• Boston blog by Boston

    All the Boston science news that's fit to blog. And then some. A group blog from Rob Pinsonneault and Corie Lok.

    • Animal genomes to sequence: opossum. Check.

      Thursday, 10 May 2007 - 16:06 UTC

      The opossum joins the growing list of animals that have had their genomes sequenced. The folks at the Broad Institute led an international team reporting today in Nature that the grey, short-tailed opossum (often used as a model for spinal cord injury and other disorders/diseases) has about the same number of genes as humans do.

      What’s more interesting and surprising is that most of the sequence differences found in the opossum genome, compared with other mammals, are in noncoding regions thought to regulate gene activity, suggesting that evolution was driven not by having different genes, but by different ways of regulating the same genes._ The researchers also say that these sequences changes came from transposons, or “jumping genes.”

      Last updated: Thursday, 10 May 2007 - 16:06 UTC


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