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Gene and alternative splicing annotation with AIR
Author(s) -
Liliana Florea,
Valentina Di Francesco,
Jason Miller,
Russell Turner,
Alison Yao,
Michael A. Harris,
Brian P. Walenz,
Clark Mobarry,
Gennady V. Merkulov,
Rosane Charlab,
Ian Dew,
Zuoming Deng,
Sorin Istrail,
Peter Li,
Granger Sutton
Publication year - 2005
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.2889405
Subject(s) - annotation , biology , synteny , computational biology , gene annotation , rna splicing , genome , genome project , genetics , gene prediction , gene , genomics , alternative splicing , expressed sequence tag , human genome , exon , rna
Designing effective and accurate tools for identifying the functional and structural elements in a genome remains at the frontier of genome annotation owing to incompleteness and inaccuracy of the data, limitations in the computational models, and shifting paradigms in genomics, such as alternative splicing. We present a methodology for the automated annotation of genes and their alternatively spliced mRNA transcripts based on existing cDNA and protein sequence evidence from the same species or projected from a related species using syntenic mapping information. At the core of the method is the splice graph, a compact representation of a gene, its exons, introns, and alternatively spliced isoforms. The putative transcripts are enumerated from the graph and assigned confidence scores based on the strength of sequence evidence, and a subset of the high-scoring candidates are selected and promoted into the annotation. The method is highly selective, eliminating the unlikely candidates while retaining 98% of the high-quality mRNA evidence in well-formed transcripts, and produces annotation that is measurably more accurate than some evidence-based gene sets. The process is fast, accurate, and fully automated, and combines the traditionally distinct gene annotation and alternative splicing detection processes in a comprehensive and systematic way, thus considerably aiding in the ensuing manual curation efforts.

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