Gene deserts bear fruit

Regulatory elements identified in noncoding genomic sequences

Written byCathy Holding
| 1 min read

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The evidence that "junk" DNA contains highly conserved sequences that have a regulatory function is mounting: their genetic and (controversial) commercial value had been guessed at as long ago as 1989. In the October 17 Science, Marcelo Nobrega and colleagues at the US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute examined the "gene deserts" flanking the human DACH gene and report that they contain several important enhancer functions that have been conserved across species in over a billion years of parallel evolution (Science, 302:413, October 17, 2003).

Nobrega et al. compared human DACH flanking sequences with mouse genomic DNA and by combining additional genome comparison information from distantly related vertebrates such as frog, zebrafish, and pufferfish, narrowed the number of conserved sequences from 1098 to 32. Nine of these were cloned upstream of the mouse heat shock protein 68 minimal promoter driving beta-galactosidase expression. These were used to create transgenic mice ...

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