Sunday, April 29, 2007

Junk' DNA now looks like powerful regulator

Swaths of garbled human DNA once dismissed as junk appear to contain some valuable sections, according to a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and the University of California-Santa Cruz. The scientists propose that this redeemed DNA plays a role in controlling when genes turn on and off.Gill Bejerano, PhD, assistant professor of developmental biology and of computer science at Stanford, found more than 10,000 nearly identical genetic snippets dotting the human chromosomes, these sequences help in the intricate choreography of when and where those genes flip on as the animal lays out its body plan. In particular, the group found the sequences to be especially abundant near genes that help cells stick together. These genes play a crucial role early in an animal’s life, helping cells migrate to the correct location or form into organs and tissues of the correct shape. The 10,402 sequences are remnants of unusual DNA pieces called transposons that duplicate themselves and hop around the genome. Bejerano suspects that when a transposon is plopped down in a region where it wasn’t needed, it slowly accumulated mutations until it no longer resembled its original sequence. The genome is littered with these decaying transposons. When a transposon dropped into a location where it was useful, however, it held on to much of the original sequence, making it possible for Bejerano to pick out.

http://med.stanford.edu/news_releases/2007/april/junk-dna.html

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