Endosymbiotic theory/Bibliography
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- Please sort and annotate in a user-friendly manner. For formatting, consider using automated reference wikification.
- Bruce Alberts, Alexander Johnson, Julian Lewis, Martin Raff, Keith Roberts and Peter Walter, Molecular Biology of the Cell, Garland Science, New York, 2002. ISBN 0-8153-3218-1. (General textbook)
- Golding GB, Gupta RS. (1995) Protein-based phylogenies support a chimeric origin for the eukaryotic genome. [Mol Biol Evol. 12:1-6].
- Jeffrey L. Blanchard and Michael Lynch (2000), "Organellar genes: why do they end up in the nucleus?", Trends in Genetics, 16 (7), pp. 315-320.
- Discusses theories on how mitochondria and chloroplast genes are transferred into the nucleus, and also what steps a gene needs to go through in order to complete this process.) [1]
- Jarvis, Paul (2001). "Intracellular signalling: The chloroplast talks!". Current Biology 11 (8): R307-R310. PMID 11369220.
- Recounts evidence that chloroplast-encoded proteins affect transcription of nuclear genes, as opposed to the more well-documented cases of nuclear-encoded proteins that affect mitochondria or chloroplasts.
- Brinkman, Fiona S.L.; Jeffrey L. Blanchard, Artem Cherkasov, Yossef Av-Gay, Robert C. Brunham, Rachel C. Fernandez, B. Brett Finlay, Sarah P. Otto, B.F. Francis Ouellette, Patrick J. Keeling, Ann M. Rose, Robert E.W. Hancock, and Steven J.M. Jones (2002). "Evidence That Plant-Like Genes in Chlamydia Species Reflect an Ancestral Relationship between Chlamydiaceae, Cyanobacteria, and the Chloroplast". Genome Res. 12: 1159 - 1167.