Genome

entirety of an organism's hereditary information; genome of organism (encoded by the genomic DNA) is the (biological) information of heredity which is passed from one generation of organism to the next; is transcribed to produce various RNAs

The genome of an organism is the whole of its hereditary information encoded in its DNA (or, for some viruses, RNA). This includes both the genes and the non-coding sequences of the DNA.Professor Hans Winkler coined the term in 1920.[1]

Winkler's definition, in translation, runs:

"I propose the expression genome for the haploid chromosome set, which, together with the pertinent protoplasm, specifies the material foundations of the species ...." [2]p165

However, no single haploid chromosome set defines even the DNA of a species. Because of the huge variety of alleles carried by a population, every individual is genetically different. Even a diploid individual carries genetic variety. For that reason Dobzhansky preferred "set of chromosomes",[3] and the definition now must be broader than Winklers' definition. The genome of a haploid chromosome set is merely a sample of the total genetic variety of a species.

The term 'genome' can be applied specifically to mean the complete set of nuclear DNA (the 'nuclear genome') but can also be used of organelles that contain their own DNA, as with the mitochondrial genome or the chloroplast genome.

Genome sizes

OrganismGenome size (base pairs)Note
Virus, Bacteriophage MS23569First sequenced RNA-genome[4]
Virus, SV405224[5]
Virus, Phage Φ-X1745386First sequenced DNA-genome[6]
Virus, Phage λ5×104
Bacterium, Candidatus Carsonella ruddii1.6×105Smallest non-viral genome, Feb 2007
Bacterium, Escherichia coli4×106Best-researched bacterium.[7]
Bacterium, Solibactoer usitatus1×107Largest known bacterial genome
Protist, Amoeba dubia6.7×1011Largest known genome, but disputed.[8]
Plant, Arabidopsis thaliana1.57×108First plant genome sequenced, Dec 2000.[9]
Plant, Genlisea margaretae6.34×107Smallest recorded flowering plant genome, 2006.[9]
Plant, Fritillaria assyrica1.3×1011
Plant, Populus trichocarpa4.8×108First tree genome, Sept 2006
Yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae2×107
Fungus, Aspergillus nidulans3×107
Nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans9.8×107First multicellular animal genome, December 1998.[10]
Insect, Drosophila melanogaster aka fruit fly1.3×108
Insect, Bombyx mori aka silk moth5.30×108
Insect, Apis mellifera aka honey bee1.77×109
Fish, Tetraodon nigroviridis, type of Puffer fish3.85×108Smallest vertebrate genome known
Mammal, Homo sapiens3×109
Fish, Protopterus aethiopicus aka marbled lungfish1.3×1011Largest vertebrate genome known

Note: The DNA from a single human cell has a length of ~1.8 m (but at a width of ~2.4 nanometers).

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References

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