stressedadfff
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does anyone know
omg thanks!!! i knew ive asked it before THANK YOU SO MUCH!!I believe you previously asked the same question on the below thread?
Would non coding dna making up the large majority of the dna also contribute to this? because only a small amount is actually coding dnaCoding regions of DNA are sections of DNA that code for proteins. Even slight changes to the DNA sequence of this region can completely change the protein produced, which can have detrimental effects on the organism. This results in the organism not surviving to be able to pass on its genetic material containing the SNP which is why SNPs are less commonly found in coding regions of DNA
In contrast, certain sections of non-coding DNA are considered junk DNA and have no effect on protein production. If a SNP occurs in this region, it won't affect the organism's survivability and as a result will pass on its SNP to offspring. This results in SNPs being found in non-coding regions of DNA more than coding regions of DNA.
oh ok makes sense. So they measure what the percentage of snps are in each section. But given that there are more non coding dna, doesnt it mean that there is a greater probability of snp occuring in the non coding dna. If i have 10 cookies but 7 are chocolate and 3 are mint, then i have more of a chance of breaking the chocolate cookies when i transfer them to their package? is there not more chances of snp occuring in non coding?No those differences are accounted for. Let's look at this mathematically
Let's say I have 10 coding segments of DNA and 100 non-coding segments of DNA
Coding section: 2/10 have SNPs = 20%
Non-coding section: 50/100 have SNPs = 50%, so SNPs more commonly found in non coding regions
They measure it based on the percentage of SNPs found within an region. If i were to measure it based on amounts of DNA alone then i would be incorrect. Take a look at this
(This case isn't true, as more non coding DNA is present than coding DNA, but I'm just showing an example of why we don't use amounts of DNA)
Non-Coding section: 7/10 = 70%, so in this hypothetical scenario SNPs occur more in the non coding region as shown by the 70%. However, if we were to base it off amounts of SNPs occurring in amounts of DNA. Then the coding DNA has more SNPs, as it has 50 snps compared to non coding's 7 snps, but the SNPs are more commonly found in the coding region
coding section: 50/100 = 50%
So measuring how common SNPs are in DNA has nothing to do with whether more non-coding is DNA is present, as they measure it on the percentage in which it's found.