- Genomic organization
Organism s have a vast array of ways in which their respectivegenome s are organized. A comparison of the genomic organization of six major model organisms shows size expansion with the increase ofcomplexity of the organism. There is a more than 300-fold difference between the genome sizes ofyeast andmammal s, but only a modest 4- to 5-fold increase in overallgene number (see the figure on the right). However, the ratio of coding to noncoding and repetitive sequences is indicative of the complexity of the genome: The largely "open" genomes ofunicellular fungi have relatively little noncodingDNA compared with the highly heterochromatic genomes ofmulticellular organisms.In particular, mammals have accumulated considerable repetitive elements and noncoding regions, which account for the majority of their DNA sequences (52% non-coding and 44%
repetitive DNA ). [Venter G, et al., The Sequence of the Human Genome Science (2001) 291. pp1304-51] [R. A. Harris et al., Human-Specific Changes of Genome Structure Detected by Genomic Triangulation Science (2007) 316.5822, pp. 235-7] Only 4% of the mammalian genome thus encodes forprotein function (including intronic sequences). This massive expansion of repetitive and noncoding sequences in multicellular organisms is most likely due to the incorporation of invasive elements, such as DNAtransposon s,retrotransposon s, and other repetitive elements. [Haig H. Kazazian, Jr. Mobile Elements: Drivers of Genome Evolution Science, Mar 2004; 303: 1626-32] The expansion of repetitive elements (such asAlu sequence s) has even infiltrated the transcriptional units of the mammalian genome. This results in transcription units that are frequently much larger (30-200 kb), commonly containing multiple promoters and DNA repeats within untranslatedintron s.The vast expansion of the genome with noncoding and repetitive DNA in higher
eukaryote s implies more extensive epigenetic silencing mechanisms. Studies of the genomic organization is thought to be the future of genomicmedicine , which will provide the opportunity for personalized prognoses in clinics. [West M., et al., Embracing the complexity of genomic data for personalized medicine Genome Res. (2006)16:559-66]ee also
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Genome Comparison
*Genome project
*List of sequenced eukaryotic genomes
*Molecular evolution References
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