Hugues Roest Crollius, a molecular geneticist at Genoscope in Evry, France, came up with an even lower estimate — between 27,700 and 34,300 genes — based on comparisons between
the existing human sequence and the sequence of a freshwater puffer fish, Tetraodon nigroviridis.
Not exact matches
We are particularly interested in the identification of novel
human proteins involved in inflammatory, immune and cancer processes that can not be characterized by
sequence - based methods due to their low or not
existing sequence similarity to others.
Looking ahead to when all of our genomes have been analyzed and tools
exist for precise editing of HARs in
human cells, it seems possible to figure out what happened when each of these evolutionarily conserved
sequences suddenly mutated in
humans.
Complex auditory
sequences known as music
exist in all
human cultures1, and elements in many musical styles are hierarchically structured2, 3.