Intronic
Intronic is an adjective describing features related to introns, the noncoding segments of genes found in most eukaryotes. Introns are transcribed into precursor messenger RNA but are removed during RNA processing, so they are not present in the mature transcript that is translated into protein. Exons, in contrast, encode the amino acid sequence of a protein.
Introns vary widely in length and number across genes. They often contain regulatory elements that influence
Mutations within introns can disrupt normal splicing, leading to abnormal proteins and disease. Changes that create
Introns are common in eukaryotic genomes but are rare or absent in most prokaryotes. Some genes are
In biotechnology and research, intron sequences are sometimes used in gene constructs to enhance expression or