“…These include a high number of genes (33 protein-encoding genes, six open reading frames, two ribosomal RNA genes, and 18 transfer RNA genes), a high A + T content (72.6%), a small number of noncoding regions, and the presence of large and small subunit ribosomal protein genes, which are arranged in a bacterial-like gene cluster (Ogawa et al 2000;Barth et al 2007). Compared with this, mitochondrial genomes in all multicellular organisms, especially in animals (<20 kb) (Wolstenholme 1992) but also in some fungi (Schizosaccharomyces pombe, 19.4 kb) (Paquin et al 1997;Schäfer et al 2005) and some green (Chlamydomonas reinhardii, 15.8 kb) (Michaelis et al 1990) and red algae (Chondrus crispus, 25.8 kb) (Leblanc et al 1995) appear to be much smaller and more compact mitochondrial DNAs. These smaller mitochondrial genomes are commonly transcribed from either single, bidirectional promoters or from two or more unidirectional promoters into at least two polycistronic transcription units (Bogenhagen and Romanelli 1988;L'Abbe et al 1991;Shadel and Clayton 1993).…”