Glossary entry

German term or phrase:

Erbgut

English translation:

genome

Added to glossary by Dr. Johanna Schmitt
Oct 15, 2013 13:39
10 yrs ago
5 viewers *
German term

Erbgut

German to English Science Genetics
"Wissenschaftler des Venter-Instituts haben das Erbgut von Mycoplasma (...) komplett synthesiert."
"Über weniger Erbgut verfügt kein anderer eigenständiger Organismus."

These are examples from a popular science book I am translating which tells the story of Venter and his staff (among other things). I am wondering whether I may use the word DNA as a translation for "Erbgut" in the sentence above? Or is genome the correct term? I am NOT an expert so I apologise for my ignorance.

eg "Scientists at the Venter Institute synthesised the complete genome / OR / the complete DNA of mycoplasma."
"No other independent organism has a simpler DNA."
Change log

Oct 15, 2013 13:45: Steffen Walter changed "Field (specific)" from "Chemistry; Chem Sci/Eng" to "Genetics"

Oct 20, 2013 07:36: Dr. Johanna Schmitt Created KOG entry

Oct 20, 2013 07:37: Dr. Johanna Schmitt changed "Edited KOG entry" from "<a href="/profile/781253">Dr. Johanna Schmitt's</a> old entry - "Erbgut"" to ""genome""

Votes to reclassify question as PRO/non-PRO:

Non-PRO (2): Ramey Rieger (X), Cetacea

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Discussion

philgoddard Oct 15, 2013:
Maybe "it has the least complex genome of any autonomous organism". I'm not sure "simple" is an appropriate word here.
Yorkshireman Oct 15, 2013:
Shorter DNA strands Hi Phil,
How about
Mycoplasms have shorter DNA strands than any other independent organism
Lucy Jones (asker) Oct 15, 2013:
Thank you! I would therefore say: "No independent organism has a simpler genetic structure/makeup than this one."
philgoddard Oct 15, 2013:
They synthesized its genome, but I'm not sure how you'd translate "weniger Erbgut" in your second sentence.

Proposed translations

+6
16 mins
Selected

genome

I think the term "genome" is quite common in this context, example:

"Mycoplasma genitalium has the smallest genome of any organism that can be grown in pure culture."
http://www.pnas.org/content/103/2/425.long

Please also note that your second example sentence,
"Über weniger Erbgut verfügt kein anderer eigenständiger Organismus.", means that this organisms has the smallest, not the simplest genome. Might not be a big difference, but in my opinion it is not quite the same.
Peer comment(s):

agree Andrea Burde (X) : on both counts..."genome"..."smallest"
11 mins
Vielen Dank, auburde!
agree Ingo Dierkschnieder
26 mins
Vielen Dank, Ingo!
agree raptisi
50 mins
Thank you, raptisi!
agree Sabine Akabayov, PhD : there is a big difference between simplest and smallest. And smallest is the correct term here.
54 mins
Vielen Dank, sibsab! Yes, this may be a big difference, small is not necessarily simple, too.
agree Edith Kelly
3 hrs
Vielen Dank, EdithK!
agree Cetacea : on all points.
21 hrs
Vielen Dank, Cetacea!
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+4
4 mins

Genetic makeup

Same as DNA structure

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Note added at 6 mins (2013-10-15 13:46:10 GMT)
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Another sentence:
his test identifies the mycoplasma strain by its DNA or genetic makeup.

http://www.roadback.org/index.cfm/fuseaction/studies.display...

Quite near the bottom of the page.
Example sentence:

The genotype is the genetic makeup of a cell, an organism, or an individual usually with reference to a specific characteristic under consideration.

Peer comment(s):

agree Claire Cox
1 min
agree Ramey Rieger (X) : simple enough
8 mins
simple is as simple does - duh!
agree raptisi
1 hr
agree gangels (X)
2 hrs
Something went wrong...
2 hrs

genetic material

another option commonly used
Something went wrong...
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