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Genome

About: Genome is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 74231 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3819713 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
Keith Bradnam, Joseph Fass, Anton Alexandrov, Paul Baranay1, Michael Bechner, Inanc Birol2, Sébastien Boisvert3, Jarrod Chapman4, Guillaume Chapuis5, Guillaume Chapuis6, Rayan Chikhi6, Rayan Chikhi5, Hamidreza Chitsaz7, Wen-Chi Chou8, Jacques Corbeil3, Cristian Del Fabbro, Roderick R. Docking2, Richard Durbin9, Dent Earl10, Scott J. Emrich11, Pavel Fedotov, Nuno A. Fonseca12, Ganeshkumar Ganapathy13, Richard A. Gibbs14, Sante Gnerre15, Elenie Godzaridis3, Steve Goldstein, Matthias Haimel12, Giles Hall15, David Haussler10, Joseph B. Hiatt16, Isaac Ho4, Jason T. Howard13, Martin Hunt9, Shaun D. Jackman2, David B. Jaffe15, Erich D. Jarvis13, Huaiyang Jiang14, Sergey Kazakov, Paul J. Kersey12, Jacob O. Kitzman16, James R. Knight, Sergey Koren17, Tak-Wah Lam18, Dominique Lavenier5, Dominique Lavenier6, Dominique Lavenier19, François Laviolette3, Yingrui Li18, Zhenyu Li, Binghang Liu, Yue Liu14, Ruibang Luo18, Iain MacCallum15, Matthew D. MacManes20, Nicolas Maillet19, Nicolas Maillet5, Sergey Melnikov, Delphine Naquin5, Delphine Naquin19, Zemin Ning9, Thomas D. Otto9, Benedict Paten10, Octávio S. Paulo21, Adam M. Phillippy17, Francisco Pina-Martins21, Michael Place, Dariusz Przybylski15, Xiang Qin14, Carson Qu14, Filipe J. Ribeiro, Stephen Richards14, Daniel S. Rokhsar4, Daniel S. Rokhsar22, J. Graham Ruby23, J. Graham Ruby24, Simone Scalabrin, Michael C. Schatz25, David C. Schwartz, Alexey Sergushichev, Ted Sharpe15, Timothy I. Shaw8, Jay Shendure16, Yujian Shi, Jared T. Simpson9, Henry Song14, Fedor Tsarev, Francesco Vezzi26, Riccardo Vicedomini27, Bruno Vieira21, Jun Wang, Kim C. Worley14, Shuangye Yin15, Siu-Ming Yiu18, Jianying Yuan, Guojie Zhang, Hao Zhang, Shiguo Zhou, Ian F Korf 
TL;DR: The Assemblathon 2 as discussed by the authors presented a variety of sequence data to be assembled for three vertebrate species (a bird, a fish, and a snake) from 21 participating teams.
Abstract: Background: The process of generating raw genome sequence data continues to become cheaper, faster, and more accurate. However, assembly of such data into high-quality, finished genome sequences remains challenging. Many genome assembly tools are available, but they differ greatly in terms of their performance (speed, scalability, hardware requirements, acceptance of newer read technologies) and in their final output (composition of assembled sequence). More importantly, it remains largely unclear how to best assess the quality of assembled genome sequences. The Assemblathon competitions are intended to assess current state-of-the-art methods in genome assembly. Results: In Assemblathon 2, we provided a variety of sequence data to be assembled for three vertebrate species (a bird, a fish, and snake). This resulted in a total of 43 submitted assemblies from 21 participating teams. We evaluated these assemblies using a combination of optical map data, Fosmid sequences, and several statistical methods. From over 100 different metrics, we chose ten key measures by which to assess the overall quality of the assemblies. (Continued on next page)

602 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data suggest that the Acc-1 and Pgk-1 loci have different histories in different lineages, indicating genome mosaicity and significant intraspecific differentiation.
Abstract: The classic wheat evolutionary history is one of adaptive radiation of the diploid Triticum/Aegilops species (A, S, D), genome convergence and divergence of the tetraploid (Triticum turgidum AABB, and Triticum timopheevii AAGG) and hexaploid (Triticum aestivum, AABBDD) species. We analyzed Acc-1 (plastid acetyl-CoA carboxylase) and Pgk-1 (plastid 3-phosphoglycerate kinase) genes to determine phylogenetic relationships among Triticum and Aegilops species of the wheat lineage and to establish the timeline of wheat evolution based on gene sequence comparisons. Triticum urartu was confirmed as the A genome donor of tetraploid and hexaploid wheat. The A genome of polyploid wheat diverged from T. urartu less than half a million years ago (MYA), indicating a relatively recent origin of polyploid wheat. The D genome sequences of T. aestivum and Aegilops tauschii are identical, confirming that T. aestivum arose from hybridization of T. turgidum and Ae. tauschii only 8,000 years ago. The diploid Triticum and Aegilops progenitors of the A, B, D, G, and S genomes all radiated 2.5–4.5 MYA. Our data suggest that the Acc-1 and Pgk-1 loci have different histories in different lineages, indicating genome mosaicity and significant intraspecific differentiation. Some loci of the S genome of Aegilops speltoides and the G genome of T. timophevii are closely related, suggesting the same origin of some parts of their genomes. None of the Aegilops genomes analyzed is a close relative of the B genome, so the diploid progenitor of the B genome remains unknown.

