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MosaicFinder: identification of fused gene families in sequence similarity networks
Author(s) -
Pierre-Alain Jachiet,
Romain Pogorelcnik,
Anne Berry,
Philippe Lopez,
Éric Bapteste
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.599
H-Index - 390
eISSN - 1367-4811
pISSN - 1367-4803
DOI - 10.1093/bioinformatics/btt049
Subject(s) - identification (biology) , similarity (geometry) , sequence (biology) , gene , computational biology , gene sequence , genetics , computer science , sequence alignment , biology , artificial intelligence , peptide sequence , phylogenetic tree , botany , image (mathematics)
Gene fusion is an important evolutionary process. It can yield valuable information to infer the interactions and functions of proteins. Fused genes have been identified as non-transitive patterns of similarity in triplets of genes. To be computationally tractable, this approach usually imposes an a priori distinction between a dataset in which fused genes are searched for, and a dataset that may have provided genetic material for fusion. This reduces the 'genetic space' in which fusion can be discovered, as only a subset of triplets of genes is investigated. Moreover, this approach may have a high-false-positive rate, and it does not identify gene families descending from a common fusion event.

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