Literature DB >> 11591471

Isochore chromosome maps of eukaryotic genomes.

J L Oliver1, P Bernaola-Galván, P Carpena, R Román-Roldán.   

Abstract

Analytical DNA ultracentrifugation revealed that eukaryotic genomes are mosaics of isochores: long DNA segments (>>300 kb on average) relatively homogeneous in G+C. Important genome features are dependent on this isochore structure, e.g. genes are found predominantly in the GC-richest isochore classes. However, no reliable method is available to rigorously partition the genome sequence into relatively homogeneous regions of different composition, thereby revealing the isochore structure of chromosomes at the sequence level. Homogeneous regions are currently ascertained by plain statistics on moving windows of arbitrary length, or simply by eye on G+C plots. On the contrary, the entropic segmentation method is able to divide a DNA sequence into relatively homogeneous, statistically significant domains. An early version of this algorithm only produced domains having an average length far below the typical isochore size. Here we show that an improved segmentation method, specifically intended to determine the most statistically significant partition of the sequence at each scale, is able to identify the boundaries between long homogeneous genome regions displaying the typical features of isochores. The algorithm precisely locates classes II and III of the human major histocompatibility complex region, two well-characterized isochores at the sequence level, the boundary between them being the first isochore boundary experimentally characterized at the sequence level. The analysis is then extended to a collection of human large contigs. The relatively homogeneous regions we find show many of the features (G+C range, relative proportion of isochore classes, size distribution, and relationship with gene density) of the isochores identified through DNA centrifugation. Isochore chromosome maps, with many potential applications in genomics, are then drawn for all the completely sequenced eukaryotic genomes available.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11591471     DOI: 10.1016/s0378-1119(01)00641-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gene        ISSN: 0378-1119            Impact factor:   3.688


  22 in total

1.  Using analytical ultracentrifugation to study compositional variation in vertebrate genomes.

Authors:  Oliver Clay; Christophe J Douady; Nicolas Carels; Sandrine Hughes; Giuseppe Bucciarelli; Giorgio Bernardi
Journal:  Eur Biophys J       Date:  2003-04-09       Impact factor: 1.733

2.  Effects of coarse-graining on the scaling behavior of long-range correlated and anti-correlated signals.

Authors:  Yinlin Xu; Qianli D Y Ma; Daniel T Schmitt; Pedro Bernaola-Galván; Plamen Ch Ivanov
Journal:  Physica A       Date:  2011-11-01       Impact factor: 3.263

3.  IsoFinder: computational prediction of isochores in genome sequences.

Authors:  José L Oliver; Pedro Carpena; Michael Hackenberg; Pedro Bernaola-Galván
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2004-07-01       Impact factor: 16.971

4.  The biased distribution of Alus in human isochores might be driven by recombination.

Authors:  Michael Hackenberg; Pedro Bernaola-Galván; Pedro Carpena; José L Oliver
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 2.395

5.  Isochore structures in the genome of the plant Arabidopsis thaliana.

Authors:  Ren Zhang; Chun-Ting Zhang
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 2.395

6.  Arabidopsis thaliana chromosome 4 replicates in two phases that correlate with chromatin state.

Authors:  Tae-Jin Lee; Pete E Pascuzzi; Sharon B Settlage; Randall W Shultz; Milos Tanurdzic; Pablo D Rabinowicz; Margit Menges; Ping Zheng; Dorrie Main; James A H Murray; Bryon Sosinski; George C Allen; Robert A Martienssen; Linda Hanley-Bowdoin; Matthew W Vaughn; William F Thompson
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2010-06-10       Impact factor: 5.917

7.  Identifying compositionally homogeneous and nonhomogeneous domains within the human genome using a novel segmentation algorithm.

Authors:  Eran Elhaik; Dan Graur; Kresimir Josić; Giddy Landan
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2010-06-22       Impact factor: 16.971

8.  Modeling compositional dynamics based on GC and purine contents of protein-coding sequences.

Authors:  Zhang Zhang; Jun Yu
Journal:  Biol Direct       Date:  2010-11-08       Impact factor: 4.540

9.  Organization and evolution of a gene-rich region of the mouse genome: a 12.7-Mb region deleted in the Del(13)Svea36H mouse.

Authors:  Ann-Marie Mallon; Laurens Wilming; Joseph Weekes; James G R Gilbert; Jennifer Ashurst; Sandrine Peyrefitte; Lucy Matthews; Matthew Cadman; Richard McKeone; Chris A Sellick; Ruth Arkell; Marc R M Botcherby; Mark A Strivens; R Duncan Campbell; Simon Gregory; Paul Denny; John M Hancock; Jane Rogers; Steve D M Brown
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2004-09-13       Impact factor: 9.043

10.  Segmentation of time series with long-range fractal correlations.

Authors:  P Bernaola-Galván; J L Oliver; M Hackenberg; A V Coronado; P Ch Ivanov; P Carpena
Journal:  Eur Phys J B       Date:  2012-06-01       Impact factor: 1.500

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