What are these... trick questions?
I am not God. It is possible that so called junk DNA is useful.
I think there is a lot we don't know, even though some think they do know.
Since you brought up the question on segments of the gene, I asked a question earlier, which I think was avoided.
Do you know which segments of genes are responsible for the function and survival of an organism? As far as I know, no one knows.
A team of scientists at Harvard Medical School may have identified a purpose for at least some junk DNA, according to a study published in Nature. They have discovered a yeast gene, called SRG1, located in a region of DNA long considered a genetic wasteland. Unusually, it does not make a protein, but instead just makes a mRNA (messenger RNA) copy of itself. mRNA usually acts as an intermediary molecule between a gene and the protein it codes for but, in the case of SRG1, the RNA does the work - its job is to stop a neighbouring gene from being switched on. 'This doesn't explain all junk DNA. It gives a potential use for some DNA', said team leader Fred Winston.
Junk' DNA Has Important Role, Researchers Find
DNA sequences from regions of what had been viewed as the "dispensable genome" are actually performing functions that are central for the organism. They have concluded that the genes spur an almost acrobatic rearrangement of the entire genome that is necessary for the organism to grow.
Genes called transposons in the single-celled pond-dwelling organism Oxytricha produce cell proteins known as transposases. During development, the transposons appear to first influence hundreds of thousands of DNA pieces to regroup. Then, when no longer needed, the organism cleverly erases the transposases from its genetic material, paring its genome to a slim 5 percent of its original load.
"The transposons actually perform a central role for the cell,"
The term "junk DNA" has been questioned on the grounds that it provokes a strong a priori assumption of total non-functionality.
Scientists cannot claim that genes have no functionality, simply because they assume that to be the case.
Studies are being done that are revealing that assumptions in this case are often wrong.
Non-coding DNA - Wikipedia
In 2013, a new "record" for the most efficient eukaryotic genome was discovered with Utricularia gibba, a bladderwort plant that has only 3% non-coding DNA and 97% of coding DNA. Parts of the non-coding DNA were being deleted by the plant and this suggested that non-coding DNA may not be as critical for plants, even though non-coding DNA is useful for humans. Other studies on plants have discovered crucial functions in portions of non-coding DNA that were previously thought to be negligible and have added a new layer to the understanding of gene regulation.
It is agreed upon, that researchers do not know what those genes are doing. Do you also agree with that?