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Analysis of the genome sequence of the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana.

Arabidopsis Genome Initiative
- 14 Dec 2000 - 
- Vol. 408, Iss: 6814, pp 796-815
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TLDR
This is the first complete genome sequence of a plant and provides the foundations for more comprehensive comparison of conserved processes in all eukaryotes, identifying a wide range of plant-specific gene functions and establishing rapid systematic ways to identify genes for crop improvement.
Abstract
The flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana is an important model system for identifying genes and determining their functions. Here we report the analysis of the genomic sequence of Arabidopsis. The sequenced regions cover 115.4 megabases of the 125-megabase genome and extend into centromeric regions. The evolution of Arabidopsis involved a whole-genome duplication, followed by subsequent gene loss and extensive local gene duplications, giving rise to a dynamic genome enriched by lateral gene transfer from a cyanobacterial-like ancestor of the plastid. The genome contains 25,498 genes encoding proteins from 11,000 families, similar to the functional diversity of Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans--the other sequenced multicellular eukaryotes. Arabidopsis has many families of new proteins but also lacks several common protein families, indicating that the sets of common proteins have undergone differential expansion and contraction in the three multicellular eukaryotes. This is the first complete genome sequence of a plant and provides the foundations for more comprehensive comparison of conserved processes in all eukaryotes, identifying a wide range of plant-specific gene functions and establishing rapid systematic ways to identify genes for crop improvement.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The sequence of the human genome.

J. Craig Venter, +272 more
- 16 Feb 2001 - 
TL;DR: Comparative genomic analysis indicates vertebrate expansions of genes associated with neuronal function, with tissue-specific developmental regulation, and with the hemostasis and immune systems are indicated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Initial sequencing and comparative analysis of the mouse genome.

Robert H. Waterston, +222 more
- 05 Dec 2002 - 
TL;DR: The results of an international collaboration to produce a high-quality draft sequence of the mouse genome are reported and an initial comparative analysis of the Mouse and human genomes is presented, describing some of the insights that can be gleaned from the two sequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

PlantCARE, a database of plant cis-acting regulatory elements and a portal to tools for in silico analysis of promoter sequences

TL;DR: New features have been implemented to search for plant cis-acting regulatory elements in a query sequence and links are now provided to a new clustering and motif search method to investigate clusters of co-expressed genes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A phylogenomic study of DNA repair genes, proteins, and processes

TL;DR: A new form of analysis that combines genome sequence information and phylogenetic studies into a composite analysis the authors refer to as phylogenomics is used to study the evolution of repair proteins and processes and to predict the repair phenotypes of those species for which they now know the complete genome sequence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Naturally occurring variation in Arabidopsis: an underexploited resource for plant genetics.

TL;DR: The current tools available for the forward genetic analysis of naturally occurring variation in Arabidopsis, and the recent progress in the detection and mapping of loci and the cloning of large-effect genes are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

A genomic perspective on plant transcription factors

TL;DR: The availability of the full complement of Arabidopsis transcription factors, together with the results of recent studies that illustrate some of the challenges to their functional characterization, now provides the basic framework for future analyses of transcriptional regulation in plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic definition and sequence analysis of Arabidopsis centromeres.

TL;DR: High-precision genetic mapping was used to define the regions that contain centromere functions on each natural chromosome in Arabidopsis thaliana, and the DNA within the centromeres was not merely structural but also encoded several expressed genes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Divergence time estimates for the early history of animal phyla and the origin of plants, animals and fungi

TL;DR: By inference, the basal animal phyla (Porifera, Cnidaria, Ctenophora) diverged between about 1200 – 1500 Ma, which suggests that at least sixAnimal phyla originated deep in the Precambrian, more than 400 million years earlier than their first appearance in the fossil record.
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