genome | genetics | Britannica.com

Posted: September 28, 2015 at 10:42 pm

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an international collaboration in which researchers aimed to sequence the genomes of a large number of people from different ethnic groups worldwide with the intent of creating a catalog of genetic variations occurring with a frequency of at least 1 percent across all human populations. A major goal of the project was to identify more than 95 percent of variations known as single nucleotide...

...of a phosphoryl group). The specific location of a given chemical modification can also be important. For example, certain histone modifications distinguish actively expressed regions of the genome from regions that are not highly expressed. These modifications may correlate with chromosome banding patterns generated by staining procedures common in karyotype analyses. Similarly,...

The development of the technology to sequence the DNA of whole genomes on a routine basis has given rise to the discipline of genomics, which dominates genetics research today. Genomics is the study of the structure, function, and evolutionary comparison of whole genomes. Genomics has made it possible to study gene function at a broader level, revealing sets of genes that interact to impinge on...

study of the structure, function, and inheritance of the genome (entire set of genetic material) of an organism. A major part of genomics is determining the sequence of molecules that make up the genomic deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) content of an organism. The genomic DNA sequence is contained within an organisms chromosomes, one or more sets of which are found in each cell of an organism. The...

The genome of HIV mutates at a very high rate, and the virus in each infected individual is thus slightly different. The genetic mechanisms that underlie the individual variation have been investigated through approaches based on genome sequencing. The HIV-1 genome in 2009 was the first HIV genome to be sequenced in its entirety. Prior to that achievement, the ability of HIV RNA to fold into...

New work on genome sequences, the total amount and quality of all of the genes that make up a live being, permits more accurate assessment of the material basis of the theoretically smallest and simplest extant free-living organisms. The complete DNA sequences of a few extremely small free-living organisms are now knowne.g., Mycoplasma genitalium with its 480 genes. All the...

type of life cycle that takes place when a bacteriophage infects certain types of bacteria. In this process, the genome (the collection of genes in the nucleic acid core of a virus) of the bacteriophage stably integrates into the chromosome of the host bacterium and replicates in concert with it. No progeny viruses are produced. Instead, the infecting virus lies dormant within the bacteriums...

an alteration in the genetic material (the genome) of a cell of a living organism or of a virus that is more or less permanent and that can be transmitted to the cells or the viruss descendants. (The genomes of organisms are all composed of DNA, whereas viral genomes can be of DNA or RNA.) Mutation in the DNA of a body...

Salamanders have enormous genomes that contain more nucleic acid and larger chromosomes in each cell than any tetrapods. The genomes vary greatly in size among species, even within a family. Large genomes impose large cell size, which means that small salamanders have relatively few cells. The apparent anatomic simplicity of salamanders may be a direct and phylogenetically secondary outcome.

The nucleic acids of virions are arranged into genomes. All double-stranded DNA viruses consist of a single large molecule, whereas most double-stranded RNA viruses have segmented genomes, with each segment usually representing a single gene that encodes the information for synthesizing a single protein. Viruses with single-stranded genomic DNA are usually small, with limited genetic...

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genome | genetics | Britannica.com

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