Repository logo
Log In(current)
  1. Home
  2. Colleges & Schools
  3. Graduate School
  4. Doctoral Dissertations
  5. Applications of Evolutionary Bioinformatics in Basic and Biomedical Research
Details

Applications of Evolutionary Bioinformatics in Basic and Biomedical Research

Date Issued
December 1, 2015
Author(s)
Adebali, Ogun  
Advisor(s)
Igor B. Jouline
Additional Advisor(s)
Albrecht von Arnim
Jerome Baudry
Elias Fernandez
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/24669
Abstract

With the revolutionary progress in sequencing technologies, computational biology emerged as a game-changing field which is applied in understanding molecular events of life for not only complementary but also exploratory purposes. Bioinformatics resources and tools significantly help in data generation, organization and analysis. However, there is still a need for developing new approaches built based on a biologist’s point of view. In protein bioinformatics, there are several fundamental problems such as (i) determining protein function; (ii) identifying protein-protein interactions; (iii) predicting the effect of amino acid variants. Here, I present three chapters addressing these problems from an evolutionary perspective. Firstly, I describe a novel search pipeline for protein domain identification. The algorithm chain provides sensitive domain assignments with the highest possible specificity. Secondly, I present a tool enabling large-scale visualization of presences and absences of proteins in hierarchically clustered genomes. This tool visualizes multi-layer information of any kind of genome-linked data with a special focus on domain architectures, enabling identification of coevolving domains/proteins, which can eventually help in identifying functionally interacting proteins. And finally, I propose an approach for distinguishing between benign and damaging missense mutations in a human disease by establishing the precise evolutionary history of the associated gene. This part introduces new criteria on how to determine functional orthologs via phylogenetic analysis. All three parts use comparative genomics and/or sequence analyses. Taken together, this study addresses important problems in protein bioinformatics and as a whole it can be utilized to describe proteins by their domains, coevolving partners and functionally important residues.

Subjects

protein domain

phylogenetic profilin...

missense mutation pre...

orthologs and paralog...

phylogenetics

Disciplines
Bioinformatics
Computational Biology
Genomics
Other Genetics and Genomics
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Major
Life Sciences
Embargo Date
December 15, 2016
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

0-Table_5_3.xlsx

Size

2.07 MB

Format

Microsoft Excel XML

Checksum (MD5)

7e6e9b722677e835e1c834feaa0dea54

Thumbnail Image
Name

1-DataSet_5_1.xlsx

Size

2.07 MB

Format

Microsoft Excel XML

Checksum (MD5)

7e6e9b722677e835e1c834feaa0dea54

Built with DSpace-CRIS software - Extension maintained and optimized by 4Science

  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
  • Send Feedback
  • Contact
  • Libraries at University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Repository logo COAR Notify