February 12, 2001
|
iologists
have been estimating the size of genomes for decades. In 1971, for example,
researchers reported that a species of Italian bat, Miniopterus,
has a genome half the size of the human genome. Similarly, the genome
of Muntiacus, a species of Asian barking deer, was estimated at
about 70 percent of that of humans. As reported this week, the human genome
contains about 3 billion chemical units of DNA, or base pairs.
In the animal kingdom, the relationship between genome size and evolutionary
status is not clear. One of the largest genomes belongs to a very small
creature, Amoeba dubia. This protozoan genome has 670 billion units of
DNA, or base pairs. The genome of a cousin, Amoeba proteus, has a mere
290 billion base pairs, making it 100 times larger than the human genome.
A Sample of Species and Genome Size (in base pairs)
Amoeba dubia
670,000,000,000 |
|
Amoeba proteus
290,000,000,000 |
|
Bufo bufo
6,900,000,000 |
|
Homo sapiens
2,900,000,000 |
|
Muntiacus muntjak vaginalis
2,521,500,000 |
|
Boa constrictor
2,100,000,000 |
|
Rhinolophus ferrumequinum
1,929,400,000 |
|
Plasmodium falciparum
25,000,000 |
|
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1
19,750 |
|
Source: Database
of Genome Sizes (Center for Biological Sequence Analysis)
|
Among the organisms whose genomes are sequenced, genome size does not
correlate with the number of genes.
| Species |
Size of genome |
Number of genes |
Human
 |
2.9 billion base pairs |
30,000 |
Fruit fly (Drosophila melanogaster)
 |
120 million base pairs |
13,601 |
Baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae)
 |
12 million base pairs |
6, 275 |
Worm (Caenorhabditis elegans)
 |
97 million base pairs |
19,000 |
E. coli
 |
4.1 million base pairs |
4,800 |
Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana)
 |
125 million base pairs |
25,000 |
|
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of Genomics (TCAG).
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