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Biology, 20.03.2020 22:48 anelismel

With age, somatic cells are thought to accumulate genomic "scars" as a result of the inaccurate repair of double-strand breaks by nonhomologous end-joining (NHEI). Estimates based on the frequency of breaks in primary human fibroblasts suggest that by age 70 each human somatic cell may carry some 2000 NHEl-induced mutations due to inaccurate repair. If these mutations were distributed randomly around the genome, how many genes would you expect to be affected? Would you expect cell function to be compromised? Why or why not? (Assume that 2% of the genome-l.5% coding and 0.5% regulatory-is crucial information.)

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