Genes are the segment of DNA.
What is Genome Organisation?
Genome organization is the sequential and not structural organization of the genome. It has coding and non coding regions.
- Introns: DNA sequences inserted between the exons. After the first level of transcription they are spliced and most of the introns are junk inserted within genes.
- Pseudogenes: 'Dead', non-functional copies of genes present elsewhere in the genome, but there is no use of it.
- Retropseudogenes: These are like pseudogenes only, but lack introns. Produced by the action of reverse transcriptase on mRNA, and subsequent incorporation of the cDNA into the genome.
- Transposons: Named as Jumping genes. By the transposase enzyme’s action they splice themselves in and out of the genome randomly.
- Retrotransposons: Transcribed into an mRNA, then copies the mRNA back to DNA and incorporates it into the genome.
What is Genome Analysis?
Genome analysis is predicting of genes and its sequences. Some model organisms have been sequenced in plant kingdom and animal kingdom as well.
Gene prediction is simple for the prokaryotes when compared to eukaryotes. Because,DNA coding sequence is interrupted by the introns of eukaryotes.
We still don’t know the answer for the below questions…
- What part of genome codes for a protein and what part of it is junk DNA?
- Classify the junk DNA as intron, untranslated region, transposons, dead genes, regulatory elements etc.
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