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  6. MicroSyn: A user friendly tool for detection of microsynteny in a gene family
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MicroSyn: A user friendly tool for detection of microsynteny in a gene family

Date Issued
March 18, 2011
Author(s)
Cai, Bin
Yang, Xiaohan  
Tusken, Gerald A.
Cheng, Zong-Ming  
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/50496
Abstract

Background


The traditional phylogeny analysis within gene family is mainly based on DNA or amino acid sequence homologies. However, these phylogenetic tree analyses are not suitable for those "non-traditional" gene families like microRNA with very short sequences. For the normal protein-coding gene families, low bootstrap values are frequently encountered in some nodes, suggesting low confidence or likely inappropriateness of placement of those members in those nodes.

Results

We introduce MicroSyn software as a means of detecting microsynteny in adjacent genomic regions surrounding genes in gene families. MicroSyn searches for conserved, flanking colinear homologous gene pairs between two genomic fragments to determine the relationship between two members in a gene family. The colinearity of homologous pairs is controlled by a statistical distance function. As a result, gene duplication history can be inferred from the output independent of gene sequences. MicroSyn was designed for both experienced and non-expert users with a user-friendly graphical-user interface. MicroSyn is available from: http://fcsb.njau.edu.cn/microsyn/ webcite.

Conclusions

Case studies of the microRNA167 genes in plants and Xyloglucan ndotransglycosylase/Hydrolase family in Populus trichocarpa were presented to show the utility of the software. The easy using of MicroSyn in these examples suggests that the software is an additional valuable means to address the problem intrinsic in the computational methods and sequence qualities themselves in gene family analysis.

Disciplines
Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology
Bioinformatics
Plant Sciences
Recommended Citation
BMC Bioinformatics 2011, 12:79 doi:10.1186/1471-2105-12-79
Embargo Date
July 11, 2013
File(s)
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1471_2105_12_79.pdf

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913.51 KB

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Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

d306dc2af4448b3943ad4fec0a98b5ba

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