From: CurtAdams@aol.com
Date: Mon May 08 2000 - 18:18:01 MDT
In a message dated 5/8/00 12:50:21 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
bradbury@aeiveos.com writes:
> The interesting thing is the confusion over the # of genes.
> About 5 years ago the estimate was ~70,000, then Incyte said
> 140,000, now Doubletwist says 105,000...
>
Did you see the article last year on the first human
chromosome arm mapped (Dunham et al, Nature 402:489-495)? They gave 4 quite
different numbers for the gene count
- even with the sequence they're not sure what's a gene; what's a pseudogene;
and what's just junk that
looks a whole lot like a gene. They didn't even get into
the headache of transcribed RNA that *doesn't* make proteins
or known RNA products.
As I recall, their estimates were vaguely around 70,000.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 15:28:30 MST