[Home]Retroposon

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Retroposons, also called retrotransposons, are related to transposons. They copy themselves to RNA and then, via reverse transcriptase, back to DNA. Many retroposons have LTRs ([long terminal repeats]?) at their ends that can contain over 1000 base pairs each. Like transposons, they create [direct repeat]?s at their entry site, which can be used to detect them. About 40% of the human genome supposedly consists of retroposons.

See also : transposon -- genetics

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Last edited December 10, 2001 10:20 pm by Magnus Manske (diff)
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