| Literature DB >> 16013088 |
Merja Oja1, Göran O Sperber, Jonas Blomberg, Samuel Kaski.
Abstract
About 8 per cent of the human genome consists of human endogenous retroviral sequences (HERVs), which are remains from ancient infections. The HERVs may give rise to transcripts or affect the expression of human genes. The first step in understanding HERV function is to classify HERVs into families. In this work we study the relationships of existing HERV families and detect potentially new HERV families. A Median Self-Organizing Map (SOM), a SOM for non-vectorial data, is used to group and visualize a collection of 3661 HERVs. The SOM-based analysis is complemented with estimates of the reliability of the results. A novel trustworthiness visualization method is used to estimate which parts of the SOM visualization are reliable and which not. The reliability of extracted interesting HERV groups is verified by a bootstrap procedure suitable for SOM visualization-based analysis. The SOM detects a group of epsilonretroviral sequences and a group of ERV9, HERVW, and HUERSP3 sequences which suggests that ERV9 and HERVW sequences may have a common origin.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16013088 DOI: 10.1142/S0129065705000177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Neural Syst ISSN: 0129-0657 Impact factor: 5.866