Submitted:
10 March 2026
Posted:
12 March 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Literature Sources and Analytical Domains
2.3. Conceptual Framework Development
- Biological Memory – the preservation of genetic information accumulated throughout evolutionary history.
- Latent Genetic Elements – structurally preserved genetic sequences whose functional execution is suspended.
- Recallability – the potential for preserved genetic elements to regain functional activity under appropriate conditions.
- Regulatory Decision Architecture – the network of molecular signals governing gene activation.
- Evolutionary Information Storage – the accumulation of preserved genomic information representing historical biological processes.
2.4. Analytical Scope and Limitations
- comparative genomics
- transcriptomic analysis
- epigenetic profiling
- computational modeling of regulatory networks
- artificial intelligence–based genomic discovery
3. Results
3.1. Emergence of the Biological Memory Framework
3.2. Components of Genomic Biological Memory
3.3. Relationship Between Biological Memory and Gene Latency
- Gene Latency represents the operational condition in which genes remain structurally intact while their functional execution is suppressed.
- Biological Memory represents the long-term evolutionary repository in which such latent genetic elements accumulate.
3.4. The Genome as an Evolutionary Information Archive
- previously functional genes
- duplicated genetic sequences
- regulatory systems that have undergone modification
- genetic pathways that have become conditionally inactive
- execution of active genetic programs necessary for current biological processes
- preservation of latent genetic information representing accumulated evolutionary knowledge
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Ethics Approval and Consent to Participate
Consent to Publish
Clinical Trial Registration
Data Availability Statement
AI Use Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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