Résultat de la recherche
1 recherche sur le mot-clé 'Eucaryotic cells'
Ajouter le résultat dans votre panier Affiner la recherche Générer le flux rss de la recherche
Partager le résultat de cette recherche Interroger des sources externes
The origins of genome architecture / Lynch, M. (2007)
Titre : The origins of genome architecture Type de document : livre Auteurs : Lynch, M. Editeur : Sunderland, Massachusetts : Sinauer Associates Année de publication : 2007 Importance : 494 p. ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-0-87893-484-3 Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Eucaryotic cells Genes Genomes Résumé : With official genomic blueprints now available for hundreds of species, and thousands more expected in the near future, the field of biology has been forever transformed. Such readily accessible data have encouraged the proliferation of adaptive arguments for the evolution of gene and genomic features, often with little or no attention being given to simpler and more powerful alternative explanations. By integrating the central observations from molecular biology and population genetics relevant to comparative genomics, Lynch shows why the details matter. Presented in a nontechnical fashion, at both the population-genetic and molecular-genetic levels, this book offers a unifying explanatory framework for how the peculiar architectural diversity of eukaryotic genomes and genes came to arise. Under Lynch's hypothesis, the genome-wide repatterning of eukaryotic gene structure, which resulted primarily from nonadaptive processes, provided an entirely novel resource from which natural selection could secondarily build new forms of organismal complexity. The origins of genome architecture [livre] / Lynch, M. . - Sunderland, Massachusetts : Sinauer Associates, 2007 . - 494 p.
ISBN : 978-0-87893-484-3
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Mots-clés : Eucaryotic cells Genes Genomes Résumé : With official genomic blueprints now available for hundreds of species, and thousands more expected in the near future, the field of biology has been forever transformed. Such readily accessible data have encouraged the proliferation of adaptive arguments for the evolution of gene and genomic features, often with little or no attention being given to simpler and more powerful alternative explanations. By integrating the central observations from molecular biology and population genetics relevant to comparative genomics, Lynch shows why the details matter. Presented in a nontechnical fashion, at both the population-genetic and molecular-genetic levels, this book offers a unifying explanatory framework for how the peculiar architectural diversity of eukaryotic genomes and genes came to arise. Under Lynch's hypothesis, the genome-wide repatterning of eukaryotic gene structure, which resulted primarily from nonadaptive processes, provided an entirely novel resource from which natural selection could secondarily build new forms of organismal complexity. Exemplaires (2)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 68190 LYN_09_68190 Livre Salle des ouvrages 09_Génétique_Evolution Disponible 68461 LYN_09_68461 Livre Salle des ouvrages 09_Génétique_Evolution Sorti jusqu'au 25/05/2043