Ultra-Conservation In Genome Comparisons
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13.7 years ago

Part of my research interest is to look for unusual conservation patterns in pairwise genome comparisons. Naturally, such patterns might suggest functional elements, or occasionally, lateral DNA transmission between organisms.

I have so far relied on ad-hoc rules to extract these. However, the same rule does not apply to a different species pair - for example, some would find a 200bp perfect match between chicken-human unusual, but it is a lot less surprising for chimp-human comparison.

My question here is whether there is a statistical method to measure the "surprise" of an alignment, given the expected sequence divergence between two species? I realize there could be complications as selective pressure varies for different types of sequences - but would like to see what others approach this problem.

comparative conservation similarity alignment statistics • 3.3k views
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13.7 years ago

Have you looked at the extensive genome comparison studies reported by Inna Dubchuk's group?

I would recommend you to start with the manuscripts that described genome comparison based on multiple alignments and pairwise alignments from the group (dataset, methods). Pre-computed data and an associated comparative genome browser Vista could be useful for you.

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13.7 years ago
Aaron Statham ★ 1.1k

http://ancora.genereg.net/ and http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18279518 may be useful background

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thanks for the pointer. According to the paper, "We identify HCNEs by scanning pairwise BLASTZ net whole-genome alignments (nets) downloaded from the UCSC Genome Browser database for regions with at least I identities over C alignment columns." - this is an arbitrary rule that I mentioned, which I hope that there is a better alternative to.

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