Introns: A Mystery Renewed
December 10, 2009
December 10, 2009
BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Dec. 10 -- Indiana University issued the following news release:
The sequences of nonsense DNA that interrupt genes could be far more important to the evolution of genomes than previously thought, according to a recent Science report by Indiana University Bloomington and University of New Hampshire biologists.
Their study of the model organism Daphnia pulex (water flea) is the first to demonstrate the colonization of a single lineage by "intr . . .
The sequences of nonsense DNA that interrupt genes could be far more important to the evolution of genomes than previously thought, according to a recent Science report by Indiana University Bloomington and University of New Hampshire biologists.
Their study of the model organism Daphnia pulex (water flea) is the first to demonstrate the colonization of a single lineage by "intr . . .