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1 Gene Geography Dan Graur Department of Biology and Biochemistry 3c
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2 Gene density (genes/Kb) Mycoplasma genitalium 0.8 Escherichia coli 0.6 Saccharomyces cerevisiae0.5 Caenorhabditis elegans 0.2 Arabidopsis thaliana 0.2 Homo sapiens0.03 Alu in Homo sapiens 1.1
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3 Genes are distributed evenly among the 16 chromosomes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
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4 Periodicity in gene density along chromosome XI of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
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5 In large plant genomes, most protein- coding genes are clustered in long DNA segments (gene space, urban aggregations) that represent a small fraction (12-24%) of the nuclear genome, and which are separated from one another by vast expanses of gene- empty regions (deserts).
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6 Only ~1/3 genes in eukaryotes are essential for viability. The proportion does not vary much between organisms (25-35%). Organisms with a large number of genes (e.g., humans, fish). Organisms with an intermediate number of genes (nematodes, Drosophila). Organisms with a low gene number (e.g., yeast).
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7 Genetic material Chromosomes Extrachromosomal material PlasmidsEpisomes Cryptic (linear) Giant (circular)
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8 Chromosomes contain genes that are unconditionally essential. Extrachromosomal elements contain genetic information that is not necessary under all conditions.
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9plasmidepisome
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10Brucella2 2 1 1 =
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11 Even in Bacteria chromosome number does not correlate with DNA content.
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12 Classification of eukaryotic chromosomes by centromere position.
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13 Gene loss
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14 Gene addition
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15 Gene rearrangement
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16 Exchanges of genetic information between two nonhomologous chromosomes.
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17 Mouse-human synteny. Human chromosomes can be cut into a relatively small number pieces, then shuffled into a reasonable approximation of the mouse genome.
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18 Regions of conserved synteny between human chromosome 22 and the mouse genome.
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19 Chromosome-number reduction Chinese water deer (Hydropotes inermis) n = 70 Brown-brocket deer (Mazama gouazoubira) n = 70 Chinese muntjac (Munitacus reevesi) n = 46 Black muntjac (M. muntiacus crinifrons) n = 8 Indian muntjac (M. muntiacus vaginalis) n = 6
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20 Muntiacus reevesi
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21 2N = 44 + (XX or XY) 2N = 6 + (XX or XY 1 Y 2
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22 Inferring the number of gene-order-rearrangement events 12345 32545
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23 The alignment-reduction method by David Sankoff genome content deletion distance (D) = the minimal number of deletions or insertions necessary to turn genome content A into genome content B. gene order rearrangement distance (R) = the minimal number of inversions and transpositions necessary to convert gene order of A into the gene order of B.
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24 evolutionary edit distance (E): E = D + R
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25 To estimate E, we employ three geometrical procedures: deletion, bundling, and inversion D = 2 bundle is w/o price
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26 12345 32545 R = 3
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27 Tsuzumi graph Tsuzumi drum
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28 The conserved S10 region. The three arrows represent operons in E. coli. A dot ( ) indicates the existence of a gene at a site; a minus sign (–) indicates that the gene has been translocated elsewhere in the genome; indicates that the gene was not found in the genome. L and S = large and small ribosomal-proteins; prlA = preprotein- translocation secY subunit; adk = adenylate kinase; map = methionine aminopeptidase; infA = initiation-factor 1; rpoA = DNA-directed RNA-polymerase chain.
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29 Evolutionary-edit distance between pairs of animal mitochondria. Rearrangement distances and deletion distances are above and below the diagonal, respectively. a Hs = Homo sapiens; Gg = Gallus gallus; Sp = Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (sea urchin); Ap = Asterina pectinifera (starfish); Po = Pisaster ochraceus (starfish); Dy = Drosophila yakuba; As = Ascaris suum (pig roundworm).
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30 Sorting by reversals Nicotiana Lobelia
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31 Synteny = occurrence of two or more genes on the same chromosome. Conserved synteny = synteny of two or more homologous genes in two species. Conserved linkage = conservation of both synteny and gene order of homologous genes between species. Disrupted synteny = a pair of genes are syntenic in one species but their orthologs are located on different chromosomes in the second species. Disrupted linkage = a difference in gene order between the species.
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33 Empirical variables: (1) number of conserved syntenies (2) distribution of number of genes among conserved syntenies (3) number of conserved linkages (4) distribution of number of genes among conserved linkages.
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34 Assumption: A uniform distribution of genes over the genomeEstimate: Number of genomic disruptions required to explain the differences between two genomes.
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35 Conclusions: (1) gene-order rearrangements occur at high rates.
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36 Conclusions: (2) rates of synteny disruption vary widely among mammalian lineages. The mouse lineage has a rate of synteny disruptions that is 25 times higher than that of the cat lineage.
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37 Conclusions: inter intra (3) interchromosomal rearrangements occur approximately four times more frequently than intrachromosomal ones.
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