Pyknons

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Pyknons are genomic patterns in the "non-coding" regions of DNA that are also present in the coding regions and relate to biological processes. Pyknons were discovered and termed by Rigoutsos et al. of IBM identified a subset of subset of 127,998 patterns, termed pyknons, using pattern recognition methods. [1][1] i.e. in what evolutionists have been calling "junk DNA" (sic).


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References

  1. "Short blocks from the non-coding parts of the human genome have instances within nearly all known genes and relate to biological processes" by Isidore Rigoutsos, Tien Huynh, Kevin Miranda, Aristotelis Tsirigos, Alice McHardy and Daniel Platt (T. J. Watson Research Center, IBM, Yorktown Heights, NY), April 24, 2006, 10.1073/pnas.0601688103
  2. Meynert A, Birney E., Cell. 2006 Jun 2;125(5):836-8.

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