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13.3: "Junk" DNA in Perspective

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    88978
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    Not long ago we thought that less than 5% of a eukaryotic genome was transcribed (i.e., as mRNA, rRNA, and tRNA), and that much of the nontranscribed genome served either a structural function or no function at all! That “functionless” genetic material, labeled “junk DNA,” included nondescript intergenic sequences, mutant pseudogenes, “dead” transposons, long stretches of intronic DNA, and more. Thus, junk DNA was defined as DNA we could do without. Junk DNAs were thought to be accidental riders in our genomes, hitchhikers picked up on the evolutionary road. But while miRNA genes are a small proportion of a eukaryotic genome, their discovery—and that of more abundant lnc RNAs—suggests a far greater amount of functional DNA in the genome.

    Might there be, in fact, no such thing as “junk DNA”?

    The debate continues. Read all about it at Junk DNA—Not so useless After All and Only 8.2% of Human DNA is Functional. Perhaps we need to rethink what it means for DNA to be “junk” or to be without “genetic purpose.” More than 90% of our own DNA has no known genetic purpose, and the maintenance of it all surely comes at an energy cost. At the same time, that entire DNA is grist for future selection, a source of the diversity required for long-term survival. The same natural selection that picks up “hitchhiker” DNA sequences, as we have seen, can at some point put them to work!


    This page titled 13.3: "Junk" DNA in Perspective is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Gerald Bergtrom.

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