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Power law exponents characterizing human DNA

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dc.contributor.author Provata, A.
dc.contributor.author Oikonomou, Th.
dc.date.accessioned 2016-01-26T10:03:57Z
dc.date.available 2016-01-26T10:03:57Z
dc.date.issued 2007
dc.identifier.citation A. Provata, Th. Oikonomou; 2007; Power law exponents characterizing human DNA; Physical Review E; http://journals.aps.org/pre/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevE.75.056102; ru_RU
dc.identifier.uri http://nur.nu.edu.kz/handle/123456789/1039
dc.description.abstract The size distributions of all known coding and noncoding DNA sequences are studied in all human chromosomes. In a unified approach, both introns and intergenic regions are treated as noncoding regions. The distributions of noncoding segments Pnc S of size S present long tails Pnc S S−1− nc, with exponents nc ranging between 0.71 for chromosome 13 and 1.2 for chromosome 19 . On the contrary, the exponential, short-range decay terms dominate in the distributions of coding exon segments Pc S in all chromosomes. Aiming to address the emergence of these statistical features, minimal, stochastic, mean-field models are proposed, based on randomly aggregating DNA strings with duplication, influx and outflux of genomic segments. These minimal models produce both the short-range statistics in the coding and the observed power law and fractal statistics in the noncoding DNA. The minimal models also demonstrate that although the two systems coding and noncoding coexist, alternating on the same linear chain, they act independently: the coding as a closed, equilibrium system and the noncoding as an open, out-of-equilibrium one ru_RU
dc.language.iso en ru_RU
dc.subject Research Subject Categories::NATURAL SCIENCES::Physics ru_RU
dc.subject human DNA ru_RU
dc.title Power law exponents characterizing human DNA ru_RU
dc.type Article ru_RU


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