Exons and Introns Exons and introns refer to specific nucleotide base sequences in the genetic code that are involved in producing proteins. Exons are the DNA bases that are transcribed into mRNA and eventually code for amino acids in the p...
http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20091129...
Alternative splicing is common in other genes. However, it typically results in domains added or dropped from the final protein product. This scenario is not applicable to exon 2: extra amino acids are not wanted upstream of a signal pept...
http://www.mad-cow.org/exon2.html#zzz
You can build gene models from either exon candidates or alignments, or use both.
http://compbio.ornl.gov/grailexp/gxpfaq4.html#2
Introns found between functional motifs/domains e.g. after each UIM repeat. The phase zero introns give a second hint: Coding exons must have same phase splice junctions to be duplicated.
http://www.embl-heidelberg.de/%7Eseqanal/courses/predoc...
John J. Exon died in Lincoln, Nebraska, USA
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0264066/bio
Introns are nucleotides that are not used or expressed, while exons are expressed regions.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What+do+introns+and+extrons+d...
Exons are the DNA sequences that code for proteins. Introns are not involved in coding for proteins.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_difference_betwee...