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Ultra conserved element

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An ultra-conserved element (UCE) is a region of DNA that is identical in at least two different species. One of the first studies of UCEs showed that certain human DNA sequences of length 200 nucleotides or greater were entirely conserved (identical nucleic acid sequence) in both rats and mice. Despite often being noncoding DNA, some ultra-conserved elements have been found to be transcriptionally active, giving non-coding RNA molecules.

Contents

Evolution

Perfect conservation of these long stretches of DNA is thought to imply evolutionary importance as these regions appear to have experienced strong negative selection for 300-400 million years. The probability of finding ultra-conserved elements by chance (under neutral evolution) has been estimated at less than 10−22 in 2.9 billion bases.

Functions

481 ultra-conserved elements have been identified in the human genome. A database collecting genomic information about ultra-conserved elements (UCbase) that share 100% identity among human, mouse and rat is available at http://ucbase.unimore.it. A small number of those which are transcribed have been connected with human carcinomas and leukemias. For example, TUC338 is strongly upregulated in human hepatocellular carcinoma cells. A study comparing ultra-conserved elements between humans and Takifugu rubripes proposed an importance in vertebrate development. Several ultra-conserved elements are located near transcriptional regulators or developmental genes. Other functions include enhancing and splicing regulation.

References

Ultra-conserved element Wikipedia