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Do Humans and Chimps Share Nearly 99% of Their DNA?

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Long-Held Belief ​Challenged: Human and ⁣Chimpanzee DNA Difference is Substantially Larger Than Previously⁢ Thought

Recent research ‌indicates humans and‌ chimpanzees share considerably less ⁤DNA‌ than‍ the​ widely‌ cited 99% figure. A groundbreaking⁢

The​ significant⁢ differences aren’t ‍necessarily in ‍the genes‍ that code for proteins, but ⁣rather‍ in noncoding DNA, wich comprises roughly 98% of the genome. According to David Pollard, ⁤these noncoding regions contain “regulatory regions” that control when and where proteins are ‍made, acting as crucial genetic switches. “A ⁢small‌ change in the DNA can have big consequences for how that DNA is expressed,” adds David Haussler, “and, in turn, changes in expression⁤ can lead to even bigger changes in phenotype ​- the scientific term for traits ‍like hairy or​ not, large or⁣ small, etc.”

While ⁣humans and chimps⁤ utilize essentially the same “genetic tool kit” ⁣of proteins, the ‌way these tools ‍are deployed differs significantly. As Teresa Marques-Bonet explains,even subtle alterations​ in these regulatory regions can trigger​ substantial⁢ variations in traits. Pollard ⁤summarizes the implications: “Humans and chimps are​ made up of essentially the same building blocks ​(proteins),but ​these are used in somewhat ​different ‍ways to make a human versus a chimp.”

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