‘Junk’ DNA gets credit for making us who we are
March 22, 2010 | Source: New Scientist Life
By studying differences in transcription factors (proteins that attach to stretches of non-coding DNA and affect how nearby genes make proteins), researchers hope to unravel what makes people different in disease risk for specific ailments.
Non-coding (“junk”) DNA makes up about 98 per cent of the human genome. One recent study revealed dramatic differences between the non-coding DNA of people whose genes are 99 per cent the same.