Diodes have a forward voltage drop. Silicon diodes around 0.7V. Gallium arsenide around 0.3V. This will totally screw up the dna's battery monitoring. When you insert a freshly charged battery at 4.2V, the dna will only see 3.9V. Oh, and at 10A, your diode will be dissipating 3W. If you really want to add reverse battery protection, a diode isn't the way to do it; a P-FET is, one with really low on-resistance (like under 5 milli-ohms).
I swore to myself I wasn't going to post again on this subject.......aw god the devil made me do it.
You state forward voltage drop right? That means when the little arrow on my diode is pointing the other direction. In the circuit I drew, it is reverse of normal battery polarity. So that means no voltage drop and why there would not be 10amps flowing in reverse flow against the diode? It's purpose is to stop current flow in this circuit, not be conducive to it. So there would not be a 3 watt loss. That would only be if it was in series, and then it would totally screw up the dna monitoring system.
OK, devil isn't going to tempt me again.