@article{Adams:2000:full,
title = {{The genome sequence of drosophila melanogaster}},
author = {Mark D. Adams and Susan E. Celniker and Robert A. Holt and Cheryl A. Evans and Jeannine D. Gocayne and Peter G. Amanatides and Steven E. Scherer and Peter W. Li and Roger A. Hoskins and Richard F. Galle and Reed A. George and Suzanna E. Lewis and Stephen Richards and Michael Ashburner and Scott N. Henderson and Granger G. Sutton and Jennifer R. Wortman and Mark D. Yandell and Qing Zhang and Lin X. Chen and Rhonda C. Brandon and Yu-Hui C. Rogers and Robert G. Blazej and Mark Champe and Barret D. Pfeiffer and Kenneth H. Wan and Clare Doyle and Evan G. Baxter and Gregg Helt and Catherine R. Nelson and George L. Gabor Miklos and Josep F. Abril and Anna Agbayani and Hui-Jin An and Cynthia Andrews-Pfannkoch and Danita Baldwin and Richard M. Ballew and Anand Basu and James Baxendale and Leyla Bayraktaroglu and Ellen M. Beasley and Karen Y. Beeson and P. V. Benos and Benjamin P. Berman and Deepali Bhandari and Slava Bolshakov and Dana Borkova and Michael R. Botchan and John Bouck and Peter Brokstein and Phillipe Brottier and Kenneth C. Burtis and Dana A. Busam and Heather Butler and Edouard Cadieu and Angela Center and Ishwar Chandra and J. Michael Cherry and Simon Cawley and Carl Dahlke and Lionel B. Davenport and Peter Davies and Beatriz de Pablos and Arthur Delcher and Zuoming Deng and Anne Deslattes Mays and Ian Dew and Suzanne M. Dietz and Kristina Dodson and Lisa E. Doup and Michael Downes and Shannon Dugan-Rocha and Boris C. Dunkov and Patrick Dunn and Kenneth J. Durbin and Carlos C. Evangelista and Concepcion Ferraz and Steven Ferriera and Wolfgang Fleischmann and Carl Fosler and Andrei E. Gabrielian and Neha S. Garg and William M. Gelbart and Ken Glasser and Anna Glodek and Fangcheng Gong and J. Harley Gorrell and Zhiping Gu and Ping Guan and Michael Harris and Nomi L. Harris and Damon Harvey and Thomas J. Heiman and Judith R. Hernandez and Jarrett Houck and Damon Hostin and Kathryn A. Houston and Timothy J. Howland and Ming-Hui Wei and Chinyere Ibegwam and Mena Jalali and Francis Kalush and Gary H. Karpen and Zhaoxi Ke and James A. Kennison and Karen A. Ketchum and Bruce E. Kimmel and Chinnappa D. Kodira and Cheryl Kraft and Saul Kravitz and David Kulp and Zhongwu Lai and Paul Lasko and Yiding Lei and Alexander A. Levitsky and Jiayin Li and Zhenya Li and Yong Liang and Xiaoying Lin and Xiangjun Liu and Bettina Mattei and Tina C. McIntosh and Michael P. McLeod and Duncan McPherson and Gennady Merkulov and Natalia V. Milshina and Clark Mobarry and Joe Morris and Ali Moshrefi and Stephen M. Mount and Mee Moy and Brian Murphy and Lee Murphy and Donna M. Muzny and David L. Nelson and David R. Nelson and Keith A. Nelson and Katherine Nixon and Deborah R. Nusskern and Joanne M. Pacleb and Michael Palazzolo and Gjange S. Pittman and Sue Pan and John Pollard and Vinita Puri and Martin G. Reese and Knut Reinert and Karin Remington and Robert D. C. Saunders and Frederick Scheeler and Hua Shen and Bixiang Christopher Shue and Inga Siden"=Kiamos and Michael Simpson and Marian P. Skupski and Tom Smith and Eugene Spier and Allan C. Spradling and Mark Stapleton and Renee Strong and Eric Sun and Robert Svirskas and Cyndee Tector and Russell Turner and Eli Venter and Aihui H. Wang and Xin Wang and Zhen-Yuan Wang and David A. Wassarman and George M. Weinstock and Jean Weissenbach and Sherita M. Williams and Trevor Woodage and Kim C. Worley and David Wu and Song Yang and Q. Alison Yao and Jane Ye and Ru-Fang Yeh and Jayshree S. Zaveri and Ming Zhan and Guangren Zhang and Qi Zhao and Liansheng Zheng and Xiangqun H. Zheng and Fei N. Zhong and Wenyan Zhong and Xiaojun Zhou and Shiaoping Zhu and Xiaohong Zhu and Hamilton O. Smith and Richard A. Gibbs and Eugene W. Myers and Gerald M. Rubin and J. Craig Venter},
journal = {Science},
number = {5461},
pages = {2185--2195},
url = {http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/sci;287/5461/2185},
volume = {287},
year = {2000},
abstract = {The fly Drosophila melanogaster is one of the most intensively studied
organisms in biology and serves as a model system for the investigation
of many developmental and cellular processes common to higher eukaryotes,
including humans. We have determined the nucleotide sequence of nearly
all of the ~120-megabase euchromatic portion of the Drosophila genome
using a whole-genome shotgun sequencing strategy supported by extensive
clone-based sequence and a high-quality bacterial artificial chromosome
physical map. Efforts are under way to close the remaining gaps;
however, the sequence is of sufficient accuracy and contiguity to
be declared substantially complete and to support an initial analysis
of genome structure and preliminary gene annotation and interpretation.
The genome encodes ~13,600 genes, somewhat fewer than the smaller
Caenorhabditis elegans genome, but with comparable functional diversity.},
owner = {tkirsten},
keywords = {imported }
}