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Gene finding in novel genomes

Ian Korf

2004BMC Bioinformatics3,513 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Computational gene prediction continues to be an important problem, especially for genomes with little experimental data. RESULTS: I introduce the SNAP gene finder which has been designed to be easily adaptable to a variety of genomes. In novel genomes without an appropriate gene finder, I demonstrate that employing a foreign gene finder can produce highly inaccurate results, and that the most compatible parameters may not come from the nearest phylogenetic neighbor. I find that foreign gene finders are more usefully employed to bootstrap parameter estimation and that the resulting parameters can be highly accurate. CONCLUSION: Since gene prediction is sensitive to species-specific parameters, every genome needs a dedicated gene finder.

Topics & Concepts

GenomeGeneComputational biologyGene predictionPhylogenetic treeDNA microarrayBiologyGeneticsComputer scienceGene expressionGenome Rearrangement AlgorithmsGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesCancer Genomics and Diagnostics
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