linkedin post 2016-02-11 08:37:51

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NICHE EXPLOITIVE GENES are susceptible to lateral gene transfer. "We do find extensive evidence for the preferential transfer of metabolic genes: acquisition of such genes would allow organisms to gain access to new energy and nutrient sources, thereby increasing their ability to colonize or compete in the environment." https://lnkd.in/e5eZ_2E View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-02-11 08:32:59

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SOME GENES ARE SUSCEPTIBLE to lateral gene transfer, others less so: "informational genes including 16S rDNA are particularly resistant to LGT, and cell wall and cell division proteins tend to be inherited vertically. Integral components of the ribosome show a strong tendency toward vertical descent...aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, which interact at a single common site on the exterior of the ribosome, frequently show evidence of LGT." https://lnkd.in/e5eZ_2E View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-02-11 08:28:27

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HORIZONTAL GENE TRANSFER by mobile genetic elements: how frequent is it in prokaryotes? One large study grappled with the question. "From 422,971 proteins in 144 genomes we generated and aligned 22,432 orthologous sets (families) of size 4 or greater, covering 220,240 proteins (52.1%) in total to answer the question of the frequency of horizontal (HGT) or lateral gene transfer (LGT)." https://lnkd.in/e5eZ_2E View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-02-08 05:35:24

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VERTICAL SIGNAL STRENGTH. It is thought that "HGT is frequent at all biologically relevant levels and time-scales. Given the number of individual organisms inhabiting our planet and the time elapsed since cellular life became established on Earth, a high frequency of HGT would certainly lead to erasing most, if not all, signs of vertical inheritance...But, by enlarge, HGT has not completely blurred the phylogenetic signal resulting from vertical transmission of genetic material." https://lnkd.in/eXE-r93 View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-02-10 08:10:36

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COMMON GENE SHUFFLING. "Bdelloid rotifers – tiny translucent animals that look something like sea slugs – have constructed a whopping eight per cent of their genome using genes from bacteria, fungi and plants. Fish living in icy seawater have traded genes coding for antifreeze proteins. Gargantuan-blossomed rafflesia have exchanged genes with the plants they parasitise." https://aeon.co/essays/genes-that-jump-species-does-this-shake-the-tree-of-life View in LinkedIn
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