Gene Regulation for Higher Cells: A Theory

Science
July 25, 1969
Cited by 2,089

Abstract

Cell differentiation is based almost certainly on the regulation of gene activity, so that for each state of differentiation a certain set of genes is active in transcription and other genes are inactive. The establishment of this concept (1) has depended on evidence
\nindicating that the cells of an organism generally contain identical genomes (2). Direct support for the idea that regulation of gene activity underlies cell differentiation
\ncomes from evidence that much of the genome in higher cell
\ntypes is inactive (3) and that different ribonucleic acids (RNA) are synthesized in different cell types (4).


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