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Comparative Study
. 1995 Feb 25;23(4):689-95.
doi: 10.1093/nar/23.4.689.

An overabundance of long oligopurine tracts occurs in the genome of simple and complex eukaryotes

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Free PMC article
Comparative Study

An overabundance of long oligopurine tracts occurs in the genome of simple and complex eukaryotes

M J Behe. Nucleic Acids Res. .
Free PMC article

Abstract

A search of sequence information in the GenBank files shows that tracts of 15-30 contiguous purines are greatly overrepresented in all eukaryotic species examined, ranging from yeast to human. Such an overabundance does not occur in prokaryotic sequences. The large increase in the number of oligopurine tracts cannot be explained as a simple consequence of base composition, nearest-neighbor frequencies, or the occurrence of an overabundance of oligoadenosine tracts. Oligopurine sequences have previously been shown to be versatile structural elements in DNA, capable of occuring in several alternate conformations. Thus the bias toward long oligopurine tracts in eukaryotic DNA may reflect the usefulness of these structurally versatile sequences in cell function.

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