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* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
What you need to know: • The major goals of the Human Genome Project • How prokaryotic genomes compare to eukaryotic genomes. • The activity and role of transposable elements and retrotransposons. • How evo-devo relates to our understanding of the evolution of genomes. • The role of homeotic genes and homeoboxes. Human Genome Project  Purpose: to sequence the entire human genome  Completed in 2003  >1,200 genomes sequenced now (1000 bacteria, 80 archaea, & 124 eukaryotic species) Human Genome Project Human DNA • 3 billion base pairs • ~20,000 genes • Only 1.5% codes for proteins (or RNA) • Repetitive DNA: sequences present in multiple copies Transposable Elements  Make up 75% of repetitive DNA  Can be moved from one location to another in genome  Discovered by Barbara McClintock – corn breeding experiments  2 Types:  Transposons  Retrotransposons Transposons  Moves within genome via DNA intermediate  “cut & paste” or “copy & paste” mechanisms  Requires enzyme transposase Retrotransposons  Move by means of RNA intermediate  Leaves copy at original site  Involves enzyme reverse transcriptase Genome Evolution  Duplication  genes with related functions  Genes diverge by accumulating mutations  Some become nonfunctional pseudogenes  Eventually, new genes with new functions can occur Multigene Families  Collections of 2 or more identical or very similar genes  Eg. hemoglobin: -globin and -globin gene families Illustrative Example: Antifreeze Gene in Fish  Antifreeze proteins (AFP): produced by vertebrates, plants, fungi, bacteria to aid survival in sub-zero environments  Function: bind to ice crystals and prevent growth  Antarctic fish: old protein gene transformed into a new gene with new structure/function  Gene mutates  duplicated  divergent evolution Transpositions  chromosomal rearrangements Transposable elements contribute to evolution  Promote recombination, disrupt genes or control elements, & carry genes to new locations  May be harmful or lethal, but can also have small beneficial effects  Provides raw material for natural selection Evolutionary Development (Evo-devo) • Compares developmental processes to understand how changes can lead to evolution of organisms Homeotic genes: master regulatory genes • Control placement and spatial organization of body parts Homeobox: widely conserved 180nucleotide sequence within homeotic (Hox) genes • Found in many groups (fungi, animals, plants) • Hints at relatedness between all life forms Conservation of homeotic genes