Abstract
An intron is an extended genomic feature whose function requires multiple constrained positions-donor and acceptor splice sites, a branch point, a polypyrimidine tract and suitable splicing enhancers-that may be distributed over hundreds or thousands of nucleotides. New introns are therefore unlikely to emerge by incremental accumulation of functional sub-elements. Here we demonstrate that a functional intron can be created de novo in a single step by a segmental genomic duplication. This experiment recapitulates in vivo the birth of an intron that arose in the ancestral jawed vertebrate lineage nearly half-a-billion years ago. © 2011 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Hellsten, U., Aspden, J. L., Rio, D. C., & Rokhsar, D. S. (2011). A segmental genomic duplication generates a functional intron. Nature Communications, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1461
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