Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10871614 | FEBS Letters | 2012 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Recently the mismatch between our newly acquired capacity to synthetize DNA at genome scale, and our low capacity to design ab initio a functional genome has become conspicuous. This essay gathers a variety of constraints that globally shape natural genomes, with a focus on eubacteria. These constraints originate from chromosome replication (leading/lagging strand asymmetry; gene dosage gradient from origin to terminus; collisions with the transcription complexes), from biased codon usage, from noise control in gene expression, and from genome layout for co-functional genes. On the basis of this analysis, lessons are drawn for full genome design.
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Authors
François Képès, Brian C. Jester, Thibaut Lepage, Nafiseh Rafiei, Bianca Rosu, Ivan Junier,