Although unicellular
eukaryotes such as yeast have either no introns or very few,
metazoans and especially
vertebrate genomes have a large fraction of
non-coding DNA. For instance, in the
human genome only 1.1% of the genome is spanned by exons, whereas 24% is in introns, with 75% of the genome being
intergenic DNA. This can provide a practical advantage in
omics-aided
health care (such as
precision medicine) because it makes commercialized
whole exome sequencing a smaller and less expensive challenge than commercialized
whole genome sequencing. The large variation in
genome size and
C-value across
life forms has posed an interesting challenge called the
C-value enigma. Across all eukaryotic genes in GenBank, there were (in 2002), on average, 5.48 exons per protein coding gene. The average exon encoded 30-36
amino acids. While the longest exon in the human genome is 11555
bp long, several exons have been found to be only 2 bp long. A single-nucleotide exon has been reported from the
Arabidopsis genome. In humans, like protein coding
mRNA, most
non-coding RNA also contain multiple exons ==Structure and function==