOI bot-->}}</ref> These features are called "[[epigenetic]]" because they exist "on top" of the DNA sequence and retain inheritance from one cell generation to the next. Because of epigenetic features, different cell types [[cell culture|grown]] within the same medium can retain very different properties. Although epigenetic features are generally dynamic over the course of development, some, like the phenomenon of [[paramutation]], have multigenerational inheritance and exist as rare exceptions to the general rule of DNA as the basis for inheritance.<ref>{{cite journal| title=Paramutation: From Maize to Mice| author=Chandler VL| journal=Cell| volume=128| pages=641–645| year=2007| doi=10.1016/j.cell.2007.02.007}}</ref>
In the second major commercial, known as the "Ejector Seat" commercial, church [[pew]]s "eject" people in a fashion similar to aircraft [[ejector seat]]s; among the persons "ejected" from the church are an African American mother holding a crying infant, two men holding hands, an Arab-American man, and a person with a [[Walker (tool)|walker]]. The commercial again concluded with the line "Jesus didn't turn people away. Neither do we", and cut to a scene of a diverse church gathering and a voice-over stating "The United Church of Christ: No matter who you are, or where you are on life's journey, you're welcome here." The "Ejector Seat" commercial was originally announced to air during Advent 2005, but due to inadequate funding available at the time, the Executive Council delayed this until Lent 2006.


==Genetic change==
In December 2006, UCC launched a blog-centered ad campaign. "UCC ads will be placed on various internet sites and blogs, with the hope of reaching general audiences in addition to targeted groups, such as youth, young families with children, gays and lesbians, [[social justice]] advocates, and the Spanish-speaking community."


===Mutations===
The United Church of Christ Executive Council announced at its April 2006 meeting that the denomination would integrate the campaign into the overall program of the national setting. Ron Buford, the campaign manager, subsequently resigned.
{{main|Mutation}}
[[Image:Gene-duplication.png|thumb|upright|Gene duplication allows diversification by providing redundancy: one gene can mutate and lose its original function without harming the organism.]]


During the process of [[DNA replication]], errors occasionally occur in the polymerization of the second strand. These errors, called [[mutations]], can have an impact on the phenotype of an organism, especially if they occur within the protein coding sequence of a gene. Error rates are usually very low&mdash;1 error in every 10–100&nbsp;million bases&mdash;due to the "proofreading" ability of DNA polymerases.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.2706 Chapter 16 (Mechanisms of Gene Mutation): Spontaneous mutations]</ref><ref name=Kunkel>{{cite journal| title=DNA Replication Fidelity| author=Kunkel TA| year=2004| journal=[[Journal of Biological Chemistry]]| volume=279| issue=17| pages=16895–16898 | doi = 10.1038/sj.emboj.7600158 <!--Retrieved from Yahoo! by DOI bot-->}}</ref> (Without proofreading error rates are a thousand-fold higher; because many viruses rely on DNA and RNA polymerases that lack proofreading ability, they experience higher mutation rates.) Processes that increase the rate of changes in DNA are called [[mutagenic]]: mutagenic chemicals promote errors in DNA replication, often by interfering with the structure of base-pairing, while [[UV radiation]] induces mutations by causing damage to the DNA structure.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.2727 Chapter 16 (Mechanisms of Gene Mutation): Induced mutations]</ref> Chemical damage to DNA occurs naturally as well, and cells use [[DNA repair]] mechanisms to repair mismatches and breaks in DNA—nevertheless, the repair sometimes fails to return the DNA to its original sequence.
===Controversial Resolutions from General Synod XXV (2005)===
{{main|Resolutions of United Church of Christ General Synod XXV}}
{{seealso|Resolutions of United Church of Christ }}
Two resolutions from the United Church of Christ General Synod XXV, meeting in [[Atlanta, Georgia]] from [[July 1]]–5, 2005, generated significant controversy both in and outside the denomination, some of which continues presently. As noted in the Polity section above, the General Synod cannot enforce positions on local congregations, speaking "to, but not for" them.


In organisms that use [[chromosomal crossover]] to exchange DNA and recombine genes, errors in alignment during [[meiosis]] can also cause mutations.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.2844 Chapter 17 (Chromosome Mutation I: Changes in Chromosome Structure): Introduction]</ref> Errors in crossover are especially likely when similar sequences cause partner chromosomes to adopt a mistaken alignment; this makes some regions in genomes more prone to mutating in this way. These errors create large structural changes in DNA sequence—[[gene duplication|duplications]], [[chromosomal inversion|inversions]] or [[gene deletion|deletions]] of entire regions, or the accidental exchanging of whole parts between different chromosomes (called [[chromosomal translocation|translocation]]).
*The resolution "''In support of equal marriage rights for all"'', supported by an estimated 80% of the 884 General Synod Delegates, made the United Church of Christ General Synod the first major Christian deliberative body in the U.S. to make a statement of support for "[[equal marriage rights]] for all people, regardless of gender," and is hitherto the largest Christian denominational entity in the U.S. supporting equal marriage rights (although other denominations have affirmed committed relationships for [[LGBT]] people in other forms). The resolution's primary focus is on calling for equal access to civil marriage rights regardless of gender; however, the resolution does call upon local congregations and other settings of the United Church of Christ to discussion and discernment around "marriage equality" and encourages congregations "to consider adopting Wedding Policies that do not discriminate against couples based on gender." Although eighty percent (80%) of the delegates at the United Church of Christ General Synod XXV endorsed an "Equal Marriage Rights For All" resolution, national response to the resolution remains mixed. Some in the United Church of Christ have heralded the resolution as furthering the prophetic witness of the United Church of Christ to both church and society. Others in the United Church of Christ viewed this decision unfavorably, though, because the General Synod's highly publicized endorsement may or may not reflect the actual theological opinions held by individual members or their local congregations. The language used that asserts no distinction between same sex marriage and different sex marriage ("Therefore, theologically and biblically, there is neither justification for denying any couple, regardless of gender, the blessings of the church nor for denying equal protection under the law in the granting of a civil marriage license, recognized and respected by all civil entities.") has been considered by some to be an overstepping the Synod's role in asserting theological positions. Of particular note, on [[June 10]], [[2006]], the Iglesia Evangelica Unida de Puerto Rico, since 1931 a conference of the Congregational Christian Churches/UCC, voted by a 3–1 margin to withdraw its affiliation with the UCC as a body, over the issue.<ref name = "News581">[http://news.ucc.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=581&Itemid=54]</ref>


===Natural selection and evolution===
*United Church of Christ General Synod XXV also passed two resolutions concerning the conflict between Israel and Palestinians in the Middle East. One calls for the use of economic leverage to promote peace in the Middle East, which can include measures such as government lobbying, selective ''investment'', shareholder lobbying, and selective ''[[divestment]]'' from companies which profit from the continuing Israel-Palestine conflict. The other resolution, named "Tear Down the Wall", calls upon Israel to remove the [[separation barrier]] between Israel and the West Bank. Opponents of the "Tear Down the Wall" resolution have noted that the wall's purpose is to prevent terrorist attacks, and that the resolution does not call for a stop to these attacks. The [[Simon Wiesenthal Center]] stated that the July 2005 UCC resolutions on divestment from Israel were "functionally [[anti-Semitic]]".<ref name = "Wiesenthal">[http://www.wiesenthal.com/site/apps/nl/content.asp?c=fwLYKnN8LzH&b=312458&content_id={01D1316F-EAA5-42EC-91BB-81E250805BFC}&notoc=1 Simon WIESENTHAL Center].</ref> The [[Anti-Defamation League]] stated that those same resolutions are "disappointing and disturbing" and "deeply troubling".<ref name = "ADL">[http://www.adl.org/PresRele/IslME_62/4749_62.htm Anti-Defamation League].</ref> In addition to the concerns raised about the merits of the "economic leverage" resolution, additional concerns were raised about the process in which the General Synod approved the resolution. Michael Downs of the [http://www.pbucc.org/ United Church of Christ Pension Boards] (who would be charged with implementing any divestment of the UCC's Pension Board investments) wrote a letter<ref name = "Thomas">[http://www.ucctruths.com/JohnThomas1Synod.pdf].</ref> to UCC President John Thomas expressing concern "with the precedent-setting implications of voted actions, integrity of process and trust."
{{main|Evolution}}


Mutations produce organisms with different genotypes, and those differences can result in different phenotypes. Many mutations have little effect on an organism's phenotype, health, and reproductive [[fitness (biology)|fitness]]. Mutations that do have an effect are often deleterious, but occasionally mutations are beneficial. Studies in the fly ''[[Drosophila melanogaster]]'' suggest that if a mutation changes a protein produced by a gene, this will probably be harmful, with about 70 percent of these mutations having damaging effects, and the remainder being either neutral or weakly beneficial.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Sawyer SA, Parsch J, Zhang Z, Hartl DL |title=Prevalence of positive selection among nearly neutral amino acid replacements in Drosophila |journal=Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. |volume=104 |issue=16 |pages=6504–10 |year=2007 |pmid=17409186 |doi=10.1073/pnas.0701572104}}</ref>
===Criticism of conservative critics===
Leaders of the United Church of Christ have recently begun to issue criticism of the [[Institute for Religion and Democracy]] and groups associated with it. In a speech [[October 14]], [[2005]], President John Thomas accused the IRD of becoming over-involved with conservatives within the UCC. He said:


[[Image:Eukaryote tree.svg|thumb|left|An [[evolutionary tree]] of eukaryotic organisms, constructed by comparison of several [[orthologous gene]] sequences]]
<blockquote>In the midst of all of this we are increasingly aware of the challenge of groups within and beyond the United Church of Christ that claim to represent the call to honor theological diversity in the United Church of Christ, that encourage the voice of more conservative sisters and brothers among us, but which are in fact intent on disrupting and destroying our life together.<ref name = "News356">[http://news.ucc.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=356&Itemid=56]</ref></blockquote>
[[Population genetics]] research studies the distributions of these genetic differences within populations and how the distributions change over time.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.3842 Chapter 24 (Population Genetics): Variation and its modulation]</ref> Changes in the frequency of an allele in a population can be influenced by [[natural selection]], where a given allele's higher rate of survival and reproduction causes it to become more frequent in the population over time.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.3886 Chapter 24 (Population Genetics): Selection]</ref> [[Genetic drift]] can also occur, where chance events lead to random changes in allele frequency.<ref>Griffiths et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=iga.section.3906 Chapter 24 (Population Genetics): Random events]</ref>


