login
english version rss feed
Revisiting the missing protein-coding gene catalog of the domestic dog.
Derrien T., Thézé J., Vaysse A., André C., Ostrander E., Galibert F., Hitte C.
BMC Genomics 10 (2009) 62 - http://www.hal.inserm.fr/inserm-00366111/fr/
 (19193219) 
Revisiting the missing protein-coding gene catalog of the domestic dog.
Thomas Derrien1, 2, Julien Thézé1, Amaury Vaysse1, Catherine André1, Elaine Ostrander3, Francis Galibert1, Christophe Hitte () 1
1:  IGDR - Institut de Génétique et Développement de Rennes
http://umr6061.univ-rennes1.fr
CNRS : UMR6061 – Université de Rennes I – IFR140
Faculté de Médecine - CS 34317 2 Av du Professeur Léon Bernard 35043 RENNES CEDEX
France
2:  CRG - Centre for Genomic Regulation
Bioinformatics Program C/Dr. Aiguader
Barcelona
Spain
3:  NHGRI - National Human Genome Research Institute
NIH
Bethesda, MD
United States
BACKGROUND: Among mammals for which there is a high sequence coverage, the whole genome assembly of the dog is unique in that it predicts a low number of protein-coding genes, ~19,000, compared to the over 20,000 reported for other mammalian species. Of particular interest are the more than 400 of genes annotated in primates and rodent genomes, but missing in dog. RESULTS: Using over 14,000 orthologous genes between human, chimpanzee, mouse rat and dog, we built multiple pairwise synteny maps to infer short orthologous intervals that were targeted for characterizing the canine missing genes. Based on gene prediction and a functionality test using the ratio of replacement to silent nucleotide substitution rates (d(N)/d(S)), we provide compelling structural and functional evidence for the identification of 232 new protein-coding genes in the canine genome and 69 gene losses, characterized as undetected gene or pseudogenes. Gene loss phyletic pattern analysis using ten species from chicken to human allowed us to characterize 28 canine-specific gene losses that have functional orthologs continuously from chicken or marsupials through human, and 10 genes that arose specifically in the evolutionary lineage leading to rodent and primates. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates the central role of comparative genomics for refining gene catalogs and exploring the evolutionary history of gene repertoires, particularly as applied for the characterization of species-specific gene gains and losses.
Life Sciences/Biochemistry, Molecular Biology/Genomics, Transcriptomics and Proteomics
Life Sciences/Genetics
English
1471-2164

Peer-reviewed article
10.1186/1471-2164-10-62
BMC Genomics (BMC Genomics)
Publisher BioMed Central
ISSN 1471-2164 
international
2009
2009-02-04
10
62

Attached file list to this document: 
PDF
picrender.pdf(856.4 KB)

all articles on CCSd database...