Intraspecies variation in bacterial genomes: the need for a species genome concept
R. Lan, and P. Reeves. Trends in Microbiology, 8 (9):
396--401(September 2000)PMID: 10989306.
Abstract
Bacterial populations are clonal. Their evolution involves not only divergence between orthologous genes but also gain of genes from other clones or species, which has only recently been widely appreciated through macrorestriction mapping, genomic subtraction and complete genome sequencing. Genes can also be lost in response to selection or by random mutation after becoming redundant. The bacterial genome is a dynamic structure and intraspecies variation needs to be included in genome analysis if we are to gain insight into the full species genome.
%0 Journal Article
%1 lan_intraspecies_2000
%A Lan, R
%A Reeves, P R
%D 2000
%J Trends in Microbiology
%K Bacteria, Bacterial, Enterobacteriaceae, Evolution, Genetic Genome, Helicobacter Neisseria Species Specificity Variation, meningitidis, pylori,
%N 9
%P 396--401
%T Intraspecies variation in bacterial genomes: the need for a species genome concept
%U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10989306
%V 8
%X Bacterial populations are clonal. Their evolution involves not only divergence between orthologous genes but also gain of genes from other clones or species, which has only recently been widely appreciated through macrorestriction mapping, genomic subtraction and complete genome sequencing. Genes can also be lost in response to selection or by random mutation after becoming redundant. The bacterial genome is a dynamic structure and intraspecies variation needs to be included in genome analysis if we are to gain insight into the full species genome.
@article{lan_intraspecies_2000,
abstract = {Bacterial populations are clonal. Their evolution involves not only divergence between orthologous genes but also gain of genes from other clones or species, which has only recently been widely appreciated through macrorestriction mapping, genomic subtraction and complete genome sequencing. Genes can also be lost in response to selection or by random mutation after becoming redundant. The bacterial genome is a dynamic structure and intraspecies variation needs to be included in genome analysis if we are to gain insight into the full species genome.},
added-at = {2011-03-11T10:05:34.000+0100},
author = {Lan, R and Reeves, P R},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2b60bad793eab4540e4218a467e262b18/jelias},
interhash = {93294163046286f04b694378ec52d51f},
intrahash = {b60bad793eab4540e4218a467e262b18},
issn = {{0966-842X}},
journal = {Trends in Microbiology},
keywords = {Bacteria, Bacterial, Enterobacteriaceae, Evolution, Genetic Genome, Helicobacter Neisseria Species Specificity Variation, meningitidis, pylori,},
month = sep,
note = {{PMID:} 10989306},
number = 9,
pages = {396--401},
shorttitle = {Intraspecies variation in bacterial genomes},
timestamp = {2011-03-11T10:05:46.000+0100},
title = {Intraspecies variation in bacterial genomes: the need for a species genome concept},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10989306},
volume = 8,
year = 2000
}