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What is genome size?

324 bytes removed, 16:25, 16 January 2011
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<p><b>Genome size</b> is the total amount of DNA contained within one copy of a genome. It is typically measured in terms of mass in picograms (trillionths (10<sup><font size="2">&minus;12</font></sup>) of a gram, abbreviated pg) or less frequently in Daltons or as the total number of nucleotide base pairs typically in megabases (millions of base pairs, abbreviated Mb or Mbp). </p><p>One picogram equals 978 megabases.<sup id="cite_ref-Dolezel2003_0-0" class="reference"><font size="2">[1]</font></sup> In diploid organisms, genome size is used interchangeably with the term [[C-value]]. An organism's complexity is not directly proportional to its genome size; some single cell organisms have much more DNA than humans (see Junk DNA and C-value enigma).</p>
<h2><span id="Origin_of_the_term" class="mw-headline">Origin of the term</span></h2>
<p>The term &quot;genome size&quot; is often erroneously attributed to Hinegardner<sup id="cite_ref-Hinegardner1976_1-0" class="reference"><font size="2">[2]</font></sup>, even in discussions dealing specifically with terminology in this area of research (e.g., Greilhuber, 2005<sup id="cite_ref-Greilhuber2005_2-0" class="reference"><font size="2">[3]</font></sup>). Notably, Hinegardner<sup id="cite_ref-Hinegardner1976_1-1" class="reference"><font size="2">[2]</font></sup> used the term only once: in the title. The term actually seems to have first appeared in 1968 when Hinegardner wondered, in the last paragraph of his article, whether &quot;cellular DNA content does, in fact, reflect genome size&quot;.<sup id="cite_ref-Hinegardner1968_3-0" class="reference"><font size="2">[4]</font></sup> In this context, &quot;genome size&quot; was being used in the sense of genotype to mean the number of genes. In a paper submitted only two months later (in February 1969), Wolf et al. (1969)<sup id="cite_ref-Wolf1969_4-0" class="reference"><font size="2">[5]</font></sup> used the term &quot;genome size&quot; throughout and in its present usage; therefore these authors should probably be credited with originating the term in its modern sense. By the early 1970s, &quot;genome size&quot; was in common usage with its present definition, probably as a result of its inclusion in Susumu Ohno's influential book <i>Evolution by Gene Duplication</i>, published in 1970.<sup id="cite_ref-Ohno1970_5-0" class="reference"><font size="2">[6]</font></sup></p>
<h2><span id="Variation_in_genome_size_and_gene_content" class="mw-headline">Variation in genome size and gene content</span></h2>
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<div style="width: 252px" class="thumbinner"><img class="thumbimage" alt="" width="250" height="177" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/8/80/Genome_Sizes.png/250px-Genome_Sizes.png" />
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<div class="magnify"><img alt="" width="15" height="11" src="http://bits.wikimedia.org/skins-1.5/common/images/magnify-clip.png" />&nbsp;</div>[[File:Genome Sizes.png|thumb]]Genome SizesAbizar</div>
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<h2><span id="Conversion_from_picograms_.28pg.29_to_base_pairs_.28bp.29" class="mw-headline">Conversion from picograms (pg) to base pairs (bp)</span></h2>
<div class="rellink relarticle mainarticle">Main article: C-value</div>
<dl><dd><img class="tex" alt="\text{number of base pairs} = \text{mass in pg}\times0.978\times10^9" src="http:/dd></upload.wikimedia.org/math/8/c/9/8c90d61ecd0582de9bbf6cfdf03d9f95.png" /dl></ddp>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[[File:Pico gram to basepair eq.png]]</dlp>
<p>or simply:</p>
<dl><dd><span class="texhtml"><font face="๋ฐ”ํƒ•">1pg = 978Mb</font></span><sup id="cite_ref-Dolezel2003_0-1" class="reference"><font size="2">[1]</font></sup></dd></dl>