Prokaryotic and Mitochondrial Linear Genomes: Their Genesis, Evolutionary Significance, and the Problem of Replicating Chromosome Ends


Цитировать

Полный текст

Открытый доступ Открытый доступ
Доступ закрыт Доступ предоставлен
Доступ закрыт Только для подписчиков

Аннотация

Bacterial chromosomes are widely thought of as circular DNA molecules. However, linear bacterial chromosomes, as well as linear mitochondrial and plastid chromosomes, are fairly common. The most frequent causes of linearization are reparation system defects, incorporation of plasmids in the genome, and recombination compromising the circular topology of chromosomes. Genomes of some bacterial species had undergone frequent linearization–circularization events, which resulted in an increased variability of gene content at linear chromosome ends. Similarly to eukaryotes, bacteria that have linear genomes face the problem of end replication, which different species solve in a variety of ways. A theoretically important issue is the adaptive value of chromosome linearization. This review discusses theories concerning the evolution of linear genomes and supporting experiments. The most common mechanisms of linear bacterial genomes replication and possible ways of their emergence are also considered.

Об авторах

M. Moldovan

Kharkevich Institute for Information Transmission Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences; Department of Bioengineering and Bioinformatics, Moscow State University; Skolkovo Institute for Science and Technology

Автор, ответственный за переписку.
Email: mika.moldovan@gmail.com
Россия, Moscow, 127051; Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 121205

Дополнительные файлы

Доп. файлы
Действие
1. JATS XML

© Pleiades Publishing, Inc., 2019

Согласие на обработку персональных данных

 

Используя сайт https://journals.rcsi.science, я (далее – «Пользователь» или «Субъект персональных данных») даю согласие на обработку персональных данных на этом сайте (текст Согласия) и на обработку персональных данных с помощью сервиса «Яндекс.Метрика» (текст Согласия).