Review
Nature Reviews Genetics 5, 169-178 (March 2004) | doi:10.1038/nrg1292
The evolution of genetic regulatory systems in bacteria
Harley H. McAdams1, Balaji Srinivasan1 & Adam P. Arkin2 About the authors
Abstract
The genomes of bacterial species show enormous plasticity in the function of individual genes, in genome organization and in regulatory organization. Over millions of years, both bacterial genes and their genomes have been extensively reorganized and adapted so that bacteria occupy virtually every environmental niche on the earth. In addition, changes have occurred in the regulatory circuitry that controls cell operations, cell-cycle progression and responses to environmental signals. The mechanisms that underlie the adaptation of the bacterial regulatory circuitry are crucial for understanding the bacterial biosphere and have important roles in the emergence of antibiotic resistance.
- View At a Glance
Author affiliations
- Department of Developmental Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, B300 Beckman Center, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
- Physical Bioscience Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories, Department of Bioengineering, University of California at Berkeley, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.
Correspondence to: Harley H. McAdams1 Email: hmcadams@stanford.edu
MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS
These links to content published by NPG are automatically generated.
RESEARCH
DNA methylation affects the cell cycle transcription of the CtrA global regulator in CaulobacterThe EMBO Journal Article (16 Sep 2002)
