Modeling DNA with Pipe Cleaners
Materials: ★☆☆ Easy to get from supermarket or hardware store
Difficulty: ★☆☆ Can be easily done by most teenagers
Safety: ★☆☆ Minimal safety procedures required
Categories: Genetics and DNA
Alternative titles: Bead and Wire DNA Structure
Summary
Students use beads and pipe cleaners to model the structure of DNA. Colored beads represent the four bases (A, T, G, C), while pipe cleaners represent the sugar-phosphate backbone. The model demonstrates base-pairing rules and the twisted double-helix structure.
Procedure
- Choose bead colors to represent each of the four DNA bases (for example: blue = adenine, green = thymine, purple = guanine, orange = cytosine).
- Thread pairs of beads onto 2-inch pipe cleaners, making sure to follow base-pairing rules (A pairs with T, G pairs with C).
- Use two 1-foot pipe cleaners to represent the sugar-phosphate backbone. Lay them parallel to each other.
- Attach the bead pairs between the two long pipe cleaners, twisting the ends of the short pipe cleaners around the backbone to form “rungs of a ladder.”
- Once all rungs are attached, hold both ends of the ladder and twist gently to form a double helix shape.
Links
HOW TO MAKE A DNA MODEL USING PIPECLEANERS. PROJECT DEMONSTRATION - Kunal Sharma:
Make Your Own Double Helix DNA Strand | One Stop Science Shop - Da Vinci Kids:
📄 DNA Building - Sanford Research: https://static.pbslearningmedia.org/media/media_files/914d3716-08f0-4032-8016-1871ae07dcfc/8f9f2bae-74a0-4688-8d4b-3571b4e784a1.pdf
Variations
* Create a longer DNA model with more base pairs.
- Use different materials, such as straws and string, instead of pipe cleaners and beads.
- Label the bases with letters (A, T, G, C) to reinforce learning.
- Build two complementary DNA strands separately, then zip them together like a zipper.
Safety Precautions
- Beads can be a choking hazard—keep away from young children.
- Use caution with pipe cleaners, as the cut ends can be sharp.
- Handle materials responsibly and avoid leaving small parts on the floor.
Questions to Consider
- Why must adenine always pair with thymine, and guanine always pair with cytosine? (Because of hydrogen bonding patterns and molecular shape.)
- What does the twisted shape of the DNA model represent? (The double helix structure of DNA.)
- How does this model help us understand how DNA stores genetic information? (The sequence of bases along the model represents the genetic code.)
- What real molecules do the pipe cleaners represent? (The sugar-phosphate backbone of DNA.)