Over many generations, the genomes of organisms can change, resulting in the phenomenon of [[evolution]]. Mutations and the selection for beneficial mutations can cause a species to [[evolution|evolve]] into forms that better survive their environment, a process called [[adaptation]].<ref name=Darwin>{{cite book |last=Darwin |first=Charles |authorlink = Charles Darwin |year=1859 |title=On the Origin of Species |place=London |publisher=John Murray |edition=1st |pages=1 |url=http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=F373&viewtype=text&pageseq=16}}. Related earlier ideas were acknowledged in {{cite book |last=Darwin |first=Charles |authorlink = Charles Darwin |year=1861 |title=On the Origin of Species |place=London |publisher=John Murray |edition=3rd |pages=xiii |url=http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=F381&viewtype=text&pageseq=20}}</ref> New species are formed through the process of [[speciation]], a process often caused by geographical separations that allow different populations to genetically diverge.<ref name=Gavrilets>{{cite journal |author=Gavrilets S |title=Perspective: models of speciation: what have we learned in 40 years? |journal=Evolution |volume=57 |issue=10 |pages=2197–2215 |year=2003 |pmid=14628909 | doi = 10.1554/02-727 <!--Retrieved from Yahoo! by DOI bot-->}}</ref> The application of genetic principles to the study of population biology and evolution is referred to as the [[modern synthesis]].
At [[Gettysburg College]] on [[March 6]], [[2006]], Thomas again warned against collusion with the IRD, calling the IRD "a sophisticated 'inside the beltway' organization well funded by conservative foundations and closely aligned with a neo-conservative political agenda." Thomas criticized IRD's association with the [[Association of Church Renewal]], with the [[Biblical Witness Fellowship]], with "[[Faithful and Welcoming Churches|Welcoming and Faithful Movement]]" [sic], and the [[Simon Wiesenthal Center]]. Further, Thomas described IRD's [[modus operandi]] as follows:


As sequences diverge and change during the process of evolution, these differences between sequences can be used as a [[molecular clock]] to calculate the evolutionary distance between them.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Wolf YI, Rogozin IB, Grishin NV, Koonin EV |title=Genome trees and the tree of life |journal=Trends Genet. |volume=18 |issue=9 |pages=472–479 |year=2002 |pmid=12175808 |doi=10.1016/S0168-9525(02)02744-0}}</ref> Genetic comparisons are generally considered the most accurate method of characterizing the relatedness between species, an improvement over the sometimes deceptive comparison of phenotypic characteristics. The evolutionary distances between species can be combined to form [[evolutionary tree]]s - these trees represent the [[common descent]] and divergence of species over time, although they cannot represent the transfer of genetic material between unrelated species (known as [[horizontal gene transfer]] and most common in bacteria).
<blockquote>The IRD pursues its political agenda in the churches through three strategies: campaigns of [[disinformation]] that seek to discredit church leadership, advocacy efforts at church assemblies seeking to influence church policy, and [[grass roots]] organizing which, in some cases, encourages [[schism (religion)|schismatic]] movements encouraging members and congregations either to redirect mission funding or even to leave their denominations. Indeed, the Mainline churches are facing [[hardball]] tactics."<ref name = "News483">[http://news.ucc.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=483&Itemid=56]</ref></blockquote>


==Research and technology==
Following the speech, the [[Simon Wiesenthal Center]] denied any connection to the IRD and stated:


===Model organisms and genetics===
<blockquote>John Thomas made some conspiratorial charges about the Wiesenthal Center at a recent speech at Gettysburg College. These charges are completely inaccurate and are not based on fact and the irresponsible nature of these comments should make reasonable people wonder if the leadership of the UCC is being equally irresponsible with the facts about the Middle-East."''<ref name = "Truths200603">[http://www.ucctruths.com/Archive/2006MarchArchive.html#swc March 2006 UCCtruths.com Archive<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref></blockquote>
[[Image:Drosophila melanogaster - side (aka).jpg|thumb|right|The [[common fruit fly]] (''Drosophila melanogaster'') is a popular [[model organism]] in genetics research.]]


Although geneticists originally studied inheritance in a wide range of organisms, researchers began to specialize in studying the genetics of a particular subset of organisms. The fact that significant research already existed for a given organism would encourage new researchers to choose it for further study, and so eventually a few [[model organisms]] became the basis for most genetics research.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.loci.wisc.edu/outreach/text/model.html| title=The Use of Model Organisms in Instruction| accessdate=2008-03-15| publisher=University of Wisconsin: Wisconsin Outreach Research Modules}}</ref> Common research topics in model organism genetics include the study of [[gene regulation]] and the involvement of genes in [[Morphogenesis|development]] and [[cancer]].
Faithful and Welcoming, one of these groups named by Thomas as being aligned with IRD, held their first annual gathering in August 2006 and invited the UCC leadership to dialogue on the future of conservatives and other non-liberals in the UCC. Shortly thereafter, the August–September issue of the United Church News was published during that included a pastoral letter by Thomas and [[point counterpoint]] articles by Bob Thompson and Nancy Taylor disagreeing over the goals of Faithful and Welcoming.<ref name = "Thompson">[http://www.ucc.org/ucnews/sep06/commentary.htm THOMPSON, Bob].</ref><ref name = "TAYLOR">[http://www.ucc.org/ucnews/sep06/commentary2.htm TAYLOR, Nancy].</ref> Thomas' letter does not take an explicit stand on FWC, but is clear that pastors within the UCC need to "distinguish loving critics from hurtful ones" and that not all conservative critics of UCC resolutions should be automatically associated with IRD. Taylor's ONA counterpoint explicitly stated "Thompson is not a loving critic."<ref name = "Thomas200609">[http://www.ucc.org/ucnews/sep06/collegium.htm Thomas’ letter], 2006 Sept.</ref>


Organisms were chosen, in part, for convenience&mdash;short generation times and easy genetic manipulation made some organisms popular genetics research tools. Widely used model organisms include the gut bacterium ''[[Escherichia coli]]'', the plant ''[[Arabidopsis thaliana]]'', baker's yeast (''[[Saccharomyces cerevisiae]]''), the nematode ''[[Caenorhabditis elegans]]'', the common fruit fly (''[[Drosophila melanogaster]]''), and the common house mouse (''[[Mus musculus]]'').
However, Faithful and Welcoming is not and was not aligned with IRD. This controversy stemmed from a short-lived link to IRD inadvertently posted on the FWC website's links page. This link was not representative of an association or alignment with IRD.


===Medical genetics research===
Thomas' letter said:
[[Medical genetics]] seeks to understand how genetic variation relates to human health and disease.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=gnd&ref=sidebar| title=NCBI: Genes and Disease| publisher=NIH: National Center for Biotechnology Information| accessdate=2008-03-15}}</ref> When searching for an unknown gene that may be involved in a disease, researchers commonly use [[genetic linkage]] and genetic [[pedigree chart]]s to find the location on the genome associated with the disease. At the population level, researchers take advantage of [[Mendelian randomization]] to look for locations in the genome that are associated with diseases, a technique especially useful for [[quantitative trait locus|multigenic traits]] not clearly defined by a single gene.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Davey Smith, G | coauthors = Ebrahim, S| journal=International Journal of Epidemiology| title=‘Mendelian randomization’: can genetic epidemiology contribute to understanding environmental determinants of disease?| year=2003| volume=32| pages=1–22| url=http://ije.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/32/1/1| doi=10.1093/ije/dyg070| pmid=12689998}}</ref> Once a candidate gene is found, further research is often done on the same gene (called an [[homology (biology)#Orthology|orthologous]] gene) in model organisms. In addition to studying genetic diseases, the increased availability of genotyping techniques has led to the field of [[pharmacogenetics]]&mdash;studying how genotype can affect drug responses.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nigms.nih.gov/Initiatives/PGRN/Background/FactSheet.htm |title=Pharmacogenetics Fact Sheet |accessdate=2008-03-15 |publisher=NIH: National Institute of General Medical Sciences}}</ref>
<blockquote>
It is clear that we face two kinds of critics today. There are many loving critics who care deeply for this church, seek ways to support it, and yearn for its growth and vitality. They find themselves in dissent from some of the positions of the General Synod and its leaders, finding in the Bible and the church's tradition differing understandings of how we are to view contemporary social and moral issues. We need to listen with care, humility and deep respect to these loving critics, assuring them of their honored place within the diverse life of this church, finding ways for them to support those aspects of our national and global ministries that they can fully embrace. We need to be open to the truth that they have spiritual insights to nurture, even challenge us toward greater faithfulness.


Although it is not an inherited disease, [[cancer]] is also considered a genetic disease.<ref>{{cite book| author=Strachan T, Read AP| title=Human Molecular Genetics 2| year=1999| publisher=John Wiley & Sons Inc.| edition=second edition}}[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=hmg.chapter.2342 Chapter 18: Cancer Genetics]</ref> The process of cancer development in the body is a combination of events. [[Mutation]]s occasionally occur within cells in the body as they divide. While these mutations will not be inherited by any offspring, they can affect the behavior of cells, sometimes causing them to grow and divide more frequently. There are biological mechanisms that attempt to stop this process; signals are given to inappropriately dividing cells that should trigger [[apoptosis|cell death]], but sometimes additional mutations occur that cause cells to ignore these messages. An internal process of [[natural selection]] occurs within the body and eventually mutations accumulate within cells to promote their own growth, creating a cancerous tumor that grows and invades various tissues of the body.
It's also the case that there are critics who do not love this church, who seek to disrupt, distract, diminish, even destroy our life. These critics, within and beyond, encourage local churches to withhold financial support of our wider ministries, offer advice and counsel on how to leave the denomination, establish parallel structures for the placement of clergy and the sending of mission personnel, and regularly disseminate deliberately misleading or false information about the denomination and its leaders. Those who love this church, and cherish its legacy, need to be clear in saying no to this form of critique which falls outside the bounds of acceptable Christian behavior.


