ONE piece of so-called "junk" DNA appears to have a surprising role. In voles at least, a particular stretch of non-coding DNA seems to control a male's fidelity.
Larry Young and Elizabeth Hammock at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, bred two strains of prairie voles. Each had different lengths of "microsatellite" DNA in a gene encoding a receptor for the hormone vasopressin. Microsatellites are repetitive DNA sequences which, like all junk DNA, do not code for proteins.
The strains differed in length by just 19 base pairs; a small difference, but enough to change the voles' behaviour. Males with the longer sequence were more attentive to their partners when offered a choice of another female, and spent more time with their pups (Science, vol 308, p 1630). In lab tests the researchers also found that the longer sequence increased enzyme activity.
Junk DNA makes up at least 95 per cent of the human genome. Young says that microsatellites in the regulatory regions of genes can create diversity in behavioural traits between individuals. "They can be a mechanism for rapid evolution and adaptation," he says.
Larry Young and Elizabeth Hammock at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, bred two strains of prairie voles. Each had different lengths of "microsatellite" DNA in a gene encoding a receptor for the hormone vasopressin. Microsatellites are repetitive DNA sequences which, like all junk DNA, do not code for proteins.
The strains differed in length by just 19 base pairs; a small difference, but enough to change the voles' behaviour. Males with the longer sequence were more attentive to their partners when offered a choice of another female, and spent more time with their pups (Science, vol 308, p 1630). In lab tests the researchers also found that the longer sequence increased enzyme activity.
Junk DNA makes up at least 95 per cent of the human genome. Young says that microsatellites in the regulatory regions of genes can create diversity in behavioural traits between individuals. "They can be a mechanism for rapid evolution and adaptation," he says.
This is getting interesting. DNA sequences not encoding for actual proteins may have other roles.
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