1. How Big Is the Universe of Exons?
- Author
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Robert L. Dorit, Lloyd Schoenbach, and Walter Gilbert
- Subjects
Genetics ,Multidisciplinary ,Models, Genetic ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Proteins ,Exons ,Biology ,Exon shuffling ,Thyroglobulin ,Universe ,Homology (biology) ,Exon ,Exon trapping ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Tandem exon duplication ,Monte Carlo Method ,Gene ,Genomic organization ,media_common - Abstract
If genes have been assembled from exon subunits, the frequency with which exons are reused leads to an estimate of the size of the underlying exon universe. An exon database was constructed from available protein sequences, and homologous exons were identified on the basis of amino acid identity; statistically significant matches were determined by Monte Carlo methods. It is estimated that only 1000 to 7000 exons were needed to construct all proteins.
- Published
- 1990
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