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result(s) for
"Barnstead, Mary"
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The Genome of Nanoarchaeum equitans: Insights into Early Archaeal Evolution and Derived Parasitism
by
Bolanos, Randall
,
Hohn, Michael J.
,
Kretz, Keith
in
Amino acids
,
Arabidopsis - microbiology
,
Archaea
2003
The hyperthermophile Nanoarchaeum equitans is an obligate symbiont growing in coculture with the crenarchaeon Ignicoccus. Ribosomal protein and rRNA-based phylogenies place its branching point early in the archaeal lineage, representing the new archaeal kingdom Nanoarchaeota. The N. equitans genome (490,885 base pairs) encodes the machinery for information processing and repair, but lacks genes for lipid, cofactor, amino acid, or nucleotide biosyntheses. It is the smallest microbial genome sequenced to date, and also one of the most compact, with 95% of the DNA predicted to encode proteins or stable RNAs. Its limited biosynthetic and catabolic capacity indicates that N. equitans' symbiotic relationship to Ignicoccus is parasitic, making it the only known archaeal parasite. Unlike the small genomes of bacterial parasites that are undergoing reductive evolution, N. equitans has few pseudogenes or extensive regions of noncoding DNA. This organism represents a basal archaeal lineage and has a highly reduced genome.
Journal Article
Sequence and analysis of chromosome 2 of the plant Arabidopsis thaliana
by
Benito, Maria-Ines
,
Feldblyum, Tamara V.
,
Kaul, Samir
in
Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions
,
Arabidopsis
,
Arabidopsis - genetics
1999
Arabidopsis thaliana
(Arabidopsis) is unique among plant model organisms in having a small genome (130–140 Mb), excellent physical and genetic maps, and little repetitive DNA. Here we report the sequence of chromosome 2 from the Columbia ecotype in two gap-free assemblies (contigs) of 3.6 and 16 megabases (Mb). The latter represents the longest published stretch of uninterrupted DNA sequence assembled from any organism to date. Chromosome 2 represents 15% of the genome and encodes 4,037 genes, 49% of which have no predicted function. Roughly 250 tandem gene duplications were found in addition to large-scale duplications of about 0.5 and 4.5 Mb between chromosomes 2 and 1 and between chromosomes 2 and 4, respectively. Sequencing of nearly 2 Mb within the genetically defined centromere revealed a low density of recognizable genes, and a high density and diverse range of vestigial and presumably inactive mobile elements. More unexpected is what appears to be a recent insertion of a continuous stretch of 75% of the mitochondrial genome into chromosome 2.
Journal Article
Whole-Genome Shotgun Assembly and Analysis of the Genome of Fugu rubripes
by
Zharkikh, Andrey
,
Pruss, Dmitry
,
Chapman, Jarrod
in
Animals
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Biological Evolution
2002
The compact genome of Fugu rubripes has been sequenced to over 95% coverage, and more than 80% of the assembly is in multigene-sized scaffolds. In this 365-megabase vertebrate genome, repetitive DNA accounts for less than one-sixth of the sequence, and gene loci occupy about one-third of the genome. As with the human genome, gene loci are not evenly distributed, but are clustered into sparse and dense regions. Some \"giant\" genes were observed that had average coding sequence sizes but were spread over genomic lengths significantly larger than those of their human orthologs. Although three-quarters of predicted human proteins have a strong match to Fugu, approximately a quarter of the human proteins had highly diverged from or had no pufferfish homologs, highlighting the extent of protein evolution in the 450 million years since teleosts and mammals diverged. Conserved linkages between Fugu and human genes indicate the preservation of chromosomal segments from the common vertebrate ancestor, but with considerable scrambling of gene order.
Journal Article
The Genome Sequence of the Malaria Mosquito Anopheles gamblae
by
Zdobnov, Evgeny M.
,
Delcher, Art
,
Grundschober-Freimoser, Anne
in
Chromosomes
,
Drosophila
,
Genes
2002
Anopheles gambiae is the principal vector of malaria, a disease that afflicts more than 500 million people and causes more than 1 million deaths each year. Tenfold shotgun sequence coverage was obtained from the PEST strain of A. gambiae and assembled into scaffolds that span 278 million base pairs. A total of 91% of the genome was organized in 303 scaffolds; the largest scaffold was 23.1 million base pairs. There was substantial genetic variation within this strain, and the apparent existence of two haplotypes of approximately equal frequency (\"dual haplotypes\") in a substantial fraction of the genome likely reflects the outbred nature of the PEST strain. The sequence produced a conservative inference of more than 400,000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms that showed a markedly bimodal density distribution. Analysis of the genome sequence revealed strong evidence for about 14,000 protein-encoding transcripts. Prominent expansions in specific families of proteins likely involved in cell adhesion and immunity were noted. An expressed sequence tag analysis of genes regulated by blood feeding provided insights into the physiological adaptations of a hematophagous insect.
Journal Article
The genome sequence of the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae : The Mosquito genome: Anopheles Gambia
by
KOUTSOS, Anastasios
,
BOLANOS, Randall
,
FLANIGAN, Michael
in
Biological and medical sciences
,
Chromatin. Chromosome
,
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
2002
Journal Article