首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Anopheles gambiae genome reannotation through synthesis of ab initio and comparative gene prediction algorithms
Authors:Jun Li  Michelle M Riehle  Yan Zhang  Jiannong Xu  Frederick Oduol  Shawn M Gomez  Karin Eiglmeier  Beatrix M Ueberheide  Jeffrey Shabanowitz  Donald F Hunt  José MC Ribeiro  Kenneth D Vernick
Affiliation:Jun Li, Michelle M Riehle, Yan Zhang, Jiannong Xu, Frederick Oduol, Shawn M Gomez, Karin Eiglmeier, Beatrix M Ueberheide, Jeffrey Shabanowitz, Donald F Hunt, José MC Ribeiro, and Kenneth D Vernick
Abstract:

Background

Complete genome annotation is a necessary tool as Anopheles gambiae researchers probe the biology of this potent malaria vector.

Results

We reannotate the A. gambiae genome by synthesizing comparative and ab initio sets of predicted coding sequences (CDSs) into a single set using an exon-gene-union algorithm followed by an open-reading-frame-selection algorithm. The reannotation predicts 20,970 CDSs supported by at least two lines of evidence, and it lowers the proportion of CDSs lacking start and/or stop codons to only approximately 4%. The reannotated CDS set includes a set of 4,681 novel CDSs not represented in the Ensembl annotation but with EST support, and another set of 4,031 Ensembl-supported genes that undergo major structural and, therefore, probably functional changes in the reannotated set. The quality and accuracy of the reannotation was assessed by comparison with end sequences from 20,249 full-length cDNA clones, and evaluation of mass spectrometry peptide hit rates from an A. gambiae shotgun proteomic dataset confirms that the reannotated CDSs offer a high quality protein database for proteomics. We provide a functional proteomics annotation, ReAnoXcel, obtained by analysis of the new CDSs through the AnoXcel pipeline, which allows functional comparisons of the CDS sets within the same bioinformatic platform. CDS data are available for download.

Conclusion

Comprehensive A. gambiae genome reannotation is achieved through a combination of comparative and ab initio gene prediction algorithms.
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号