Lankenau, Dirk-Henner (Hrsg.)
Volff, Jean-Nicolas (Hrsg.)
Transposons and the Dynamic Genome

Beschreibung
There are only few major key functions that lie beneath the fundamental architecture of metabolism and life. These are multiplication, variation and heredity. Only if these factors interact synergistically can Darwinian selection power the evolution of biodiversity. Transposable elements have always played a major role in this process. The genomes of all organisms consist of chromosomes that are built up of double-stranded nucleic acid chains on whose stability and integrity the existence of cells depend. While DNA repair warrants the chemical integrity of DNA and protects it from metabolic and environmental mutagens, meiotic recombination and transposable element activity appear to counteract the molecular guardians of genome stability. Transposable elements and their kind often make up the bulk of genomic DNA, often approaching 50% of the genome. By contrast, the classic genes represent as little as 1.8% of genomic DNA, in case of the human genome.
Produktdetails
ISBN/GTIN | 978-3-642-02005-6 |
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Seitenzahl | 184 S. |
Kopierschutz | mit Wasserzeichen |
Dateigröße | 5431 Kbytes |