Review

Nature Reviews Genetics 8, 413-423 (June 2007) | doi:10.1038/nrg2083

Genome-wide transcription and the implications for genomic organization

Philipp Kapranov1, Aarron T. Willingham1 & Thomas R. Gingeras1  About the authors

Top

Recent evidence of genome-wide transcription in several species indicates that the amount of transcription that occurs cannot be entirely accounted for by current sets of genome-wide annotations. Evidence indicates that most of both strands of the human genome might be transcribed, implying extensive overlap of transcriptional units and regulatory elements. These observations suggest that genomic architecture is not colinear, but is instead interleaved and modular, and that the same genomic sequences are multifunctional: that is, used for multiple independently regulated transcripts and as regulatory regions. What are the implications and consequences of such an interleaved genomic architecture in terms of increased information content, transcriptional complexity, evolution and disease states?

Author affiliations

  1. Affymetrix, Inc., 3420 Central Expressway, Santa Clara, California 95051, USA.

Correspondence to: Thomas R. Gingeras1 Email: tom_gingeras@affymetrix.com

MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS

These links to content published by NPG are automatically generated.

NEWS AND VIEWS

The multitasking genome

Nature Genetics News and Views (01 Jun 2006)

Tiling DNA microarrays for fly genome cartography

Nature Genetics News and Views (01 Oct 2006)

See all 5 matches for News And Views

Extra navigation

Subscribe

Subscribe to Nature Reviews Genetics

Search PubMed for

naturejobs

natureproducts


Advertisement