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genome
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genome

Full complement of genes carried by a single (haploid) set of chromosomes. The term may be applied to the genetic information carried by an individual or to the range of genes found in a given species.

The human genome is made up of around 3 billion basepairs, most of which were reported in draft genome sequences obtained in 2003 by the Human Genome Project and by a commercial sequencing initiative. Complete and final sequences for individual chromosomes have been reported since then, but the total number of human genes, now estimated to be close to 30,000, remains uncertain.

The first genomes of cellular organisms to be sequenced in full were those of the bacteria Haemofilus influenzae and Mycoplasma genitalium, in 1995. Methanococcus jannaschii was the first archaeon to be sequenced in full, in 1996, and the baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae the first eukaryote, in 1997. Dozens of other microbial genome sequences followed during the second half of the 1990s.

Landmark genome sequences of higher organisms included fruit fly (2000), mouse (2002), dog (2003), rat (2004), bee (2004), and chimpanzee (2005). The latter has proven a particularly useful reference for the study of human evolution, and as a reference point for the investigation of human population genetics.

Animal species can have drastically different sized genomes even when the species are roughly the same size. In 2000, UK researchers in Scotland noted a correlation between bird genome size and lifespan, finding that birds with larger genomes lived for longer.



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To win the prize, teams taking part must successfully sequence 100 human genomes in 10 days or less at a cost of no more than 10,000 dollars per
can now boast of being the first in the world to succeed in sequencing three oil palm genomes from two oil palm species, E.
Whole-genome sequencing costs have dropped from the more than $100 million cost of the first human genomes to the point where individual labs have generated genome sequences in a matter of months for material costs of as low as $48,000," the company's Radoje Drmanac and colleagues reported in the journal Science.
 
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