===Research techniques===
Discerning between these two types of critics is one of the great challenges of leadership today. It requires a deep humility to embrace the loving critics, no matter how uncomfortable their critique may be, never saying, "I have no need of you." But it also requires the courage to name those whose actions are out of bounds, saying to those who would disrupt, distract, even destroy, "I will not let you damage what is precious or diminish a vocation that is a critical dimension of the Gospel witness." Such discernment is not easy. May God grant us the wisdom required for it, and the discipline to do it.
[[Image:Ecoli colonies.png|thumb|''[[E coli]]'' [[colony (biology)|colonies]] on a plate of [[agar]], an example of [[Cloning#Cellular cloning|cellular cloning]] and often used in [[molecular cloning]].]]
</blockquote>
DNA can be manipulated in the laboratory. [[Restriction enzymes]] are a commonly used [[enzyme]] that cuts DNA at specific sequences, producing predictable fragments of DNA.<ref>Lodish et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=mcb.section.1582 Chapter 7: 7.1. DNA Cloning with Plasmid Vectors]</ref> The use of [[DNA ligase|ligation enzymes]] allows these fragments to be reconnected, and by ligating fragments of DNA together from different sources, researchers can create [[recombinant DNA]]. Often associated with [[genetically modified organism]]s, recombinant DNA is commonly used in the context of [[plasmids]] - short circular DNA fragments with a few genes on them. By inserting plasmids into bacteria and growing those bacteria on plates of agar (to isolate [[Cloning#Cellular cloning|clones of bacteria cell]]s), researchers can clonally amplify the inserted fragment of DNA (a process known as [[Cloning#Molecular cloning|molecular cloning]]). (Cloning can also refer to the creation of [[Cloning#Organism|clonal organisms]], through various techniques.)


DNA can also be amplified using a procedure called the [[polymerase chain reaction]] (PCR).<ref>Lodish et al. (2000), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?highlight=PCR&rid=mcb.section.1718 Chapter 7: 7.7. Polymerase Chain Reaction: An Alternative to Cloning]</ref> By using specific short sequences of DNA, PCR can isolate and exponentially amplify a targeted region of DNA. Because it can amplify from extremely small amounts of DNA, PCR is also often used to detect the presence of specific DNA sequences.
Thompson voices his contention that the UCC is attempting a realignment along the lines of [[Tony Campolo]]'s 1995 book, ''Can Mainline Denominations Make a Comeback?'' [that] advocated the "realignment" of denominations based on ideological lines."<ref>Campolo has expressed similar views to other audiences, such as in a speech at [[Abilene Christian University]]'s convocation at the start of the 2003 spring semester ([http://www.acu.edu/events/news/archives2003/030113_campolo.html "Tony Campolo challenges ACU students to service"]).</ref> Thompson says, "numerous individuals — along with entire congregations — have expressed interest in joining the UCC because of its bold pronouncements and extravagant welcome. More important than the numbers lost and gained, whatever they turn out to be, is this dual reality: those leaving the UCC more than likely consider themselves evangelical, conservative, orthodox, or traditional (ECOT) and those finding the UCC are likely liberal or progressive."...&nbsp;"We [FWC] do not seek to divide or disrupt. We are not a cover for an exit strategy. We are simply asking that our presence be recognized and valued."


===DNA sequencing and genomics===
In response, Taylor writes, "while Thompson writes that his Faithful and Welcoming Churches "are not a cover for an exit strategy" from the UCC, his activities tell a different story" she lists several including that "Thompson's own church, [http://www.corinthtoday.org Corinth Reformed Church] in Hickory, N.C., has dropped UCC from its name and the FWC website encourages other UCC congregations to drop UCC from their names. Moreover, his church has scheduled a congregational vote for [[September 9]], [[2007]] regarding its continued UCC affiliation." She further criticizes Thompson for his church's withholding of OCWM funds, and concludes, "Thompson is not a loving critic."
One of the most fundamental technologies developed to study genetics, [[DNA sequencing]] allows researchers to determine the sequence of nucleotides in DNA fragments. Developed in 1977 by [[Frederick Sanger]] and coworkers, chain-termination sequencing is now routinely used to sequence DNA fragments.<ref>{{cite book|author=Brown TA| title=Genomes 2| edition=2nd edition| year=2002| isbn=ISBN 1 85996 228 9}}[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=genomes.section.6452 Section 2, Chapter 6: 6.1. The Methodology for DNA Sequencing]</ref> With this technology, researchers have been able to study the molecular sequences associated with many human diseases.


As sequencing has become less expensive and with the aid of computational tools, researchers have [[Genome project|sequenced the genomes]] of many organisms by stitching together the sequences of many different fragments (a process called [[genome assembly]]).<ref>Brown (2002), [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=genomes.section.6481 Section 2, Chapter 6: 6.2. Assembly of a Contiguous DNA Sequence]</ref> These technologies were used to sequence the human genome, leading to the completion of the [[Human Genome Project]] in 2003.<ref name=human_genome_project>{{cite web| url=http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/home.shtml| title=Human Genome Project Information| accessdate=2008-03-15| publisher=Human Genome Project}}</ref> New [[DNA sequencing#New sequencing methods|high-throughput sequencing]] technologies are dramatically lowering the cost of DNA sequencing, with many researchers hoping to bring the cost of resequencing a human genome down to a thousand dollars.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Service RF| journal=Science| title=The Race for the $1000 Genome| year=2006| volume=311| issue=5767| pages=1544–1546| url=http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/311/5767/1544| doi=10.1126/science.311.5767.1544| pmid=16543431}}</ref>
===General Synod 26===
The 2007 General Synod featured a "Synod in the City" outdoor [[bazaar]] throughout the central city of [[Hartford, Connecticut]] with speakers, street musicians, and circus acts, as a celebration of the denomination's 50th anniversary. Several notable speakers such as [[Marian Wright Edelman]], [[Lynn Redgrave]], [[Bill Moyers]], [[NBC]]'s [[John Hockenberry]], [[Leonard Pitts|Leonard Pitts, Jr.]], [[Kevin Phillips (political commentator)|Kevin Phillips]], Senator [[Barack Obama]], [[Ray Kurzweil]], the Rev. [[Peter Gomes]], and [[DJ Davey D]] were present during the festivities.


The large amount of sequences available has created the field of [[genomics]], research that uses computational tools to search for and analyze patterns in the full genomes of organisms. Genomics can also be considered a subfield of [[bioinformatics]], which uses computational approaches to analyze large sets of biological data.(It is also heredity
===Barack Obama's membership in the UCC===
{{-}}
A controversy arose over Obama speaking at UCC gatherings, but the IRS found that the UCC had adhered to the prohibition against churches campaigning for political candidates.


==Notes==
In 2007, US Presidential candidate and longtime UCC member [[Barack Obama]] spoke at the UCC's Iowa Conference meeting and at the General Synod 26.<ref>[http://www.ucc.org/news/a-week-before-synod.html One week before Synod speech, Obama addresses UCC's Iowa Conference]</ref> A complaint filed with the [[Internal Revenue Service]] alleged that the UCC promoted Obama's candidacy by having him speak at those meetings.<ref>[http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=11986 The American Spectator<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
{{reflist|2}}

[[Barry W. Lynn|Barry Lynn]], an ordained UCC minister and the executive director of [[Americans United for Separation of Church and State]], stated that although he personally would not have invited a Presidential candidate to speak at the meetings, he believed "the Internal Revenue Service permits this to happen."<ref>[http://www.onenewsnow.com/2007/06/barry_lynn_obamas_ucc_speech_n.php OneNewsNow.com - Your News Right Now<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The church had consulted with lawyers prior to the event to make sure they were following the law and had instructed those in attendance that no Obama campaign material would be allowed in the meeting. Nevertheless, in February 2008, the IRS sent a letter to the church stating that it was launching an inquiry into the matter.<ref>[http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jlQQQuZKZmCSwpSPaZL-1qFIFX8QD8V2C8NO1 The Associated Press: IRS Investigates Obama's Denomination<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

On [[February 27]], [[2008]], in an open letter to UCC members, Rev. John Thomas announced the creation of The UCC Legal Fund, to aid in the denomination's defense against the [[Internal Revenue Service|IRS]].<ref>[http://unitedchurchofchrist.blogspot.com/2008/02/support-uccs-legal-defense-against-irs.html The United Church of Christ: Support the UCC's legal defense against the IRS<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> While the denomination expects legal expenses to surpass six figures, it halted donations after raising $59,564 in less than a week.

In May 2008, the IRS issued a letter which states that the UCC had taken appropriate steps and that the denomination's tax status was not in jeopardy.
<ref>[http://unitedchurchofchrist.blogspot.com/search?q=59%2C564 The United Church of Christ: Search results for 59,564<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==Ecumenical relations==
The United Church of Christ is in a relationship of [[full communion]] with the [[Evangelical Lutheran Church in America]], the [[Presbyterian Church (USA)]], and the [[Reformed Church in America]] through a formal declaration known as the ''[[Formula of Agreement]]'', with the [[Union Evangelischer Kirchen]] (Union of Evangelical Churches) in Germany, and with the [[Disciples of Christ|Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)]] through an ecumenical partnership. The church is a founding member of [[Churches Uniting in Christ]] and is in dialogue about deeper relations with the [[Alliance of Baptists]]. It is a member of the [[National Council of Churches|National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA]] (NCC), the [[World Alliance of Reformed Churches]] (WARC), and the [[World Council of Churches]]. The UCC also allies with other denominations in support of [[Church World Service]] efforts in domestic and foreign development and relief efforts.

