Functions of human non-coding dna sequences
Author(s) -
Milanko Stupar,
Vitomir Vidović,
Dragomir Lukač
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
archive of oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.104
H-Index - 13
eISSN - 1450-9520
pISSN - 0354-7310
DOI - 10.2298/aoo1104081s
Subject(s) - dna , base pair , genetics , human genome , genome , intron , physics , gene , biology , evolutionary biology , computational biology , chemistry
The development of string theory has opened a completely new chapter and the way of thinking. A tight connection between DNA, water and strings, as well as their properties, lead to the idea that the soul is the shelter of our thoughts. Only 2% of the haploid human genome codes for proteins, while the rest consists of non-coding RNA genes, regulatory sequences, introns. The rest of the DNA, about 2.9 billion of base pairs, represents: cultural heredity of the person's family and a part being formed by the person during his/her lifetime, which gives the answer to what the use of the non-coding sequences is. Water molecules do not stay permanently united with DNA (the connection is not covalent), but they disconnect at every 0.5-1 nsec, forming and leaving the DNA molecule. It is well known that the DNA structure depends on water and that „water remembers thoughts”, and depending on the thoughts of a person it carries them to the physical structure of DNA. At the beginning of the physical organization of the water molecule there are strings. When a person dies, the DNA and water molecule are disconnected leaving only strings with an appropriate features being conditioned by three-dimensional structure of DNA shaped by water. Every person has a unique string appearance, as it is the case with the snowflakes (the DNA print in the strings)
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