Junk DNA helps in preventing breast cancer: Study
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London: British researchers have identified a piece of non-coding Ribonucleic acid (RNA) that stops cells turning cancerous, reveals a study.
The human genome contains around three metres of DNA, of which only about 2 percent contains genes that code for proteins and the rest has been recorded as RNA -- transcribed from a stretch of DNA that doesn't code for a protein.
"In our study we've identified that a strand of non-coding RNA prevents the growth of a switch getting stuck and suppresses the spread of cancer,” said Adele Murrell from the University of Bath in UK.
The human genome contains around three metres of DNA, of which only about 2 percent contains genes that code for proteins and the rest has been recorded as RNA -- transcribed from a stretch of DNA that doesn't code for a protein.
"In our study we've identified that a strand of non-coding RNA prevents the growth of a switch getting stuck and suppresses the spread of cancer,” said Adele Murrell from the University of Bath in UK.
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