Active conservation of noncoding sequences revealed by three-way species comparisons

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Abstract

Human and mouse genomic sequence comparisons are being increasingly used to search for evolutionarily conserved gene regulatory elements. Large-scale human-mouse DNA comparison studies have discovered numerous conserved noncoding sequences of which only a fraction has been functionally investigated A question therefore remains as to whether most of these noncoding sequences are conserved because of functional constraints or are the result of a lack of divergence time.

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Dubchak, I., Brudno, M., Loots, G. G., Pachter, L., Mayor, C., Rubin, E. M., & Frazer, K. A. (2000). Active conservation of noncoding sequences revealed by three-way species comparisons. Genome Research, 10(9), 1304–1306. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.142200

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