==United Church of Christ institutions==
===Officially related educational institutions===
====Seminaries====
*[[Andover Newton Theological School]] ([[Newton Centre, Massachusetts]])
*[[Bangor Theological Seminary]] ([[Bangor, Maine]])
*[[Chicago Theological Seminary]] ([[Chicago, Illinois]])
*[[Eden Theological Seminary]] ([[Webster Groves, Missouri|Webster Groves]] and [[St. Louis, MO]])
*[[Lancaster Theological Seminary]] ([[Lancaster, Pennsylvania]])
*[[Pacific School of Religion]] ([[Berkeley, California]])
*[[United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities]] ([[New Brighton, Minnesota]])

====Colleges and universities====
''These 18 schools have affirmed the purposes of the United Church of Christ Council for Higher Education by official action and are full members of the Council.''
*[[Catawba College]] ([[Salisbury, North Carolina]])
*[[Defiance College]] ([[Defiance, Ohio]])
*[[Dillard University]] ([[New Orleans, Louisiana]])
*[[Doane College]] ([[Crete, Nebraska]])
*[[Drury University]] ([[Springfield, Missouri]])
*[[Elmhurst College]] ([[Elmhurst, Illinois]])
*[[Elon University]] ([[Elon, North Carolina]])
*[[Heidelberg College]] ([[Tiffin, Ohio]])
*[[Huston-Tillotson University]] ([[Austin, Texas]])
*[[Illinois College]] ([[Jacksonville, Illinois]])
*[[Lakeland College (Wisconsin)|Lakeland College]] ([[Sheboygan, Wisconsin]])
*[[LeMoyne-Owen College]] ([[Memphis, Tennessee]])
*[[Northland College (Wisconsin)|Northland College]] ([[Ashland, Wisconsin]])
*[[Olivet College]] ([[Olivet, Michigan]])
*[[Pacific University]] ([[Forest Grove, Oregon]])
*[[Piedmont College]] ([[Demorest, Georgia]])
*[[Rocky Mountain College]] ([[Billings, Montana]])
*[[Talladega College]] ([[Talladega, Alabama]])
*[[Tougaloo College]] ([[Tougaloo, Mississippi]])

====Secondary academies====
*The [[Massanutten Academy]] ([[Woodstock, Virginia]])
*The [[Mercersburg Academy]] ([[Mercersburg, Pennsylvania]])

===Historically related educational institutions===
====Historically related seminaries====
*[[Hartford Seminary]] ([[Hartford, Connecticut]])
*[[Harvard Divinity School]] ([[Cambridge, Massachusetts]])
*[[Howard University]] School of Divinity ([[Washington, DC]])
*[[Interdenominational Theological Center]] ([[Atlanta, Georgia]])
*[[Seminario Evangélico de Puerto Rico]] ([[San Juan, Puerto Rico]])
*[[Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York|Union Theological Seminary]] ([[New York, New York]])
*[[Vanderbilt Divinity School|Vanderbilt University Divinity School]] ([[Nashville, Tennessee]])
*[[Yale University]] Divinity School ([[New Haven, Connecticut]])

====Historically related colleges and universities (Council for Higher Education)====
''"These colleges continue to relate to the United Church of Christ through the Council for Higher Education, but chose not to affirm the purposes of the Council. Though in many respects similar to the colleges and universities that have full membership in the Council, these institutions tend to be less intentional about their relationships with the United Church of Christ." (from the United Church of Christ website)''
*[[Beloit College]] ([[Beloit, Wisconsin]])
*[[Carleton College]] ([[Northfield, Minnesota]])
*[[Cedar Crest College]] ([[Allentown, Pennsylvania]])
*[[Fisk University]] ([[Nashville, Tennessee]])
*[[Franklin and Marshall College]] ([[Lancaster, Pennsylvania]])
*[[Grinnell College]] ([[Grinnell, Iowa]])
*[[Hood College]] ([[Frederick, Maryland]])
*[[Ripon College (Wisconsin)|Ripon College]] ([[Ripon, Wisconsin]])
*[[Ursinus College]] ([[Collegeville, Pennsylvania]])
*[[Westminster College of Salt Lake City]] ([[Salt Lake City, Utah]])

====Other historical colleges and universities (unrelated)====
''These colleges and universities were founded by or are otherwise related historically to the denomination or its predecessors, but no longer maintain any direct relationship.''

*[[Dartmouth College]] ([[Hanover, New Hampshire]])
*[[Harvard University]] ([[Cambridge, Massachusetts]]) — ''was founded by Congregationalists, but sided with the [[Unitarians]] in their 1825 breakaway.''
*[[Yale University]] ([[New Haven, Connecticut]])
*[[Chamberlain College of Nursing]], formerly Deaconess College of Nursing ([[St. Louis, Missouri]])
*[[Rollins College]] ([[Winter Park, Florida]])
*[[New College Florida]] ([[Sarasota, Florida]])<ref>[http://www.ncf.edu/about/history.html A Brief History - New College of Florida, The public liberal arts honors college for the state of Florida<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
*[[Oberlin College]] ([[Oberlin, Ohio]])
*[[Pomona College]] ([[Claremont, California]])
*[[Tohoku Gakuin University]] ([[Sendai]], [[Japan]])
*[[Whitman College]] ([[Walla Walla, Washington]]) — ''briefly associated with the Congragational Church in the early 1900s.''

==List of prominent UCC churches==
*[[Trinity United Church of Christ, Chicago]] - a predominantly [[black church]] located in south Chicago. With upwards of 10,000 members, it is the largest church affiliated with UCC. It was pastored by [[Rev. Jeremiah Wright]] until early 2008.

*[[Cathedral of Hope (Dallas)]] - Largest church in the United States with a primary outreach to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. Local membership exceeds 3500 people though the church claims over 52,000 world wide constituents.

==List of famous UCC members or attendees==
This section lists notable people known to have been raised in or current members of the United Church of Christ or its predecessor denominations.

* [[Daniel Akaka]] — U.S. Senator from Hawaii (Democrat)
* [[Max Baucus]] — U.S. Senator from Montana (Democrat)
* [[Julian Bond]] — Chair [[NAACP]] (2004–present)
* [[Walter Brueggemann]] — contemporary theologian, poet, and UCC minister, retired professor at [[Columbia Theological Seminary]]
* [[William Sloane Coffin]] — Late Presbyterian/UCC minister and activist; 'pastor, prophet, poet'; former Chaplain at [[Yale University]] and Senior Pastor of [[Riverside Church]], New York City
* [[Common (rapper)|Common]] — Rapper, recording artist, member of [[Trinity United Church of Christ]] in Chicago.
* [[Jon Corzine]] — Governor of New Jersey (Democrat)
* [[Howard Dean]] — Chairman of the [[Democratic National Committee]], Former Governor of Vermont (Democrat)
* [[Mark Fernald]] — Former New Hampshire State senator<ref>[http://www.nhcucc.org/Mission%20Manual%20version%203_2_.pdf pg 10]</ref>
* [[Donald Hall]] — United States [[Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress|US Poet Laureate]]<ref>[http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110008594 On Eagle Pond Farm The new poet laureate on politics, grief&mdash;and Poetry TV]</ref>
* [[Mills Godwin]] — Former Governor of Virginia
* [[Bob Graham]] — Former U.S. Senator from Florida (Democrat)
* [[Judd Gregg]] — U.S. Senator from New Hampshire (Republican)
* [[Jim Jeffords]] — Former U.S. Senator from Vermont (Independent)
* [[Roger Johnson]] - CEO of [[Western Digital]] and head of the [[General Services Administration]] under President [[Bill Clinton]]
* [[Dean Koontz]] — American writer and author. Raised UCC, now is Catholic.<ref>[http://ncregister.com/site/article/2013/ Chatting With Koontz About Faith]</ref>
* [[John Williamson Nevin]] — notable 19th-century theologian
* [[Barack Obama]] — U.S. Senator, 2008 presidential candidate
* [[Robert Orr]] — Assistant [[Secretary General of the United Nations]]
* [[H. Richard Niebuhr]] — notable 20th-century theologian
* [[Reinhold Niebuhr]] — notable 20th-century theologian
* [[Sally Pederson]] — former Lieutenant Governor of Iowa (Democrat)
* [[Leonard Pitts]] — Nationally syndicated [[Pulitzer prize]]–winning (2004) columnist
* [[Kwame Raoul]] — Senator in Illinois State Senate (Democrat)
* [[Marilynne Robinson]] — [[Pulitzer prize]]-winning (2005) author of the novel ''[[Gilead (novel)|Gilead]]''
* [[Philip Schaff]] — notable 19th-century theologian
* [[George Smathers]] — Democratic Senator from Florida
* [[Max L. Stackhouse]] — public theologian and professor at [[Princeton Theological Seminary]]
* [[William "Bill" McKinney]] — President of Pacific School of Religion, since 1996
* [[Paul Tillich]] — notable 20th-century theologian
* [[Jeri Kehn Thompson]] - wife of [[Law & Order]] star and former U.S. Senator and presidential candidate [[Fred Thompson]]
* [[Oprah Winfrey]] — entertainment mogul
* [[Andrew Young]] — Civil rights leader, ordained UCC pastor, and former member of Congress, UN ambassador, and mayor of [[Atlanta, Georgia]]

==UCC people notable within the denomination==
This section lists theologians and other UCC clergy and laypeople that are notable within the denomination but that may have little name recognition outside the denomination.

