Comparative Genomics and Understanding of Microbial Biology
Author(s) -
Claire M. Fraser,
Jonathan A. Eisen,
Robert Fleischmann,
Karen A. Ketchum,
Scott N. Peterson
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
emerging infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.54
H-Index - 226
eISSN - 1080-6059
pISSN - 1080-6040
DOI - 10.3201/eid0605.000510
Subject(s) - genome , biology , comparative genomics , genomics , computational biology , organism , bacterial genome size , evolutionary biology , genetics , gene
The sequences of close to 30 microbial genomes have been completed during the past 5 years, and the sequences of more than 100 genomes should be completed in the next 2 to 4 years. Soon, completed microbial genome sequences will represent a collection of >200,000 predicted coding sequences. While analysis of a single genome provides tremendous biological insights on any given organism, comparative analysis of multiple genomes provides substantially more information on the physiology and evolution of microbial species and expands our ability to better assign putative function to predicted coding sequences.
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