No.
I do not think you fully comprehend the truly unimaginable intelligence needed to enable a complete human being, with all its intricate complexity, to be formed and maintained from the information contained within a microscopic molecule of DNA. It is truly mind blowing to think about, and I believe it brought about some form of conversion experience to one of the people involved in the discovery of DNA.
And apart from that, we have the continuing problem of not being able to define how our conscious awareness can emerge from the reactions of material elements alone.
Then we have to deal with our perception of free will .........
(And it can't be just explained away as an illusion!)
I didn't think you would be, but I did what you asked.
I also think that its rather mind blowing, Alan. This doesn't lead me to think that DNA has anything to do with your 'source of all intelligence' unless you accept that the process of evolution can possibly be called such.
I think you must be thinking of Francis Collins, who was head of the Human Genome Project. He was not however one of the four people involved in the discovery of DNA, whom, I believe, were all agnostics or atheists. Please correct me if I am wrong. Even so, the thinking of any individual has nothing to do with any argument or evidence in favour of or against the idea of such an intelligence. Any argument or evidence must stand in its own right.
Because we have problems in defining conscious awareness in no way negates the argument that it is a result of processes which involve the interaction of material elements, especially when no other alternatives have been suggested which have any evidential integrity.
Arguments have been produced which suggest that your idea of free will does not stand the test of logic, so, almost undoubtedly, at its deepest level, it is illusory.