: '''Presidents''' (year order)
* [[James E. Wagner]] & Fred Hoskins — UCC co-presidents (1957–1961)<ref name="relig-orgs">{{cite web | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= |date= | year= | month= | url=http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Religious_Organizations.html | title=A list of world religious organizations | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=worldstatesmen.org | language= | accessdate=2006-12-27 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref>
* [[Ben M. Herbster]] — UCC president (1961–1969)
* [[Robert Moss, Jr.]] — UCC president (1969–1976) and author of the Moss Adaptation of the UCC statement of Faith.<ref name="UCC-faith">{{cite web | last=Moss | first=Robert | authorlink= | coauthors= |date= | year=1976 | month= | url=http://www.plymouthchurch.com/info/statement.htm | title=An Adaptation of the Statement of Faith Of the United Church of Christ | format= | work= | pages= |publisher=plymouthchurch.com | language= | accessdate=2006-12-27 | accessyear= | curly=}}</ref>
* [[Joseph H. Evans]] — UCC president (1976–1977)
* [[Avery Post]] — UCC President (1977–1989)
* [[Paul Sherry]] — UCC President (1989–1999)
* [[John H. Thomas]] — UCC president (1999–present)

: '''Others''' (alphabetical order)
* [[Ron Buford]] — coordinator of The Stillspeaking Initiative and former advertising manager for ''United Church News''.
* [[Gabriel Fackre]] — Theologian; president, Confessing Christ; Abbot Professor of Christian Theology Emeritus, Andover Newton Theological School
* [[J. Bennett Guess]] — Editor of ''United Church News,'' the denominational newspaper
* [[Edith Guffey]] — Associate General Minister
* [[Louis Gunnemann]] — UCC [[polity]] theologian and former dean of United Theological Seminary (Twin Cities)
* [[Douglas Horton (clergyman)|Douglas Horton]] — [[Ecumenism|Ecumenist]], Minister and General Secretary of the General Council of [[Congregational Christian Church]]es, translator of [[Karl Barth]] into English, and early force in the formation of the UCC.
* Rev. [[William Hulteen]] — 25-year veteran of the former national "Office for Church Life and Leadership" (OCLL) and spokesman for issues of "ordained and lay leadership, theological reflection and education, clergy placement, worship and spirituality, and congregational life".<ref>[http://news.ucc.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=51&Itemid=54]</ref>
* [[M. Linda Jaramillo]] — Executive Minister for Justice and Witness Ministries (JWM)
* [[José Malayang]] — Executive Minister for Local Church Ministries (LCM)
* Rev. [[Otis Moss III]] — Pastor of [[Trinity United Church of Christ]] in [[Chicago]]
* [[Elizabeth Nordbeck]] — Professor of Ecclesiastical History and 11-year dean at Andover Newton Theological School. co-editor of ''Prism,'' a UCC denominational journal.<ref>[http://www.oldsouth.org/LentenSeries2006/lentenseries06d.html Lenten Series 2006 Old South Church: The United Church of Christ: a radical experiment in Christian unity<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
* [[Charles Shelby Rooks]] — influential UCC pastor and scholar who, as president of Chicago Theological Seminary from 1974 to 1984, was the first African American to lead a predominantly Euro-American theological school.
* [[David Runnion-Bareford]] — Executive Director of Biblical Witness Fellowship since 1994; pastor, Congregational Church, [[Candia, New Hampshire]]
* [[Reuben Sheares]], pastor and former executive director of the national Office for Church Life and Leadership for the UCC.<ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE2DD173BF935A25754C0A964958260 Reuben A. Sheares, 58, a Pastor And a Leader in Church of Christ]</ref>
* [[Nancy S. Taylor]] — frequent denominational commentator, former Massachusetts Conference minister, and presently pastor of the historic [[Old South Church, Boston, Massachusetts|Old South Church]] in Boston.<ref>[http://www.ucc.org/ucnews/sep06/commentary2.htm]</ref>
* [[Susan Thistlethwaite]] — President and Professor of Theology, Chicago Theological Seminary<ref>[http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1058/is_26_119/ai_96195179 Just Peace movement seeks rebirth in UCC - News - United Church of Christ | Christian Century | Find Articles at BNET.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
* Rev. Bob Thompson, president of [[Faithful and Welcoming Churches]]; pastor, Corinth Reformed Church, [[Hickory, North Carolina]]
* [[Frederick R. Trost]] — founding convenor of Confessing Christ; former Conference Minister, Wisconsin Conference
* [[Cally Rogers-Witte]] — Executive Minister for Wider Church Ministries (WCM)
* Rev. [[Jeremiah Wright]] — retired senior pastor of the 10000-plus-member [[Trinity United Church of Christ]], a predominantly African American [[Chicago]] congregation.
* Barbara Brown Zikmund — church historian (''Hidden Histories'') and President of Hartford Seminary; unsuccessful candidate for General Minister position in 1999.

==Acronyms==
Many [[acronym]]s are used within the UCC in place of common phrases:

* ANTS - Andover Newton Theological School
* AUCE - Association of United Church Educators
* BWF - [[Biblical Witness Fellowship]]
* CAIM - Council for American Indian Ministry
* CC - Congregational Christian
* CCHS - Congregational Christian Historical Society
* CCM - Council of Conference Ministers
* CE - Council for Ecumenism
* CHE - Council for Higher Education
* CHHSM - Council for Health and Human Service Ministries
* CHM - Council for Hispanic Ministries
* CR - Collegium Relationship Committee
* CJA - Christians for Justice Action
* COCU - Consultation on Church Union
* COREM - Council for Racial and Ethnic Ministries
* CUCCIAB - Conferences of the United Church of Christ Insurance Advisory Board
* CUE - Mid-America Seminaries, Chicago, United, and Eden
* CYYAM - Council on Youth and Young Adult Ministry
* E&R - Evangelical and Reformed
* EC - Executive Council
* ECOT - evangelical, conservative, orthodox, traditional &ndash; an acronym claimed to be invented by FWC to define contradistinction to "progressive" and "fundamentalist" wings of the UCC
* EMR/EMRFA - Equal Marriage Rights resolution of GS25
* EP&P - Evaluation, Planning, and Policy Committee
* ERHS - Evangelical and Reformed Historical Society
* FWC - Faithful And Welcoming Churches
* GISS - [[God is still speaking]] (theme for UCC ad campaign)
* GS - General Synod
* GS25 - General Synod 25 held in 2005, approved the EMR
* JWM - [[Justice and Witness Ministries]]

* HC - Historical Council
* LCM - Local Church Ministries
* MRSEJ - Ministers for Racial, Social, and Economic Justice (often referred to verbally as "Missus [MRS.] E.J.")
* MOM - Manual on Ministry
* NCCC - [[National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA]]
* OCCL - Office for Church Life and Leadership (defunct office under pre-2000 reorganization
* OCWM - Our Church's Wider Mission
* OGHS - One Great Hour of Sharing
* OGM - Office of General Ministries
* OL - Organizational Life Committee
* ONA - [[Open And Affirming]]
* PAAM - Pacific Islander and Asian American Ministries
* PB - Pension Boards
* PPC-25 - Program and Planning Committee of the Twenty-fifth General Synod
* TSI - The Still Speaking Initiative (UCC ad campaign)
* UBC - United Black Christians
* UCC - United Church of Christ
* UCCDM - UCC Disabilities Ministries
* UCCLGBTC - United Church Coalition for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Concerns
* UCF - United Church Foundation
* WCM - Wider Church Ministries
* WARC - [[World Alliance of Reformed Churches]]
* WCC - [[World Council of Churches]]

==See also==
{{Portal|Religion|P religion world.svg}}
*[[Churches Uniting in Christ]]
*[[Conferences of the United Church of Christ]]
*[[Associations of the United Church of Christ]]
*[[Congregational Library]]
*[[United and uniting churches]]


==References==
==References==
* {{cite book| author=Alberts B, Johnson A, Lewis J, Raff M, Roberts K, and Walter P| title=Molecular Biology of the Cell| edition=4th edition| year=2002| isbn=0-8153-3218-1}}
{{reflist|3}}
* {{cite book| author=Griffiths AJF, Miller JH, Suzuki DT, Lewontin RC, and Gelbart WM| title=An Introduction to Genetic Analysis| year=2000| publisher=W.H. Freeman and Company| location=New York| isbn=0-7167-3520-2}}
* {{cite book| author=Hartl D, Jones E| title=Genetics: Analysis of Genes and Genomes, 6th edition| publisher=Jones & Bartlett| year=2005| isbn=0-7637-1511-5}}
* {{cite book| author=Lodish H, Berk A, Zipursky LS, Matsudaira P, Baltimore D, and Darnell J| title=Molecular Cell Biology| edition=4th edition| year=2000| isbn=0-7167-3136-3}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Wikibooks|Genetics}}
{{commonscat|Genetics}}
{{WVD}}
*{{dmoz|Science/Biology/Genetics/}}
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{{Genetics-footer}}
{{Biology-footer}}


{{featured article}}
Denominational Websites:
*[http://www.ucc.org United Church of Christ]
*[http://news.ucc.org United Church News]
*[http://www.ucc.org/god-is-still-speaking/ God Is Still Speaking campaign site]
* [http://i.ucc.org/ i.UCC online Christian community] - real-time prayer chapel, forums, online Bible study
* [http://www.uccvitality.org/index.php www.uccvitality.org launched [[March 1]], [[2006]]] an intitiative to help churches with efforts at evangelism and church building
* [http://rejectionhurts.com rejectionhurts.com launched [[March 26]], [[2006]]] "a space for people to share their personal stories of religious rejection and to find support in their search for a more-welcoming Christian experience"
* [http://accessibleairwaves.org accessibleairwaves.org launched [[March 26]], [[2006]]] "an action outlet for mainline Christians who feel their voices are being silenced by corporate media"
* [http://www.ourfaithourvote.org/ "Our Faith Our Vote" civic participation campaign]
*[http://unitedchurchofchrist.blogspot.com/ United Church News Blog] written by Rev. Chuck Currie
'''Websites of groups/caucuses with Executive Council Seats:'''
*[http://www.ucccoalition.org/ United Church of Christ Coalition for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Concerns (The Coalition)]
*[http://www.ucc.org/links/ubc.htm United Black Christians (UBC)]
*[http://www.caimucc.org/ Council for American Indian Ministry (CAIM)]
*[http://www.mrsej.org/ Ministers for Racial, Social, and Economic Justice (MRSEJ)]
*[http://www.uccdisabilitiesministries.org/ UCC Disabilities Ministries]
*[http://www.ucc.org/youth/council.htm Council for Youth and Young Adult Ministries (CYYAM)]
'''Websites of UCC-related groups (including professional associations and other caucuses):'''
*[http://www.auce-educators.org/ Association of United Church Educators]
*[http://www.chhsm.org/ Council for Health and Human Services Ministries]
*[http://www.uccma.org/Default.htm UCC Musicians Association]
*[http://www.ucc.org/musicarts UCC Musicians Network]


