The Implicit Genome

The Implicit Genome

by Lynn Helena Caporale (Editor)
The Implicit Genome
The Implicit Genome

The Implicit Genome

by Lynn Helena Caporale (Editor)

eBook

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Overview

For over half a century, we have been in the thrall of the double-helicaln structure of DNA, which, in an instant, revealed that information can be transferred between generations by a simple rule, A pairs with T, G pairs with C. In its beautiful simplicity, this structure, along with the table of codons worked out in the following decade, had entranced us into believing that we can fully understand the information content of a DNA sequence, simply by treating it as text that is read in a linear fashion. While we have learned much based on this assumption, there is much we have missed. Far from a passive tape running through a reader, genomes contain information that appears in new forms which create regions with distinct behavior. Some are "gene rich", some mobile, some full of repeats and duplications, some sticking together across long evolutionary distances, some readily breaking apart in tumor cells. Even protein-coding regions can carry additional information, taking advantage of the flexible coding options provided by the degeneracy of the genetic code. The chapters in this volume touch on one or more of three interconnected themes; information can be implied, rather than explicit, in a genome; information can lead to focused and/or regulated changes in nucleotide sequences; information that affects the probability of distinct classes of mutation has implications for evolutionary theory.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195346725
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 02/02/2006
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Dr. Lynn Helena Caporale received her Ph.D. in Molecular Biology from the University of California at Berkeley and is the author of Darwin and the Genome. She is the Associate Director for Comparative Genomics at the Judith P. Sulzberger Genome Center at Columbia University.

Table of Contents


Contributors     ix
An Overview of the Implicit Genome   Lynn Helena Caporale     3
Sequence-Dependent Properties of DNA and Their Role in Function   Donald M. Crothers     23
Mutation as a Phenotype   Errol C. Friedberg     39
Repeats and Variation in Pathogen Selection   Christopher D. Bayliss   E. Richard Moxon     54
Tuning Knobs in the Genome: Evolution of Simple Sequence Repeats by Indirect Selection   David G. King   Edward N. Trifonov   Yechezkel Kashi     77
Implicit Information in Eukaryotic Pathogens as the Basis of Antigenic Variation   J. David Barry     91
The Role of Repeat Sequences in Bacterial Genetic Adaptation to Stress   Eduardo P. C. Rocha     107
The Role of Mobile DNA in the Evolution of Prokaryotic Genomes   Garry Myers   Ian Paulsen   Claire Eraser     121
Eukaryotic Transposable Elements: Teaching Old Genomes New Tricks   Susan R. Wessler     138
Immunoglobulin Recombination Signal Sequences: Somatic and Evolutionary Functions   Ellen Hsu     163
Somatic Evolution of Antibody Genes   Rupert Beale   Dagmar Iber     177
Regulated and Unregulated Recombination of G-rich GenomicRegions   Nancy Maizels     191
The Role of the Genome in the Initiation of Meiotic Recombination   Rhona H. Borts   David T. Kirkpatrick     208
Nuclear Duality and the Genesis of Unusual Genomes in Ciliated Protozoa   Carolyn L. Jahn     225
Editing informational Content of Expressed DNA Sequences and Their Transcripts   Harold C. Smith     248
Alternative Splicing: One Gene, Many Products   Brenton R. Graveley     266
Imprinting: The Hidden Genome   Alyson Ashe   Emma Whitelaw     282
Epilogue: An Engineering Perspective: The Implicit Protocols   John Doyle   Marie Csete   Lynn Caporale     294
References     299
List of Acronyms     363
Index     365
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