There's nothing in the paper about junk DNA and nothing about the overall organization of the human genome. Indeed, the tone of the paper is exactly what you would expect from a group of scientists who know that parts of noncoding DNA are involved in gene regulation.
But here's what the press release from the Welcome Trust Sanger Institute says [New technique identifies novel class of cancer's drivers].
Sieving through 'junk' DNA reveals disease-causing genetic mutationsHere's a few facts that you need to keep in mind.
Researchers can now identify DNA regions within non-coding DNA, the major part of the genome that is not translated into a protein, where mutations can cause diseases such as cancer.
Their approach reveals many potential genetic variants within non-coding DNA that drive the development of a variety of different cancers. This approach has great potential to find other disease-causing variants.
Unlike the coding region of the genome where our 23,000 protein-coding genes lie, the non-coding region - which makes up 98% of our genome - is poorly understood. Recent studies have emphasised the biological value of the non-coding regions, previously considered 'junk' DNA, in the regulation of proteins. This new information provides a starting point for researchers to sieve through the non-coding regions and identify the most functionally important regions.
- In spite of what the press release says, we understand a great deal about the 98% of our genome that doesn't encode protein.
- We've known about regulatory regions for half a century. It's simply not correct to imply that our knowledge is "recent."
- No knowledgeable scientist ever said that all non-coding regions were junk in spite of what the press release says.
- The paper does not provide a "starting point" to identify functionally important regions. We already have a pretty good idea about which parts of the noncoding genome are functional and which parts aren't.
Note: It took the IDiots less than 24 hours to exploit the stupidity of the Welcome Trust Sanger Institute. See: Helpful for non-Darwinists: Uses of junk DNA.
Khurana, E., Fu, Y., Colonna, V., Mu, X.J. et al. (2013) Integrative annotation of variants from 1,092 humans: application to cancer genomics. Science 2013 [doi: 10.1126/science.1235587]
Post a large sign in the press relations departments of all universities and research labs?
ReplyDelete"'Non-coding' and 'junk' DNA are not synonymous, even though a great deal of non-coding DNA is 'junk.' This has been well understood for a very long time."
The strange thing with these press releases is how every time they say that "98% of the genome is not understood", then they boat how whatever paper they're reporting on solved the puzzle (of course, the paper either doesn't address the issue at all or is perfectly consistent with all we've know about junk DNA for a very long time). And this goes on for many years. So how is it that every paper solves the mystery and yet the mystery still remains???
ReplyDelete"In spite of what the press release says, we understand a great deal about the 98% of our genome that doesn't encode DNA."
ReplyDeleteDid you mean to say "doesn't encode RNA"? Or perhaps "doesn't encode protein"?
I meant "protein." Thanks.
DeleteThat's unbelievable. It's as if there is some kind of intellectual drift occurring in which well-known facts are gradually lost over time, by a mechanism that appears to be largely due to shoddy press releases and unqualified "science" writers in the popular press. I used to attribute lack of accuracy or omissions in these contexts to the need for concision, but more often these pieces are now just plain wrong. It's either extreme ignorance or willfully misleading for the purpose of hyping the findings, either of which is unconscionable. If they did in fact run this press release past the paper authors first, the authors should certainly be held responsible for misleading the public.
ReplyDeleteI saw the posting about this in Science Daily. My first thought was 'wow, Dr. Moran is not going to like this'.
ReplyDeleteI don't know why everyone is so anti-science on this site. Pretty soon someone is going to discover promoter DNA as a result of this exciting new work and thus provide a "starting point" for understanding how proteins come to be in the cell.
ReplyDeleteYou will all be eating your words then.