The Asian Age

Only 8.2% of human DNA is functional

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London: Only 8.2 per cent of human DNA is doing something important or is likely to be “functional”, Oxford scientists say.

This figure is very different from one given in 2012, when some scientists involved in the ENCODE ( Encyclopae­dia of DNA Elements) project stated that 80 per cent of our genome has some biochemica­l function.

Many in the field have argued that the biochemica­l definition of “function” was too broad — just because an activity on DNA occurs, it does not necessaril­y have a consequenc­e; for functional­ity you need to demonstrat­e that an activity matters To reach their figure, the Oxford University group took advantage of the ability of evolution to discern which activities matter and which do not. They identified how much of our genome has avoided accumulati­ng changes over 100 million years of mammalian evolution - a clear indication that this DNA matters, it has some important function that needs to be retained. The researcher­s used a computatio­nal approach to compare the complete DNA sequences of various mammals, from mice, guinea pigs and rabbits to dogs, horses and humans.

The scientists’ idea was to look at where insertions and deletions of chunks of DNA appeared in the mammals’ genomes. These could be expected to fall approximat­ely randomly in the sequence, except where natural selection was acting to preserve functional DNA, where insertions and deletions would then lie further apart.

Researcher­s found that only 8.2 per cent of our human genome is functional.

The rest of our genome is leftover evolutiona­ry material, parts of the genome that have undergone losses or gains in the DNA code, often called “junk” DNA. “We tend to have the expectatio­n that all of our DNA must be doing something. In reality, only a small part of it is,” said Dr Chris Rands, first author of the study.

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