HEREDITAS ›› 2009, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (11): 1067-1076.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1005.2009.01067
• 综述 • Previous Articles Next Articles
TIAN Jing;ZHAO Zhi-Hu;CHEN Hui-Peng
Institute of Biotechnology, Academy of Military Medical Science, Beijing 100071, China
Received:
Revised:
Online:
Published:
Contact:
Abstract:
Study of comparative genomics has revealed that about 5% of the human genome are under purifying selection, 3.5% of which are conserved non-coding elements (CNEs). While the coding regions comprise of only a small part. In human, the CNEs are functionally important, which may be associated with the process of the establishment and maintain of chromatin architecture, transcription regulation, and pre-mRNA processing. They are also related to ontogeny of mammals and human diseases. This review outlined the identification, functional significance, evolutionary origin, and effects on human genetic defects of the CNEs.
TIAN Jing, ZHAO Zhi-Hu, CHEN Hui-Peng. Conserved non-coding elements in human genome[J]. HEREDITAS, 2009, 31(11): 1067-1076.
0 / / Recommend
Add to citation manager EndNote|Reference Manager|ProCite|BibTeX|RefWorks
URL: https://www.chinagene.cn/EN/10.3724/SP.J.1005.2009.01067
https://www.chinagene.cn/EN/Y2009/V31/I11/1067