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28-Way vertebrate alignment and conservation track in the UCSC Genome Browser
Author(s) -
Webb Miller,
Kate R. Rosenbloom,
Ross C. Hardison,
Minmei Hou,
James Taylor,
Brian J. Raney,
Richard Burhans,
David King,
Robert Baertsch,
Daniel Blankenberg,
Sergei L. Kosakovsky Pond,
Anton Nekrutenko,
Belinda Giardine,
Robert S. Harris,
Svitlana Tyekucheva,
Mark Diekhans,
Thomas H. Pringle,
William J. Murphy,
Arthur M. Lesk,
George M. Weinstock,
Kerstin LindbladToh,
Richard A. Gibbs,
Eric S. Lander,
Adam Siepel,
David Haussler,
W. James Kent
Publication year - 2007
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.6761107
Subject(s) - biology , genome browser , genome , indel , genetics , human genome , computational biology , vertebrate , genomics , gene , genotype , single nucleotide polymorphism
This article describes a set of alignments of 28 vertebrate genome sequences that is provided by the UCSC Genome Browser. The alignments can be viewed on the Human Genome Browser (March 2006 assembly) at http://genome.ucsc.edu, downloaded in bulk by anonymous FTP from http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg18/multiz28way, or analyzed with the Galaxy server at http://g2.bx.psu.edu. This article illustrates the power of this resource for exploring vertebrate and mammalian evolution, using three examples. First, we present several vignettes involving insertions and deletions within protein-coding regions, including a look at some human-specific indels. Then we study the extent to which start codons and stop codons in the human sequence are conserved in other species, showing that start codons are in general more poorly conserved than stop codons. Finally, an investigation of the phylogenetic depth of conservation for several classes of functional elements in the human genome reveals striking differences in the rates and modes of decay in alignability. Each functional class has a distinctive period of stringent constraint, followed by decays that allow (for the case of regulatory regions) or reject (for coding regions and ultraconserved elements) insertions and deletions.

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