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April 25, 2003|Volume 31, Number 27



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Study suggests there are more genes
in the human genome than predicted

A study by Yale researchers provides preliminary evidence that there may be more than twice as many genes in the human genome than previously predicted.

Using an advanced genomic technique, researchers looked for all of the genes on human chromosome 22. This is the next and necessary step in analyzing and understanding the human genome.

"These are very promising findings," says the study's first author John Rinn, a fourth-year graduate student in molecular, cellular and developmental biology (MC&DB). "We found that many of the known, related and predicted genes were verified to be expressed in the cell. More importantly, our study reveals twice as many transcribed bases than have been reported previously, potentially indicating that there are twice as many genes in the human genome."

Rinn and his collaborators mapped all the coding regions -- spots where genes are potentially located -- of chromosome 22 using an advanced microarray technology. They found that a DNA microarray representing nearly all of the unique sequences of human chromosome 22 was constructed and used to measure global transcriptional activity in a complex tissue similar to the placenta.

Chromosome 22 is the most well-studied human chromosome. Most of these known genes were verified in the study, and an equal number of previously undiscovered sequences were also expressed. Rinn says the study, which was published in a recent issue of the journal Genes and Development, is part of ongoing research in this area.

"Interestingly, a significant fraction of these novel fragments can be found in the mouse genome, further indicating their biological relevance," says Rinn. "This study was a proof of the principle that we can find all the regions of a chromosome that are biologically relevant. In the future we will scale this process to tackle the entire human genome."

Rinn's study collaborators at Yale included principal investigator Michael Snyder, professor and chair of MC&DB; Mark Gerstein, associate professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry (MB&B) and computer science; Perry Miller, professor of anesthesiology and director of medical informatics; Ghia Euskirchen, postdoctoral fellow in MC&DB; Paul Bertone, graduate student in MC&DB; R. Martone, graduate student, Nicholas Luscombe, postdoctoral fellow in MB&B; S. Hartman, graduate student, Paul M. Harrison, postdoctoral associate in MB&B; F. Kenneth Nelson, research scientist and lecturer in MC&DB; and Dr. Sherman Weissman, professor of anesthesiology.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Yale cited for its 'dramatic steps' in internationalization

Study suggests there are more genes in the human genome than predicted

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Guggenheim Fellowships are awarded to five faculty members

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F&ES events look at the role of fire in forest management

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Juniors honored for 'good labor in the world' and musical gifts

Richard Sewall dies, was first master of Ezra Stiles College

Pioneering immunobiologist Dr. Charles Janeway Jr. dies

New award will honor creativity of School of Nursing students

Concert to help raise funds for year-round, overflow homeless shelter

Campus Notes


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