Chapter 21: Problem 7
Intron frequency varies considerably among eukaryotes. Provide a general comparison of intron frequencies in yeast and humans. What about intron size?
Chapter 21: Problem 7
Intron frequency varies considerably among eukaryotes. Provide a general comparison of intron frequencies in yeast and humans. What about intron size?
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Get started for freeSystems biology models the complex networks of interacting genes, proteins, and other molecules that contribute to human genetic diseases, such as cancer, diabetes, and hypertension. These interactomes show the contribution of each piece towards the whole and where diseases overlap, and provide models for drug discovery and development. Describe some tions (Roy et al., 2008 ). In some cases, closely related homologs may engender completely different classes of proteins (enzymes). Consider the 3 D structure of two proteins with 60 percent homology with entirely different functions. Explain how different functions may evolve by discussing the position of the homologous amino acid track, its relation to nonhomologous tracks, and the role that chaperones (Chapter 14) may play in determining protein function. of the differences that might be seen in the interactomes of normal and cancerous cells taken from the same tissue, and explain how these differences could lead to drugs specifically targeted against cancer cells.
Comparisons between human and chimpanzee genomes indicate that a gene that may function as a wild type or normal gene in one primate may function as a disease-causing gene in another (The Chimpanzee Sequence and Analysis Consortium, Nature, \(437: 69-87,2005\) ). For instance, the \(P P A R G\) locus (regulator of adipocyte differentiation) is associated with type 2 diabetes in humans but functions as a wild-type gene in chimps. What factors might cause this apparent contradiction? Would you consider such apparent contradictions to be rare or common? What impact might such findings have on the use of comparative genomics to identify and design therapies for disease-causing genes in humans?
MALDI-TOF spectra can be used to identify bacteria by analyzing a colony and comparing the spectra with known profiles. Describe how this could be used to fight outbreaks of multidrug-resistant bacteria in hospitals.
What is functional genomics? How does it differ from comparative genomics?
Compare and contrast whole-genome shotgun sequencing to a map-based cloning approach.
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