| Literature DB >> 16197549 |
Pierluigi Strippoli1, Silvia Canaider, Francesco Noferini, Pietro D'Addabbo, Lorenza Vitale, Federica Facchin, Luca Lenzi, Raffaella Casadei, Paolo Carinci, Maria Zannotti, Flavia Frabetti.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Formal description of a cell's genetic information should provide the number of DNA molecules in that cell and their complete nucleotide sequences. We pose the formal problem: can the genome sequence forming the genotype of a given living cell be known with absolute certainty so that the cell's behaviour (phenotype) can be correlated to that genetic information? To answer this question, we propose a series of thought experiments.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16197549 PMCID: PMC1262781 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4682-2-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Biol Med Model ISSN: 1742-4682 Impact factor: 2.432
Figure 1Formal representation of total cellular genetic information. Each matrix column should contain the sequence of each distinct DNA molecule strand in the cell (e.g. human sequence data), because mutations first arise only in one strand, and telomeres normally have a protruding single-strand of variable length.
Figure 2Determination of total genetic information of a cell genome: nearest relative analysis; in this case, even sequence identity among multiple cells from a common ancestor "C" (e.g. C2.1 and C2.3) is not formal proof of sequence identity with the other extant cells (e.g. C2.2 and C2.4). For simplicity, only the sequence of one strand is shown.