How retrotransposons control the brain

How retrotransposons control the brain
Credit: Wikipedia

Around half of the genome is made up of transposable elements or ‘jumping genes’ that derive from ancient viral integrations. They persist in various states of decay like an old fashioned ‘pull your own’ junkyard where parts from old scrapped vehicles can be harvested and repurposed. While most of these sequences really are junk, treasures can be found in their ore.

Retrotransposons that are specific to mammals; the common LINE-1 (L1) element, for example, comprises a class of transposons that salt our genomes to the tune of a couple hundred-thousand genetic mini-islands. That’s about 20% of our total sequence. Of the few thousand L1s that are…

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