intron
Americannoun
noun
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A segment of a gene situated between exons that does not function in coding for protein synthesis. After transcription of a gene to messenger RNA, the transcriptions of introns are removed, and the exons are spliced together by enzymes before translation and assembly of amino acids into proteins.
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Compare exon
Etymology
Origin of intron
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
If the spliceosome is able to reinsert the intron into DNA, this would also add significant weight to the theory that spliceosomes and Group II introns shared a common ancestor long ago.
From Science Daily • May 10, 2024
Nucleotide-repeat sequences often occur within the intron, and sequence variation is neutral, that is, there is no selection.
From Textbooks • Jun. 9, 2022
Splice sites were considered as altered if variants affected the first two or the last two bases of an intron.
From Nature • Jan. 22, 2014
An even more sprawling gene—dystrophin, the Jacksonville of human DNA—contains 14,000 bases of coding DNA spread among 2.2 million bases of intron cruft.
From Slate • Jul. 12, 2012
A mutation that jettisons a base in an intron can have dire consequences: inserting intron sequences into the protein, or obliterating the careful stitching together of exons, dropping gene sections.
From Scientific American • May 16, 2012
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