Gene in Huntington’s Disease- Convergent or Divergent?

In mathematics, if numbers come as 1,2,1,2,1,2… or 1,1,1,1,1,…, they are called divergent and convergent. In genetics, ATGCATGC… likewise come for genetic sequence. The sequence could be sporadic or could follow a pattern. In Huntington’s disease, the gene follows a pattern ATGATG…So, could it be categorised as convergent or divergent was my question to google gemini. Below is the answer: Great follow-up — and a nice bridge between mathematics and biology 👌

If the sequence is

A, T, G, A, T, G, A, T, G, …

then mathematically it is still a periodic sequence.

🔁 Type of sequence

It’s a periodic sequence with period 3, just like 1,2,3,1,2,3,…

The repeating block is:

(A, T, G)

🧬 In biological language

In DNA terms:

• A = Adenine

• T = Thymine

• G = Guanine

So this is a repeating codon-like pattern (though real DNA usually uses triplets in varied, non-periodic ways).

Period = 3

Over a finite alphabet (A, T, G)

In CS/biology terms: a repeating string / word

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