Yusnaan t1_isgqqta wrote on October 15, 2022 at 9:27 PM Reply to When it's said 99.9% of human DNA is the same in all humans, is this referring to only coding DNA or both coding and non-coding DNA combined? by PeanutSalsa Also don't forget that the epigenome (methylation, acetylation, histone modification, etc.) can make nearly identical DNA act very differently. This has been observed in identical twins, and is still being heavily explored. Permalink 38
Yusnaan t1_isgqqta wrote
Reply to When it's said 99.9% of human DNA is the same in all humans, is this referring to only coding DNA or both coding and non-coding DNA combined? by PeanutSalsa
Also don't forget that the epigenome (methylation, acetylation, histone modification, etc.) can make nearly identical DNA act very differently.
This has been observed in identical twins, and is still being heavily explored.