0

Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease Center
Mitochondrial Research Affinity Collaboration-Laboratories & Engineering

Home > 0

Every living species to be given a `barcode'.(News)

  • 작성자한진
  • 작성일2005-03-01 21:59:22
  • 조회수1933
  • 첨부파일첨부파일
Every living species to be given a `barcode'.(News) The Independent (London, England); 2/10/2005; Connor, Steve Byline: Steve Connor Science Editor AN AMBITIOUS project to take a genetic "barcode" of every animal and plant begins today in an attempt to identify and label the 10 million species on Earth. Biologists said yesterday that the plan to give every species its own barcode - made from a stretch of DNA unique to each life form - will help them to understand the diversity of life. The DNA barcode will represent a segment of a gene that differs from one species to the next but is almost identical to all members of the same species. DNA barcodes look superficially like supermarket barcodes and will work in much the same way in helping field biologists to carry out an audit of life by distinguishing between closely related species. Less than a fifth of the estimated 10 million species of plants and animals have been formally named and classified and many experts fear thousands are at risk of becoming extinct before they are identified. Scientists hope to name the rest of the unknown species by 2010 as part of the international Barcoding of Life project, said Richard Lane, director of science at the Natural History Museum in London. "We don't actually know what [species are] here so we can't possibly know what we are losing," Dr Lane said yesterday. The barcode for animals is based on a stretch of DNA within a key gene found in the tiny "power stations" of the cell called the mitochondria, which contain the only genetic material outside the cell's nucleus. Analysing the sequence of genetic "letters" that makes up this gene gives a sequence of barcode stripes unique to most species. Across humans the sequence is identical in all but two of the 648 letters of the gene, and there are 60 other letters that separate us from our closest living relative, the chimpanzee. The aim eventually is to develop hand-held instruments that field biologists will use to analyse tissue samples taken in the wild in order to compare the resulting barcodes against a huge GenBank database of 19 million DNA records. Robert Hanner of the Coriell Institute of Medical Research in Camden, New Jersey, said that barcoding life will speed up the process of identifying species formally using standard methods of taxonomy. "It will help species identification but also open up information held by many of the world's finest natural history museums, herbaria and institutes," Dr Hanner said. Biologists hope to barcode the 15,000 known species of marine fish and 8,000 species of freshwater fish within the next five years. One practical benefit will be to help tackle commercial fraud when low-value fish are surreptitiously substituted for more valuable species. But DNA barcodes will also help in marine conservation, said Paul Hebert of the University of Guelph in Ontario. "DNA barcoding could enable us to monitor quotas and bycatch and provide a more detailed understanding of fish and their ecological relationships," he said. DNA barcodes of the 10,000 known species of birds will also be collected. Many can be made from feathers or tissue samples taken from museum specimens, said Mark Stoeckle of Rockefeller University in New York. Dr Lane said Barcoding of Life was separate from the Frozen Ark project, launched last year, which set up a tissue bank of stored genetic material from thousands of endangered animals. Their genetic codes will be stored in a frozen database which may allow future clones to be made, raising the possibility of resurrecting extinct species. COPYRIGHT 2005 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Total406 [ page26/28 ]
No. 제목 작성자 작성일 조회수
31 Mitochondria and Diabetes 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 2,064
30 건강하게 오래오래 사세요. 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 2,070
29 향후 10년간의 의약품 R&D 예측: 미토콘드리아......심혈관질환의 치료표적 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 2,415
28 말아톤은.... 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 1,935
27 오래 오래 삽시다. 2005.01.30 한진 2005.01.30 3,393
26 중년기의 심혈관 위험인자들이 치매 위험을 증가시켜...... 2005.01.28 한진 2005.01.28 1,933
25 세포 발견이 질병 인식을 이끌어낸다 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 1,843
24 심장 발작에 대한 9가지 주안점 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 1,781
23 미토콘드리아에서의 문제점들이 대사적 증후군에 중요한 역할을 한다 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 1,974
22 보다 나은 근육들을 만듬 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 2,012
21 다윈의 피리새들 첨부파일 2005.01.27 강성현 2005.01.27 1,924
20 Age well the mitochondria way 2005.01.27 한진 2005.01.27 3,546
19 Mitochondria Make A Comeback, Science (Cover page) 2005.01.27 한진 2005.01.27 3,329
18 The Mitochondrion: Central to Apoptosis (from Science) 2005.01.27 한진 2005.01.27 6,107
17 L-carnitine needed transport fats 2005.01.26 문혜진 2005.01.26 2,661
처음 이전 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 다음마지막