High-level organization of isochores into gigantic superstructures in the human genome
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Carpena, Pedro; Oliver Jiménez, José Lutgardo; Hackenberg, Michael; Coronado, Ana V.; Barturen Briñas, Guillermo; Bernaola-Galván, PedroEditorial
American Physical Society
Fecha
2011-03-15Referencia bibliográfica
Carpena, P., Carpena, P., Oliver, J.L., Hackenberg, M., Coronado, A.V., Coronado, A.V., Barturen, G., & Bernaola-Galván, P.A. (2011). High-level organization of isochores into gigantic superstructures in the human genome. Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics, 83 3 Pt 1, 031908. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.83.031908
Patrocinador
Spanish Government (BIO2008-01353, PR2009-0285, JC2009-00067, Juan de la Cierva Grant); Spanish Junta de Andalucía (P07-FQM3163, P06-FQM1858); Basque Country; Universidad de Málaga; Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Universidad de GranadaResumen
Human DNA shows a complex structure with compositional features at many scales; the isochores—long DNA segments (~105 bp) of relatively homogeneous guanine-cytosine (G + C) content—are the largest well-documented and well-analyzed compositional structures. However, we report here on the existence of a high-level compositional organization of isochores in the human genome. By using a segmentation algorithm incorporating the long-range correlations existing in human DNA, we find that every chromosome is composed of a few huge segments (~ 107 bp) of relatively homogeneous G + C content, which become the largest compositional organization of the genome. Finally, we show evidence of the biological relevance of these superstructures, pointing to a large-scale functional organization of the human genome.