[[Category:Genetics]]
'''Websites of unofficial but notable UCC groups (including dissent groups, renewal groups, and prophetic groups):'''
[[Category:Subjects taught in medical school]]
*[http://www.biblicalwitness.org/ Biblical Witness Fellowship]
[[Category:Greek loanwords]]
*[http://www.confessingchrist.org/ Confessing Christ]
*[http://faithfulandwelcoming.org/ Faithful and Welcoming Churches]
*[http://www.ucccoalition.org/programs/ona/who/list LGBT Welcoming (Open and Affirming) Churches and Organizations]
*[http://orderofcorpuschristi.org/ Order of Corpus Christi]
*[http://www.oma-ucc.org/ Outdoor Ministry Association]
*[http://www.ucctruths.com UCC Truths]
*[http://www.uccunity.org UCC Unity]


{{Link FA|tr}}
[[Category:United Church of Christ| ]]


[[af:Genetika]]
[[da:United Church of Christ]]
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[[fr:Église unie du Christ]]
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[[ko:미국 연합 그리스도의 교회]]
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Revision as of 02:09, 14 October 2008

Genetics (from Ancient Greek γενετικός genetikos, “genitive” and that from γένεσις genesis, “origin”[1][2][3]), a discipline of biology, is the science of heredity and variation in living organisms.[4][5] The fact that living things inherit traits from their parents has been used since prehistoric times to improve crop plants and animals through selective breeding. However, the modern science of genetics, which seeks to understand the process of inheritance, only began with the work of Gregor Mendel in the mid-nineteenth century.[6] Although he did not know the physical basis for heredity, Mendel observed that organisms inherit traits in a discrete manner—these basic units of inheritance are now called genes.

DNA, the molecular basis for inheritance. Each strand of DNA is a chain of nucleotides, matching each other in the center to form what look like rungs on a twisted ladder.

Genes correspond to regions within DNA, a molecule composed of a chain of four different types of nucleotides—the sequence of these nucleotides is the genetic information organisms inherit. DNA naturally occurs in a double stranded form, with nucleotides on each strand complementary to each other. Each strand can act as a template for creating a new partner strand—this is the physical method for making copies of genes that can be inherited.

The sequence of nucleotides in a gene is translated by cells to produce a chain of amino acids, creating proteins—the order of amino acids in a protein corresponds to the order of nucleotides in the gene. This is known as the genetic code. The amino acids in a protein determine how it folds into a three-dimensional shape; this structure is, in turn, responsible for the protein's function. Proteins carry out almost all the functions needed for cells to live. A change to the DNA in a gene can change a protein's amino acids, changing its shape and function: this can have a dramatic effect in the cell and on the organism as a whole.

Although genetics plays a large role in the appearance and behavior of organisms, it is the combination of genetics with what an organism experiences that determines the ultimate outcome. For example, while genes play a role in determining a person's height, the nutrition and health that person experiences in childhood also have a large effect.

History

Morgan's observation of sex-linked inheritance of a mutation causing white eyes in Drosophila led him to the hypothesis that genes are located upon chromosomes.
Genetics also has to do with cloning, which is exactly two people that are alike, it is an interesting topic we all say. Although the science of genetics began with the applied and theoretical work of Gregor Mendel in the mid-1800s, other theories of inheritance preceded Mendel. A popular theory during Mendel's time was the concept of blending inheritance: the idea that individuals inherit a smooth blend of traits from their parents. Mendel's work disproved this, showing that traits are composed of combinations of distinct genes rather than a continuous blend. Another theory that had some support at that time was the inheritance of acquired characteristics: the belief that individuals inherit traits strengthened by their parents. This theory (commonly associated with Jean-Baptiste Lamarck) is now known to be wrong—the experiences of individuals do not affect the genes they pass to their children.[7] Other theories included the pangenesis of Charles Darwin (which had both acquired and inherited aspects) and Francis Galton's reformulation of pangenesis as both particulate and inherited.[8]

Mendelian and classical genetics

The modern science of genetics traces its roots to Gregor Johann Mendel, a German-Czech Augustinian monk and scientist who studied the nature of inheritance in plants. In his paper "Versuche über Pflanzenhybriden" ("Experiments on Plant Hybridization"), presented in 1865 to the Naturforschender Verein (Society for Research in Nature) in Brünn, Mendel traced the inheritance patterns of certain traits in pea plants and described them mathematically.[9] Although this pattern of inheritance could only be observed for a few traits, Mendel's work suggested that heredity was particulate, not acquired, and that the inheritance patterns of many traits could be explained through simple rules and ratios.

The importance of Mendel's work did not gain wide understanding until the 1890s, after his death, when other scientists working on similar problems re-discovered his research. William Bateson, a proponent of Mendel's work, coined the word genetics in 1905.[10][11] (The adjective genetic, derived from the Greek word genesis - γένεσις, "origin" and that from the word genno - γεννώ, "to give birth", predates the noun and was first used in a biological sense in 1860.)[12] Bateson popularized the usage of the word genetics to describe the study of inheritance in his inaugural address to the Third International Conference on Plant Hybridization in London, England, in 1906.[13]

After the rediscovery of Mendel's work, scientists tried to determine which molecules in the cell were responsible for inheritance. In 1910, Thomas Hunt Morgan argued that genes are on chromosomes, based on observations of a sex-linked white eye mutation in fruit flies.[14] In 1913, his student Alfred Sturtevant used the phenomenon of genetic linkage to show that genes are arranged linearly on the chromosome.[15]

Molecular genetics

File:JamesDWatson.jpg
James D. Watson (pictured) and Francis Crick determined the structure of DNA in 1953.

Although genes were known to exist on chromosomes, chromosomes are composed of both protein and DNA—scientists did not know which of these was responsible for inheritance. In 1928, Frederick Griffith discovered the phenomenon of transformation (see Griffith's experiment): dead bacteria could transfer genetic material to "transform" other still-living bacteria. Sixteen years later, in 1944, Oswald Theodore Avery, Colin McLeod and Maclyn McCarty identified the molecule responsible for transformation as DNA.[16] The Hershey-Chase experiment in 1952 also showed that DNA (rather than protein) was the genetic material of the viruses that infect bacteria, providing further evidence that DNA was the molecule responsible for inheritance.[17]

James D. Watson and Francis Crick determined the structure of DNA in 1953, using the X-ray crystallography work of Rosalind Franklin that indicated DNA had a helical structure (i.e., shaped like a corkscrew).[18][19] Their double-helix model had two strands of DNA with the nucleotides pointing inward, each matching a complementary nucleotide on the other strand to form what looks like rungs on a twisted ladder.[20] This structure showed that genetic information exists in the sequence of nucleotides on each strand of DNA. The structure also suggested a simple method for duplication: if the strands are separated, new partner strands can be reconstructed for each based on the sequence of the old strand.

Although the structure of DNA showed how inheritance worked, it was still not known how DNA influenced the behavior of cells. In the following years, scientists tried to understand how DNA controls the process of protein production. It was discovered that the cell uses DNA as a template to create matching messenger RNA (a molecule with nucleotides, very similar to DNA). The nucleotide sequence of a messenger RNA is used to create an amino acid sequence in protein; this translation between nucleotide and amino acid sequences is known as the genetic code.

With this molecular understanding of inheritance, an explosion of research became possible. One important development was chain-termination DNA sequencing in 1977 by Frederick Sanger: this technology allows scientists to read the nucleotide sequence of a DNA molecule.[21] In 1983, Kary Banks Mullis developed the polymerase chain reaction, providing a quick way to isolate and amplify a specific section of a DNA from a mixture.[22] Through the pooled efforts of the Human Genome Project and the parallel private effort by Celera Genomics, these and other techniques culminated in the sequencing of the human genome in 2003.[23]

Features of inheritance

Discrete inheritance and Mendel's laws

A Punnett square depicting a cross between two pea plants heterozygous for purple (B) and white (b) blossoms

At its most fundamental level, inheritance in organisms occurs by means of discrete traits, called genes.[24] This property was first observed by Gregor Mendel, who studied the segregation of heritable traits in pea plants.[9][25] In his experiments studying the trait for flower color, Mendel observed that the flowers of each pea plant were either purple or white - and never an intermediate between the two colors. These different, discrete versions of the same gene are called alleles.

In the case of pea plants, each organism has two alleles of each gene, and the plants inherit one allele from each parent.[26] Many organisms, including humans, have this pattern of inheritance. Organisms with two copies of the same allele are called homozygous, while organisms with two different alleles are heterozygous.

The set of alleles for a given organism is called its genotype, while the observable trait the organism has is called its phenotype. When organisms are heterozygous, often one allele is called dominant as its qualities dominate the phenotype of the organism, while the other allele is called recessive as its qualities recede and are not observed. Some alleles do not have complete dominance and instead have incomplete dominance by expressing an intermediate phenotype, or codominance by expressing both alleles at once.[27]

When a pair of organisms reproduce sexually, their offspring randomly inherit one of the two alleles from each parent. These observations of discrete inheritance and the segregation of alleles are collectively known as Mendel's first law or the Law of Segregation.

Notation and diagrams

Genetic pedigree charts help track the inheritance patterns of traits.

Geneticists use diagrams and symbols to describe inheritance. A gene is represented by a letter (or letters)—the capitalized letter represents the dominant allele and the recessive is represented by lowercase.[28] Often a "+" symbol is used to mark the usual, non-mutant allele for a gene.

