Science

The completion of the Arabidopsis thaliana genome sequence allows a comparative analysis of transcriptional regulators across the three eukaryotic kingdoms. Arabidopsis dedicates over 5% of its genome to code for more than 1500 transcription factors, about 45% of which are from families specific to plants. Arabidopsis transcription factors that belong to families common to all eukaryotes do not share significant similarity with those of the other kingdoms beyond the conserved DNA binding domains, many of which have been arranged in combinations specific to each lineage. The genome-wide comparison reveals the evolutionary generation of diversity in the regulation of transcription.

Source:http://purl.uniprot.org/citations/11118137

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The completion of the Arabidopsis thaliana genome sequence allows a comparative analysis of transcriptional regulators across the three eukaryotic kingdoms. Arabidopsis dedicates over 5% of its genome to code for more than 1500 transcription factors, about 45% of which are from families specific to plants. Arabidopsis transcription factors that belong to families common to all eukaryotes do not share significant similarity with those of the other kingdoms beyond the conserved DNA binding domains, many of which have been arranged in combinations specific to each lineage. The genome-wide comparison reveals the evolutionary generation of diversity in the regulation of transcription.
skos:exactMatch
uniprot:name
Science
uniprot:author
Adam L., Broun P., Creelman R., Ghandehari D., Heard J., Jiang C., Keddie J., Martin G., Pilgrim M., Pineda O., Ratcliffe O.J., Reuber L., Riechmann J.L., Samaha R.R., Sherman B.K., Yu G., Zhang J.Z.
uniprot:date
2000
uniprot:pages
2105-2110
uniprot:title
Arabidopsis transcription factors: genome-wide comparative analysis among eukaryotes.
uniprot:volume
290
dc-term:identifier
doi:10.1126/science.290.5499.2105