Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9727780 Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications 2005 22 Pages PDF
Abstract
Herein it is shown that in order to study the statistical properties of DNA sequences in bacterial chromosomes it suffices to consider only one half of the chromosome because they are similar to its corresponding complementary sequence in the other half. This is due to the inverse bilateral symmetry of bacterial chromosomes. Contrary to the classical result that DNA coding regions of bacterial genomes are purely uncorrelated random sequences, here it is shown, via a renormalization group approach, that DNA random fluctuations of single bases are modulated by log-periodic variations. Distance series of triplets display long-range correlations in each half of the intact chromosome and in protein-coding sequences, or both long-range correlations and log-periodic modulations along the whole chromosome. Hence scaling analyses of distance series of DNA sequences have to consider the functional units of bacterial chromosomes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Mathematical Physics
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