In fertilization and breeding experiments (and especially when discussing Mendel's laws) the parents are referred to as the "P" generation and the offspring as the "F1" (first filial) generation. When the F1 offspring mate with each other, the offspring are called the "F2" (second filial) generation. One of the common diagrams used to predict the result of cross-breeding is the Punnett square.

When studying human genetic diseases, geneticists often use pedigree charts to represent the inheritance of traits.[29] These charts map the inheritance of a trait in a family tree.

Interactions of multiple genes

Human height is a complex genetic trait. Francis Galton's data from 1889 shows the relationship between offspring height as a function of mean parent height. While correlated, remaining variation in offspring heights indicates environment is also an important factor in this trait.

Organisms have thousands of genes, and in sexually reproducing organisms assortment of these genes are generally independent of each other. This means that the inheritance of an allele for yellow or green pea color is unrelated to the inheritance of alleles for white or purple flowers. This phenomenon, known as "Mendel's second law" or the "Law of independent assortment", means that the alleles of different genes get shuffled between parents to form offspring with many different combinations.(Some genes do not assort independently, demonstrating genetic linkage, a topic discussed later in this article.)

Often different genes can interact in a way that influences the same trait. In the Blue-eyed Mary (Omphalodes verna), for example, there exists a gene with alleles that determine the color of flowers: blue or magenta. Another gene, however, controls whether the flowers have color at all: color or white. When a plant has two copies of this white allele, its flowers are white - regardless of whether the first gene has blue or magenta alleles. This interaction between genes is called epistasis, with the second gene epistatic to the first.[30]

Many traits are not discrete features (eg. purple or white flowers) but are instead continuous features (eg. human height and skin color). These complex traits are the product of many genes.[31] The influence of these genes is mediated, to varying degrees, by the environment an organism has experienced. The degree to which an organism's genes contribute to a complex trait is called heritability.[32] Measurement of the heritability of a trait is relative - in a more variable environment, the environment has a bigger influence on the total variation of the trait. For example, human height is a complex trait with a heritability of 89% in the United States. In Nigeria, however, where people experience a more variable access to good nutrition and health care, height has a heritability of only 62%.[33]

Molecular basis for inheritance

DNA and chromosomes

The molecular structure of DNA. Bases pair through the arrangement of hydrogen bonding between the strands.

The molecular basis for genes is deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). DNA is composed of a chain of nucleotides, of which there are four types: adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T). Genetic information exists in the sequence of these nucleotides, and genes exist as stretches of sequence along the DNA chain.[34] Viruses are the only exception to this rule—sometimes viruses use the very similar molecule RNA instead of DNA as their genetic material.[35]

DNA normally exists as a double-stranded molecule, coiled into the shape of a double-helix. Each nucleotide in DNA preferentially pairs with its partner nucleotide on the opposite strand: A pairs with T, and C pairs with G. Thus, in its two-stranded form, each strand effectively contains all necessary information, redundant with its partner strand. This structure of DNA is the physical basis for inheritance: DNA replication duplicates the genetic information by splitting the strands and using each strand as a template for synthesis of a new partner strand.[36]

Genes are arranged linearly along long chains of DNA sequence, called chromosomes. In bacteria, each cell has a single circular chromosome, while eukaryotic organisms (which includes plants and animals) have their DNA arranged in multiple linear chromosomes. These DNA strands are often extremely long; the largest human chromosome, for example, is about 247 million base pairs in length.[37] The DNA of a chromosome is associated with structural proteins that organize, compact, and control access to the DNA, forming a material called chromatin; in eukaryotes, chromatin is usually composed of nucleosomes, repeating units of DNA wound around a core of histone proteins.[38] The full set of hereditary material in an organism (usually the combined DNA sequences of all chromosomes) is called the genome.

While haploid organisms have only one copy of each chromosome, most animals and many plants are diploid, containing two of each chromosome and thus two copies of every gene.[39] The two alleles for a gene are located on identical loci of sister chromatids, each allele inherited from a different parent.

File:Zell-substanz-book-illustrations.jpg
Walther Flemming's 1882 diagram of eukaryotic cell division. Chromosomes are copied, condensed, and organized. Then, as the cell divides, chromosome copies separate into the daughter cells.

An exception exists in the sex chromosomes, specialized chromosomes many animals have evolved that play a role in determining the sex of an organism.[40] In humans and other mammals, the Y chromosome has very few genes and triggers the development of male sexual characteristics, while the X chromosome is similar to the other chromosomes and contains many genes unrelated to sex determination. Females have two copies of the X chromosome, but males have one Y and only one X chromosome - this difference in X chromosome copy numbers leads to the unusual inheritance patterns of sex-linked disorders.

Reproduction

When cells divide, their full genome is copied and each daughter cell inherits one copy. This process, called mitosis, is the simplest form of reproduction and is the basis for asexual reproduction. Asexual reproduction can also occur in multicellular organisms, producing offspring that inherit their genome from a single parent. Offspring that are genetically identical to their parents are called clones.

Eukaryotic organisms often use sexual reproduction to generate offspring that contain a mixture of genetic material inherited from two different parents. The process of sexual reproduction alternates between forms that contain single copies of the genome (haploid) and double copies (diploid).[39] Haploid cells fuse and combine genetic material to create a diploid cell with paired chromosomes. Diploid organisms form haploids by dividing, without replicating their DNA, to create daughter cells that randomly inherit one of each pair of chromosomes. Most animals and many plants are diploid for most of their lifespan, with the haploid form reduced to single cell gametes.

Although they do not use the haploid/diploid method of sexual reproduction, bacteria have many methods of acquiring new genetic information. Some bacteria can undergo conjugation, transferring a small circular piece of DNA to another bacterium.[41] Bacteria can also take up raw DNA fragments found in the environment and integrate them into their genome, a phenomenon known as transformation.[42] This processes result in horizontal gene transfer, transmitting fragments of genetic information between organisms that would be otherwise unrelated.

Recombination and linkage

Thomas Hunt Morgan's 1916 illustration of a double crossover between chromosomes

The diploid nature of chromosomes allows for genes on different chromosomes to assort independently during sexual reproduction, recombining to form new combinations of genes. Genes on the same chromosome would theoretically never recombine, however, were it not for the process of chromosomal crossover. During crossover, chromosomes exchange stretches of DNA, effectively shuffling the gene alleles between the chromosomes.[43] This process of chromosomal crossover generally occurs during meiosis, a series of cell divisions that creates haploid germ cells that later combine with other germ cells to form child organisms.

The probability of chromosomal crossover occurring between two given points on the chromosome is related to the distance between them. For an arbitrarily long distance, the probability of crossover is high enough that the inheritance of the genes is effectively uncorrelated. For genes that are closer together, however, the lower probability of crossover means that the genes demonstrate genetic linkage - alleles for the two genes tend to be inherited together. The amounts of linkage between a series of genes can be combined to form a linear linkage map that roughly describes the arrangement of the genes along the chromosome.[44]

Gene expression

Genetic code

The genetic code: DNA, through a messenger RNA intermediate, codes for protein with a triplet code.

Genes generally express their functional effect through the production of proteins, which are complex molecules responsible for most functions in the cell. Proteins are chains of amino acids, and the DNA sequence of a gene (through RNA intermediate) is used to produce a specific protein sequence. This process begins with the production of an RNA molecule with a sequence matching the gene's DNA sequence, a process called transcription.

This messenger RNA molecule is then used to produce a corresponding amino acid sequence through a process called translation. Each group of three nucleotides in the sequence, called a codon, corresponds to one of the twenty possible amino acids in protein - this correspondence is called the genetic code.[45] The flow of information is unidirectional: information is transferred from nucleotide sequences into the amino acid sequence of proteins, but it never transfers from protein back into the sequence of DNA—a phenomenon Francis Crick called the central dogma of molecular biology.[46]

File:Hb-animation2.gif
The dynamic structure of hemoglobin is responsible for its ability to transport oxygen within mammalian blood.
File:Sickle cell hemoglobin shortened.png
A single amino acid change causes hemoglobin to form fibers.

The specific sequence of amino acids results in a unique three-dimensional structure for that protein, and the three-dimensional structures of protein are related to their function.[47][48] Some are simple structural molecules, like the fibers formed by the protein collagen. Proteins can bind to other proteins and simple molecules, sometimes acting as enzymes by facilitating chemical reactions within the bound molecules (without changing the structure of the protein itself). Protein structure is dynamic; the protein hemoglobin bends into slightly different forms as it facilitates the capture, transport, and release of oxygen molecules within mammalian blood.

A single nucleotide difference within DNA can cause a single change in the amino acid sequence of a protein. Because protein structures are the result of their amino acid sequences, some changes can dramatically change the properties of a protein by destabilizing the structure or changing the surface of the protein in a way that changes its interaction with other proteins and molecules. For example, sickle-cell anemia is a human genetic disease that results from a single base difference within the coding region for the β-globin section of hemoglobin, causing a single amino acid change that changes hemoglobin's physical properties.[49] Sickle-cell versions of hemoglobin stick to themselves, stacking to form fibers that distort the shape of red blood cells carrying the protein. These sickle-shaped cells no longer flow smoothly through blood vessels, having a tendency to clog or degrade, causing the medical problems associated with this disease.

Some genes are transcribed into RNA but are not translated into protein products - these are called non-coding RNA molecules. In some cases, these products fold into structures which are involved in critical cell functions (eg. ribosomal RNA and transfer RNA). RNA can also have regulatory effect through hybridization interactions with other RNA molecules (eg. microRNA).

Nature versus nurture

File:Niobe050905.jpeg
Siamese cats have a temperature-sensitive mutation in pigment production.

