Eukaryotes and Introns
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 7:43 pm
Hi all,
I was reading over my research paper on background information, and came across a fact that I haven't verified. I don't know where I got it from, and knowing me, I could have made it up myself because I was in a very preliminary stage of my research at the time I wrote it.
So, my question is, do all eukaryotes have introns and thus have their introns spliced out?
My first sentence in my paper is:
"All eukaryotic organisms undergo pre-mRNA splicing, an essential process regulating gene expression ..."
... I'm almost embarrassed to ask this question, but is that true? For some reason, I think that not all eukaryotes even have introns in their genes (I don't know, maybe the small ones don't?) so my statement there could be false.
Thanks for your help!
-M
I was reading over my research paper on background information, and came across a fact that I haven't verified. I don't know where I got it from, and knowing me, I could have made it up myself because I was in a very preliminary stage of my research at the time I wrote it.
So, my question is, do all eukaryotes have introns and thus have their introns spliced out?
My first sentence in my paper is:
"All eukaryotic organisms undergo pre-mRNA splicing, an essential process regulating gene expression ..."
... I'm almost embarrassed to ask this question, but is that true? For some reason, I think that not all eukaryotes even have introns in their genes (I don't know, maybe the small ones don't?) so my statement there could be false.
Thanks for your help!
-M