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Evolution of bacterial genomes.
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 1997This review examines evolution of bacterial genomes with an emphasis on RNA based life, the transition to functional DNA and small evolving genomes (possible plasmids) that led to larger, functional bacterial genomes.
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Encyclopedias of Bacterial Genomes
1998Summarizing recent studies of bacterial chromosomes, participants in the First International Symposium on Small Genomes in Paris in 1993 declared the birth of a new discipline, bacterial genomics. The subject of genomics can be defined as the study of integral genome structures, integral genome properties and the evolution of genomes.
Michael Fonstein, Robert Haselkorn
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2014
The model of a static bacterial chromosome arose from early comparisons of the genetic maps of Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. Analyses of complete genome sequences by several methods revealed that the differences in gene content were the result of two complementary processes: the gain of new genes by horizontal gene transfer from ...
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The model of a static bacterial chromosome arose from early comparisons of the genetic maps of Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. Analyses of complete genome sequences by several methods revealed that the differences in gene content were the result of two complementary processes: the gain of new genes by horizontal gene transfer from ...
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Bacterial Genomes for the Masses
2004Bacterial genome sequencing has revolutionized the research landscape and promises to deliver important changes to the clinical microbiology laboratory, through the identification of novel diagnostic targets and through the birth of a new discipline or "genomic epidemiology." Current progress and future prospects for exploitation of genome sequences in
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