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Revisiting the Saccharomyces cerevisiae predicted ORFeome
Author(s) -
Qianru Li,
AnneRuxandra Carvunis,
Haiyuan Yu,
JingDong J. Han,
Quan Zhong,
Nicolas Simonis,
Stanley Tam,
Tong Hao,
Niels Klitgord,
Denis Dupuy,
Danny Mou,
Ilan Wapinski,
Aviv Regev,
David E. Hill,
Michael E. Cusick,
Marc Vidal
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.076661.108
Subject(s) - orfs , biology , genetics , open reading frame , annotation , genome , computational biology , saccharomyces cerevisiae , comparative genomics , genomics , gene , peptide sequence
Accurately defining the coding potential of an organism, i.e., all protein-encoding open reading frames (ORFs) or "ORFeome," is a prerequisite to fully understand its biology. ORFeome annotation involves iterative computational predictions from genome sequences combined with experimental verifications. Here we reexamine a set of Saccharomyces cerevisiae "orphan" ORFs recently removed from the original ORFeome annotation due to lack of conservation across evolutionarily related yeast species. We show that many orphan ORFs produce detectable transcripts and/or translated products in various functional genomics and proteomics experiments. By combining a naïve Bayes model that predicts the likelihood of an ORF to encode a functional product with experimental verification of strand-specific transcripts, we argue that orphan ORFs should still remain candidates for functional ORFs. In support of this model, interstrain intraspecies genome sequence variation is lower across orphan ORFs than in intergenic regions, indicating that orphan ORFs endure functional constraints and resist deleterious mutations. We conclude that ORFs should be evaluated based on multiple levels of evidence and not be removed from ORFeome annotation solely based on low sequence conservation in other species. Rather, such ORFs might be important for micro-evolutionary divergence between species.

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