Literature DB >> 16442663

Diagnosing duplications--can it be done?

Dannie Durand1, Rose Hoberman.   

Abstract

New genes arise through duplication and modification of DNA sequences on a range of scales: single gene duplication, duplication of large chromosomal fragments and whole-genome duplication. Each duplication mechanism has specific characteristics that influence the fate of the resulting duplicates, such as the size of the duplicated fragment, the potential for dosage imbalance, the preservation or disruption of regulatory control and genomic context. The ability to diagnose or identify the mechanism that produced a pair of paralogs has the potential to increase our ability to reconstruct evolutionary history, to understand the processes that govern genome evolution and to make functional predictions based on paralogy. The recent availability of large amounts of whole-genome sequence, often from several closely related species, has stimulated a wealth of new computational methods to diagnose gene duplications.

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16442663     DOI: 10.1016/j.tig.2006.01.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trends Genet        ISSN: 0168-9525            Impact factor:   11.639


  22 in total

1.  Macrosynteny analysis shows the absence of ancient whole-genome duplication in lepidopteran insects.

Authors:  Yoichiro Nakatani; Aoife McLysaght
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-01-23       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  How old is my gene?

Authors:  John A Capra; Maureen Stolzer; Dannie Durand; Katherine S Pollard
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2013-08-01       Impact factor: 11.639

Review 3.  Retention of duplicated genes in evolution.

Authors:  Elena Kuzmin; John S Taylor; Charles Boone
Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2021-07-20       Impact factor: 11.639

4.  MPI-PHYLIP: parallelizing computationally intensive phylogenetic analysis routines for the analysis of large protein families.

Authors:  Alexander J Ropelewski; Hugh B Nicholas; Ricardo R Gonzalez Mendez
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-11-15       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Comparing the retention mechanisms of tandem duplicates and retrogenes in human and mouse genomes.

Authors:  Zhen Wang; Xiao Dong; Guohui Ding; Yixue Li
Journal:  Genet Sel Evol       Date:  2010-06-28       Impact factor: 4.297

6.  dbDNV: a resource of duplicated gene nucleotide variants in human genome.

Authors:  Meng-Ru Ho; Kuo-Wang Tsai; Chun-houh Chen; Wen-chang Lin
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2010-11-21       Impact factor: 16.971

7.  Novel genes exhibit distinct patterns of function acquisition and network integration.

Authors:  John A Capra; Katherine S Pollard; Mona Singh
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2010-12-27       Impact factor: 13.583

Review 8.  Positional orthology: putting genomic evolutionary relationships into context.

Authors:  Colin N Dewey
Journal:  Brief Bioinform       Date:  2011-06-24       Impact factor: 11.622

9.  Controversies in modern evolutionary biology: the imperative for error detection and quality control.

Authors:  Francisco Prosdocimi; Benjamin Linard; Pierre Pontarotti; Olivier Poch; Julie D Thompson
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2012-01-04       Impact factor: 3.969

10.  Evidence and evolutionary analysis of ancient whole-genome duplication in barley predating the divergence from rice.

Authors:  Thomas Thiel; Andreas Graner; Robbie Waugh; Ivo Grosse; Timothy J Close; Nils Stein
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2009-08-22       Impact factor: 3.260

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