Journal Article10.1016/J.GDE.2005.09.006
The microbial pan-genome
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TL;DR: A decade after the beginning of the genomic era, the question of how genomics can describe a bacterial species has not been fully addressed and the pan-genome, which is composed of a "core genome" containing genes present in all strains, and a "dispensable genome", might be orders of magnitude larger than any single genome.
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About: This article is published in Current Opinion in Genetics & Development. The article was published on 01 Dec 2005. The article focuses on the topics: Minimal genome & Bacterial genome size.
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Citations
Comparative Genomic Analyses of the Genus Photobacterium Illuminate Biosynthetic Gene Clusters Associated with Antagonism
TL;DR: These BGCs-rich Photobacterium strains represent great potential for bioactive secondary metabolites production and sources for novel compounds, and genome mining revealed that biosynthetic gene clusters involved in producing antimicrobial compounds in CCB-ST2H9 could contribute to the antagonistic potential.
Effects of Environment and Space on Species Turnover of Soil Faunas across Multiple Forest Ecosystems in East Asia
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Horizontal gene transfer barrier shapes the evolution of prokaryotic pangenomes
TL;DR: The combined analysis of genome intersections and gene commonality shows that at least one of the two simplifying assumptions that are usually adopted for modeling the evolution of the U-shaped distribution, those of infinitely many genes and constant genome size, is invalid.
•Dissertation
The evolution of silent beta-glucoside systems in Escherichia coli
Sabari Sankar Thirupathy
- 01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: The evolution of two silent β-glucoside loci belonging to the flexible gene pool of E. coli was traced, implicating vertical inheritance of bgl and its loss in some enterobacterial lineages and suggesting that bgl may confer an unknown ecological advantage.
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Genome analysis of multiple pathogenic isolates of Streptococcus agalactiae: Implications for the microbial “pan-genome”
Hervé Tettelin,Vega Masignani,Michael J. Cieslewicz,Claudio Donati,Duccio Medini,Naomi L. Ward,Samuel V. Angiuoli,Jonathan Crabtree,Amanda L. Jones,A. Scott Durkin,Robert T. DeBoy,Tanja M. Davidsen,Marirosa Mora,Maria Scarselli,Immaculada Margarit Y Ros,Jeremy Peterson,Christopher R. Hauser,Jaideep P. Sundaram,William C. Nelson,Ramana Madupu,Lauren M. Brinkac,Robert J. Dodson,M. J. Rosovitz,Steven A. Sullivan,Sean C. Daugherty,Daniel H. Haft,Jeremy D. Selengut,Michelle L. Gwinn,Liwei Zhou,Nikhat Zafar,Hoda Khouri,Diana Radune,George Dimitrov,Kisha Watkins,Kevin J. B. O'Connor,Shannon Smith,Teresa Utterback,Owen White,Craig E. Rubens,Guido Grandi,Lawrence C. Madoff,Dennis L. Kasper,John L. Telford,Michael R. Wessels,Rino Rappuoli,Claire M. Fraser +45 more
TL;DR: The genomic sequence of six strains representing the five major disease-causing serotypes of Streptococcus agalactiae, the main cause of neonatal infection in humans, was generated and Mathematical extrapolation of the data suggests that the gene reservoir available for inclusion in the S. agalactic pan-genome is vast and that unique genes will continue to be identified even after sequencing hundreds of genomes.
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Mobile elements: drivers of genome evolution.
TL;DR: Mobile elements within genomes have driven genome evolution in diverse ways and are becoming useful tools for learning more about genome evolution and gene function.
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Phages and the Evolution of Bacterial Pathogens: from Genomic Rearrangements to Lysogenic Conversion
TL;DR: The current review presents the available genomics and biological data on prophages from bacterial pathogens in an evolutionary framework to demonstrate that the chromosomes from bacteria and their viruses (bacteriophages) are coevolving.
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