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Landmark Genome Study Shows Complexity of Human 'Code'

Human Genome More Complicated Than Ever Realized, Scientists Say

In what is being hailed as a landmark in understanding the human genome, scientists from over 35 research centers around the world released a collaborative study Wednesday afternoon showing that our genetic makeup is much more complicated than previously thought.

dna genes
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The collaboration of researchers, known as the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements — or ENCODE — consortium, looked at roughly 1 percent of the entire human genome, concluding that the 95 percent of the genome previously believed to be superfluous actually plays a major role in regulating how DNA expresses itself.

The study brings a new dimension to determining both the impact of human genetics in clinical medicine and how humans evolved differently from animals.

When researchers announced they had mapped the human genome in 2003, they knew it was made up of over 3 billion base pairs of DNA.

However, only between 1.5 and 5 percent of that — encompassing the areas known as "genes" — was involved in actually making proteins. The rest was termed "junk DNA."

But researchers felt that the remaining part of the genome had to have a purpose. In a paper released in the journal Nature, scientists say they have found that much of that so-called junk DNA is actually involved in regulating how genes build and maintain the body.

"Several years ago, we had completion of the Human Genome Project, but we didn't know what to do with 95 percent of the DNA we'd found," said John Greally of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, who reviewed the study in the same issue of Nature. "This is going to be a landmark."

Greally likens the genes to musical instruments, and the regulatory regions of the genome found in this study to an orchestral score — the instructions necessary to make the whole symphony come together.

Genes With Accessories

While Greally said the study is an important milestone in understanding the human genome, the fact that the other parts of the DNA play a regulatory role is not surprising; rather, it is something many scientists had expected.

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