System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenotypes from an organism's genome. In particular, flux balance approaches have been used to estimate the contribution of individual metabolic genes to organismal fitness, offering the opportunity to test whether such contributions carry information about the evolutionary pressure on the corresponding genes. Previous failure to identify the expected negative correlation between such computed gene-loss cost and sequence-derived evolutionary rates in Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been ascribed to a real biological gap between a gene's fitness contribution to an organism "here and now" and the same gene's historical importance as evidenced by its accumulated ...
htmlabstractWhole genome duplications (WGDs) have been hypothesized to be responsible for major tran...
Motivation: We compare phylogenetic approaches for inferring functional gene links. The approaches d...
A fundamental question for evolutionary biology is why different proteins evolve at dramatically dif...
<div><p>System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenoty...
System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenotypes from...
System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenotypes from...
Understanding how genetic modifications, individual or in combination, affect organismal fitness or ...
Relationships between evolutionary rates and gene properties on a genomic, functional, pathway, or s...
Variation in gene expression levels on a genomic scale has been detected among different strains, am...
Why are most genes dispensable? The impact of gene deletions may depend on the environment (plastici...
Loss of gene function is common throughout evolution, even though it often leads to reduced fitness....
Item does not contain fulltextOne of the major aims of the nascent field of evolutionary systems bio...
One of the major aims of the nascent field of evolutionary systems biology is to test evolutionary h...
We combine mathematical modeling of genome evolution with comparative analysis of prokaryotic genome...
Quantitative models are increasingly being used to interrogate the metabolic pathways that are conta...
htmlabstractWhole genome duplications (WGDs) have been hypothesized to be responsible for major tran...
Motivation: We compare phylogenetic approaches for inferring functional gene links. The approaches d...
A fundamental question for evolutionary biology is why different proteins evolve at dramatically dif...
<div><p>System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenoty...
System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenotypes from...
System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenotypes from...
Understanding how genetic modifications, individual or in combination, affect organismal fitness or ...
Relationships between evolutionary rates and gene properties on a genomic, functional, pathway, or s...
Variation in gene expression levels on a genomic scale has been detected among different strains, am...
Why are most genes dispensable? The impact of gene deletions may depend on the environment (plastici...
Loss of gene function is common throughout evolution, even though it often leads to reduced fitness....
Item does not contain fulltextOne of the major aims of the nascent field of evolutionary systems bio...
One of the major aims of the nascent field of evolutionary systems biology is to test evolutionary h...
We combine mathematical modeling of genome evolution with comparative analysis of prokaryotic genome...
Quantitative models are increasingly being used to interrogate the metabolic pathways that are conta...
htmlabstractWhole genome duplications (WGDs) have been hypothesized to be responsible for major tran...
Motivation: We compare phylogenetic approaches for inferring functional gene links. The approaches d...
A fundamental question for evolutionary biology is why different proteins evolve at dramatically dif...