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Why Study Genome Rearrangements?
Genome rearrangements are useful in studying evolution. Since
the operations described above are far more rare than point
mutations, one can track the genome rearrangements through the
evolutionary history of the species much further back than
regular mutations allow. Also, there is a very small chance of reverse
mutations that will affect the exact same location on the genome,
so we have less ambiguity in interpreting the mutations.
Finally, since the rearrangements affect whole chromosomes, this
is larger scale data which is more appropriate for studying
evolution of species.
Itshack Pe`er
1999-03-16