Bioinformaticians Discover Genes in Bacterial Genomes are Arranged in a Meaningful Order (www.hhu.de)
from shreddy_scientist@lemmy.ml to science@mander.xyz on 14 Apr 04:01
https://lemmy.ml/post/28575762

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CandleTiger@programming.dev on 14 Apr 04:53 collapse

This was very cool to learn

shreddy_scientist@lemmy.ml on 14 Apr 07:12 collapse

Right! I’ve also always been blown away knowing their DNA is circular. Probably since they don’t have a nucleus, but not totally sure.

lemming@sh.itjust.works on 14 Apr 11:23 collapse

It’s not so much about nuclear envelope and more about ends. DNA polymerase (an enzyme that builds new DNA) cannot copy the whole end - there are a few bases that should be at the end but cannot be added. Eukaryota deal with it by a complex mechanism (they have telomeres), but it allows for multiple chromosomes and therefore larger genomes. Bacteria have a circular genome instead, a circle doesn’t have an end, so they can copy as much as they need.

BTW, mitochondria and plastids, being former bacteria, also have circular genomes.