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Annotating non-coding regions of the genome

Contributed by:Administrator
Originally posted:14th July 2010: 1:33 pm
Last updated:16th July 2010: 12:01 pm
Short URL:http://gen2phen.org/node/24292
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DOI: 
doi:10.1038/nrg2814
URL: 
http://feeds.nature.com/~r/nrg/rss/aop/~3/EgqXdxvdKH0/nrg2814

Most of the human genome consists of non-protein-coding DNA. This article describes the progress made in annotating this non-coding portion of the genome by combining data from comparative and functional genomics analyses.

Abstract:

Most of the human genome consists of non-protein-coding DNA. Recently, progress has been made in annotating these non-coding regions through the interpretation of functional genomics experiments and comparative sequence analysis. One can conceptualize functional genomics analysis as involving a sequence of steps: turning the output of an experiment into a 'signal' at each base pair of the genome; smoothing this signal and segmenting it into small blocks of initial annotation; and then clustering these small blocks into larger derived annotations and networks. Finally, one can relate functional genomics annotations to conserved units and measures of conservation derived from comparative sequence analysis.

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