‘Dark genome’ could yield answers to complex genetic diseases

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The mysterious majority – as much as 98 percent – of our DNA do not code for proteins. Much of this “dark matter genome” is thought to be nonfunctional evolutionary leftovers…However, hidden among this noncoding DNA are many crucial regulatory elements that control the activity of thousands of .

[In an] effort to fully map and annotate…the , including this silent majority, the National Institutes of Health (NIH)…announced new grant funding for a nationwide project to set up five “characterization centers”…to study how these regulatory elements influence gene expression and…cell behavior.

By cataloging the functions of thousands of regulatory sequences, [researchers] hope to develop rules about how to predict and interpret other sequences’ functions. This would not only help illuminate the rest of the dark matter genome, it could also reveal new treatment targets for complex genetic diseases.

“A lot of human diseases have been found to be associated with regulatory sequences,” said [Nadav Ahituv, a professor of bioengineering at UC San Francisco]. “For example, in genome-wide association studies for common diseases, such as diabetes, cancer and autism, 90 percent of the disease-associated DNA variants are in the noncoding DNA. So it’s not a gene that’s changed, but what regulates it.”

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post: The mysterious 98%: Scientists look to shine light on the ‘dark genome’

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