We study a minimal model for genome evolution whose elementary processes are
single site mutation, duplication and deletion of sequence regions and
insertion of random segments. These processes are found to generate long-range
correlations in the composition of letters as long as the sequence length is
growing, i.e., the combined rates of duplications and insertions are higher
than the deletion rate. For constant sequence length, on the other hand, all
initial correlations decay exponentially. These results are obtained
analytically and by simulations. They are compared with the long-range
correlations observed in genomic DNA, and the implications for genome evolution
are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure