Ten Years of Collaborative Progress in the Quest for Orthologs
Author(s) -
Benjamin Linard,
Ingo Ebersberger,
Shawn E. McGlynn,
Natasha Glover,
Tomohiro Mochizuki,
Mateus Patrício,
Odile Lecompte,
Yannis Nevers,
Paul D. Thomas,
Toni Gabaldón,
Erik L. L. Sonnhammer,
Christophe Dessimoz,
Ikuo Uchiyama,
Adrian Altenhoff,
Aïda Ouangraoua,
Alex Warwick Vesztrocy,
Damian Szklarczyk,
Dannie Durand,
David Emms,
David Moi,
David Thybert,
Evgenia V. Kriventseva,
Haiming Tang,
Hirokazu Chiba,
Jaime HuertaCepas,
Jesualdo Tomás FernándezBreis,
Judith A. Blake,
Leszek P. Pryszcz,
María Martin,
Marina MarcetHouben,
Matthieu Muffato,
Philipp H. Schiffer,
Salvador Capella-Gutiérrez,
Salvatore Cosentino,
Shigehiro Kuraku,
Sofia K. Forslund,
Steven Kelly,
Suzanna Lewis,
Tamsin E. M. Jones,
Tarcisio Mendes de Farias,
Taro Maeda,
Wataru Iwasaki,
William R. Pearson,
Yan Wang,
Yuichiro Hara
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
molecular biology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.637
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1537-1719
pISSN - 0737-4038
DOI - 10.1093/molbev/msab098
Subject(s) - biology , computational biology , evolutionary biology , genome , most recent common ancestor , gene , data science , genetics , computer science
Accurate determination of the evolutionary relationships between genes is a foundational challenge in biology. Homology-evolutionary relatedness-is in many cases readily determined based on sequence similarity analysis. By contrast, whether or not two genes directly descended from a common ancestor by a speciation event (orthologs) or duplication event (paralogs) is more challenging, yet provides critical information on the history of a gene. Since 2009, this task has been the focus of the Quest for Orthologs (QFO) Consortium. The sixth QFO meeting took place in Okazaki, Japan in conjunction with the 67th National Institute for Basic Biology conference. Here, we report recent advances, applications, and oncoming challenges that were discussed during the conference. Steady progress has been made toward standardization and scalability of new and existing tools. A feature of the conference was the presentation of a panel of accessible tools for phylogenetic profiling and several developments to bring orthology beyond the gene unit-from domains to networks. This meeting brought into light several challenges to come: leveraging orthology computations to get the most of the incoming avalanche of genomic data, integrating orthology from domain to biological network levels, building better gene models, and adapting orthology approaches to the broad evolutionary and genomic diversity recognized in different forms of life and viruses.
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