Preface
The second half of the 20th century was witness to incredible
advances in molecular biology and computer technology. Only 50 years
after identifying the chemical structure of DNA (1953), the sequence
of the human genome has been determined and can be downloaded to a
computer small enough to fit in your hand. The pace of science can be
truly dizzying. So what do you do when you literally have the book of
life in the palm of your hand? Well, you read it of course.
Unfortunately, it's much easier to read the book of
life than to understand it, and one of the great quests of the 21st
century will be unraveling its mysteries. One particularly fruitful
approach to deciphering the book of life has been through comparative
studies, such as those between mouse and human.
Comparisons between the human and mouse genomes show how little has
changed since humans and mice last shared a common ancestor around 75
million years ago. Very few genes are unique to humans or mice, and
in general the genes are more than 80% identical at the sequence
level. However, genes account for a small fraction of these genomes
and the majority of sequence is not recognizably similar. This is
where BLAST, the Basic Local Alignment Search Tool, comes in. BLAST
is useful for finding similarities between biological sequences, be
they DNA, RNA, or protein. Sequence similarity is often an indication
of conserved function, and you can use comparative sequence analysis
to understand biological sequences in much the same way that ancient
Greeks used comparative anatomy to understand the human body or that
linguists used the Rosetta Stone to understand Egyptian hieroglyphs.
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