Re: Paper: Adaptive Evolution of Conserved Noncoding Elements in Mammals
- From: "Perplexed in Peoria" <jimmenegay@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 9 Sep 2007 23:30:47 -0400 (EDT)
"Entertained by my own EIMC" <write_to_eimc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:fbunm6$14lg$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
One more nail in the puffed-up (or overinflated), needlessly uninspiring
(and to me 'tyresome' :>) attitude of scientists who have (at least in the
past) asserted themselves by rolling the jargon that calls CNCs "junk-DNA"
off their tongues all too often;
Er..., Peter? Who do you have in mind as a scientist who has called
a CNC "junk-DNA". Larry Moran is the guy posting here who I would
most associate with the "Most non-coding DNA really is junk" ideology.
But he would certainly be of the opinion that most CNCs have a function.
That first 'C' in CNC stands for conserved. I don't think anyone
believes that CNCs are mutation cold-spots. That hypothesis has always
been included just to cover all the possibilities. It is something of
a straw man.
.
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- From: Robert Karl Stonjek
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