Although genes contain all the information an organism uses to function, the environment plays an important role in determining the ultimate phenotype—a dichotomy often referred to as "nature vs. nurture." The phenotype of an organism depends on the interaction of genetics with the environment. One example of this is the case of temperature-sensitive mutations. Often, a single amino acid change within the sequence of a protein does not change its behavior and interactions with other molecules, but it does destabilize the structure. In a high temperature environment, where molecules are moving more quickly and hitting each other, this results in the protein losing its structure and failing to function. In a low temperature environment, however, the protein's structure is stable and functions normally. This type of mutation is visible in the coat coloration of Siamese cats, where a mutation in an enzyme responsible for pigment production causes it to destabilize and lose function at high temperatures.[50] The protein remains functional in areas of skin that are colder—legs, ears, tail, and face—and so the cat has dark fur at its extremities.

Environment also plays a dramatic role in effects of the human genetic disease phenylketonuria.[51] The mutation that causes phenylketonuria disrupts the ability of the body to break down the amino acid phenylalanine, causing a toxic build-up of an intermediate molecule that, in turn, causes severe symptoms of progressive mental retardation and seizures. If someone with the phenylketonuria mutation follows a strict diet that avoids this amino acid, however, they remain normal and healthy.

Gene regulation

The genome of a given organism contains thousands of genes, but not all these genes need to be active at any given moment. A gene is expressed when it is being transcribed into mRNA (and translated into protein), and there exist many cellular methods of controlling the expression of genes such that proteins are produced only when needed by the cell. Transcription factors are regulatory proteins that bind to the start of genes, either promoting or inhibiting the transcription of the gene.[52] Within the genome of Escherichia coli bacteria, for example, there exists a series of genes necessary for the synthesis of the amino acid tryptophan. However, when tryptophan is already available to the cell, these genes for tryptophan synthesis are no longer needed. The presence of tryptophan directly affects the activity of the genes—tryptophan molecules bind to the tryptophan repressor (a transcription factor), changing the repressor's structure such that the repressor binds to the genes. The tryptophan repressor blocks the transcription and expression of the genes, thereby creating negative feedback regulation of the tryptophan synthesis process.[53]

Transcription factors bind to DNA, influencing the transcription of associated genes.

Differences in gene expression are especially clear within multicellular organisms, where cells all contain the same genome but have very different structures and behaviors due to the expression of different sets of genes. All the cells in a multicellular organism derive from a single cell, differentiating into variant cell types in response to external and intercellular signals and gradually establishing different patterns of gene expression to create different behaviors. As no single gene is responsible for the development of structures within multicellular organisms, these patterns arise from the complex interactions between many cells.

Within eukaryotes there exist structural features of chromatin that influence the transcription of genes, often in the form of modifications to DNA and chromatin that are stably inherited by daughter cells.[54] These features are called "epigenetic" because they exist "on top" of the DNA sequence and retain inheritance from one cell generation to the next. Because of epigenetic features, different cell types grown within the same medium can retain very different properties. Although epigenetic features are generally dynamic over the course of development, some, like the phenomenon of paramutation, have multigenerational inheritance and exist as rare exceptions to the general rule of DNA as the basis for inheritance.[55]

Genetic change

Mutations

Gene duplication allows diversification by providing redundancy: one gene can mutate and lose its original function without harming the organism.

During the process of DNA replication, errors occasionally occur in the polymerization of the second strand. These errors, called mutations, can have an impact on the phenotype of an organism, especially if they occur within the protein coding sequence of a gene. Error rates are usually very low—1 error in every 10–100 million bases—due to the "proofreading" ability of DNA polymerases.[56][57] (Without proofreading error rates are a thousand-fold higher; because many viruses rely on DNA and RNA polymerases that lack proofreading ability, they experience higher mutation rates.) Processes that increase the rate of changes in DNA are called mutagenic: mutagenic chemicals promote errors in DNA replication, often by interfering with the structure of base-pairing, while UV radiation induces mutations by causing damage to the DNA structure.[58] Chemical damage to DNA occurs naturally as well, and cells use DNA repair mechanisms to repair mismatches and breaks in DNA—nevertheless, the repair sometimes fails to return the DNA to its original sequence.

In organisms that use chromosomal crossover to exchange DNA and recombine genes, errors in alignment during meiosis can also cause mutations.[59] Errors in crossover are especially likely when similar sequences cause partner chromosomes to adopt a mistaken alignment; this makes some regions in genomes more prone to mutating in this way. These errors create large structural changes in DNA sequence—duplications, inversions or deletions of entire regions, or the accidental exchanging of whole parts between different chromosomes (called translocation).

Natural selection and evolution

Mutations produce organisms with different genotypes, and those differences can result in different phenotypes. Many mutations have little effect on an organism's phenotype, health, and reproductive fitness. Mutations that do have an effect are often deleterious, but occasionally mutations are beneficial. Studies in the fly Drosophila melanogaster suggest that if a mutation changes a protein produced by a gene, this will probably be harmful, with about 70 percent of these mutations having damaging effects, and the remainder being either neutral or weakly beneficial.[60]

An evolutionary tree of eukaryotic organisms, constructed by comparison of several orthologous gene sequences

Population genetics research studies the distributions of these genetic differences within populations and how the distributions change over time.[61] Changes in the frequency of an allele in a population can be influenced by natural selection, where a given allele's higher rate of survival and reproduction causes it to become more frequent in the population over time.[62] Genetic drift can also occur, where chance events lead to random changes in allele frequency.[63]

Over many generations, the genomes of organisms can change, resulting in the phenomenon of evolution. Mutations and the selection for beneficial mutations can cause a species to evolve into forms that better survive their environment, a process called adaptation.[64] New species are formed through the process of speciation, a process often caused by geographical separations that allow different populations to genetically diverge.[65] The application of genetic principles to the study of population biology and evolution is referred to as the modern synthesis.

As sequences diverge and change during the process of evolution, these differences between sequences can be used as a molecular clock to calculate the evolutionary distance between them.[66] Genetic comparisons are generally considered the most accurate method of characterizing the relatedness between species, an improvement over the sometimes deceptive comparison of phenotypic characteristics. The evolutionary distances between species can be combined to form evolutionary trees - these trees represent the common descent and divergence of species over time, although they cannot represent the transfer of genetic material between unrelated species (known as horizontal gene transfer and most common in bacteria).

Research and technology

Model organisms and genetics

The common fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster) is a popular model organism in genetics research.

Although geneticists originally studied inheritance in a wide range of organisms, researchers began to specialize in studying the genetics of a particular subset of organisms. The fact that significant research already existed for a given organism would encourage new researchers to choose it for further study, and so eventually a few model organisms became the basis for most genetics research.[67] Common research topics in model organism genetics include the study of gene regulation and the involvement of genes in development and cancer.

Organisms were chosen, in part, for convenience—short generation times and easy genetic manipulation made some organisms popular genetics research tools. Widely used model organisms include the gut bacterium Escherichia coli, the plant Arabidopsis thaliana, baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the common fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster), and the common house mouse (Mus musculus).

Medical genetics research

Medical genetics seeks to understand how genetic variation relates to human health and disease.[68] When searching for an unknown gene that may be involved in a disease, researchers commonly use genetic linkage and genetic pedigree charts to find the location on the genome associated with the disease. At the population level, researchers take advantage of Mendelian randomization to look for locations in the genome that are associated with diseases, a technique especially useful for multigenic traits not clearly defined by a single gene.[69] Once a candidate gene is found, further research is often done on the same gene (called an orthologous gene) in model organisms. In addition to studying genetic diseases, the increased availability of genotyping techniques has led to the field of pharmacogenetics—studying how genotype can affect drug responses.[70]

Although it is not an inherited disease, cancer is also considered a genetic disease.[71] The process of cancer development in the body is a combination of events. Mutations occasionally occur within cells in the body as they divide. While these mutations will not be inherited by any offspring, they can affect the behavior of cells, sometimes causing them to grow and divide more frequently. There are biological mechanisms that attempt to stop this process; signals are given to inappropriately dividing cells that should trigger cell death, but sometimes additional mutations occur that cause cells to ignore these messages. An internal process of natural selection occurs within the body and eventually mutations accumulate within cells to promote their own growth, creating a cancerous tumor that grows and invades various tissues of the body.

Research techniques

E coli colonies on a plate of agar, an example of cellular cloning and often used in molecular cloning.

DNA can be manipulated in the laboratory. Restriction enzymes are a commonly used enzyme that cuts DNA at specific sequences, producing predictable fragments of DNA.[72] The use of ligation enzymes allows these fragments to be reconnected, and by ligating fragments of DNA together from different sources, researchers can create recombinant DNA. Often associated with genetically modified organisms, recombinant DNA is commonly used in the context of plasmids - short circular DNA fragments with a few genes on them. By inserting plasmids into bacteria and growing those bacteria on plates of agar (to isolate clones of bacteria cells), researchers can clonally amplify the inserted fragment of DNA (a process known as molecular cloning). (Cloning can also refer to the creation of clonal organisms, through various techniques.)

DNA can also be amplified using a procedure called the polymerase chain reaction (PCR).[73] By using specific short sequences of DNA, PCR can isolate and exponentially amplify a targeted region of DNA. Because it can amplify from extremely small amounts of DNA, PCR is also often used to detect the presence of specific DNA sequences.

DNA sequencing and genomics

One of the most fundamental technologies developed to study genetics, DNA sequencing allows researchers to determine the sequence of nucleotides in DNA fragments. Developed in 1977 by Frederick Sanger and coworkers, chain-termination sequencing is now routinely used to sequence DNA fragments.[74] With this technology, researchers have been able to study the molecular sequences associated with many human diseases.

As sequencing has become less expensive and with the aid of computational tools, researchers have sequenced the genomes of many organisms by stitching together the sequences of many different fragments (a process called genome assembly).[75] These technologies were used to sequence the human genome, leading to the completion of the Human Genome Project in 2003.[23] New high-throughput sequencing technologies are dramatically lowering the cost of DNA sequencing, with many researchers hoping to bring the cost of resequencing a human genome down to a thousand dollars.[76]

The large amount of sequences available has created the field of genomics, research that uses computational tools to search for and analyze patterns in the full genomes of organisms. Genomics can also be considered a subfield of bioinformatics, which uses computational approaches to analyze large sets of biological data.(It is also heredity

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External links

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