602 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The complete DNA sequence of the Smith strain of murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) was determined from virion DNA by using a whole-genome shotgun approach, and significant similarity to the genome of the sequenced human cytome Galavirus (HCMV), strain AD169 is evident.
Abstract: The complete DNA sequence of the Smith strain of murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) was determined from virion DNA by using a whole-genome shotgun approach. The genome has an overall G+C content of 58.7%, consists of 230,278 bp, and is arranged as a single unique sequence with short (31-bp) terminal direct repeats and several short internal repeats. Significant similarity to the genome of the sequenced human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) strain AD169 is evident, particularly for 78 open reading frames encoded by the central part of the genome. There is a very similar distribution of G+C content across the two genomes. Sequences toward the ends of the MCMV genome encode tandem arrays of homologous glycoproteins (gps) arranged as two gene families. The left end encodes 15 gps that represent one family, and the right end encodes a different family of 11 gps. A homolog (m144) of cellular major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I genes is located at the end of the genome opposite the HCMV MHC class I homolog (UL18). G protein-coupled receptor (GCR) homologs (M33 and M78) occur in positions congruent with two (UL33 and UL78) of the four putative HCMV GCR homologs. Counterparts of all of the known enzyme homologs in HCMV are present in the MCMV genome, including the phosphotransferase gene (M97), whose product phosphorylates ganciclovir in HCMV-infected cells, and the assembly protein (M80).

602 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that genes with a high predicted probability of exhibiting haploinsufficiency are enriched among genes implicated in human dominant diseases and among genes causing abnormal phenotypes in heterozygous knockout mice.
Abstract: Haploinsufficiency, wherein a single functional copy of a gene is insufficient to maintain normal function, is a major cause of dominant disease. Human disease studies have identified several hundred haploinsufficient (HI) genes. We have compiled a map of 1,079 haplosufficient (HS) genes by systematic identification of genes unambiguously and repeatedly compromised by copy number variation among 8,458 apparently healthy individuals and contrasted the genomic, evolutionary, functional, and network properties between these HS genes and known HI genes. We found that HI genes are typically longer and have more conserved coding sequences and promoters than HS genes. HI genes exhibit higher levels of expression during early development and greater tissue specificity. Moreover, within a probabilistic human functional interaction network HI genes have more interaction partners and greater network proximity to other known HI genes. We built a predictive model on the basis of these differences and annotated 12,443 genes with their predicted probability of being haploinsufficient. We validated these predictions of haploinsufficiency by demonstrating that genes with a high predicted probability of exhibiting haploinsufficiency are enriched among genes implicated in human dominant diseases and among genes causing abnormal phenotypes in heterozygous knockout mice. We have transformed these gene-based haploinsufficiency predictions into haploinsufficiency scores for genic deletions, which we demonstrate to better discriminate between pathogenic and benign deletions than consideration of the deletion size or numbers of genes deleted. These robust predictions of haploinsufficiency support clinical interpretation of novel loss-of-function variants and prioritization of variants and genes for follow-up studies.

601 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using oligonucleotide arrays, the breakpoints of this microdeletion were refined, defining a 478-kb critical region containing six genes that were deleted in all four individuals, and it was found that these breakpoint regions are sites of copy number polymorphism in controls, indicating that these may be inherently unstable genomic regions.
Abstract: Genomic disorders are characterized by the presence of flanking segmental duplications that predispose these regions to recurrent rearrangement. Based on the duplication architecture of the genome, we investigated 130 regions that we hypothesized as candidates for previously undescribed genomic disorders. We tested 290 individuals with mental retardation by BAC array comparative genomic hybridization and identified 16 pathogenic rearrangements, including de novo microdeletions of 17q21.31 found in four individuals. Using oligonucleotide arrays, we refined the breakpoints of this microdeletion, defining a 478-kb critical region containing six genes that were deleted in all four individuals. We mapped the breakpoints of this deletion and of four other pathogenic rearrangements in 1q21.1, 15q13, 15q24 and 17q12 to flanking segmental duplications, suggesting that these are also sites of recurrent rearrangement. In common with the 17q21.31 deletion, these breakpoint regions are sites of copy number polymorphism in controls, indicating that these may be inherently unstable genomic regions.

600 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20242
20237,313
202214,209
20214,955
20205,080
20194,839