共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Nusbaum C Mikkelsen TS Zody MC Asakawa S Taudien S Garber M Kodira CD Schueler MG Shimizu A Whittaker CA Chang JL Cuomo CA Dewar K FitzGerald MG Yang X Allen NR Anderson S Asakawa T Blechschmidt K Bloom T Borowsky ML Butler J Cook A Corum B DeArellano K DeCaprio D Dooley KT Dorris L Engels R Glöckner G Hafez N Hagopian DS Hall JL Ishikawa SK Jaffe DB Kamat A Kudoh J Lehmann R Lokitsang T Macdonald P Major JE Matthews CD Mauceli E Menzel U Mihalev AH Minoshima S Murayama Y Naylor JW Nicol R 《Nature》2006,439(7074):331-335
The International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium (IHGSC) recently completed a sequence of the human genome. As part of this project, we have focused on chromosome 8. Although some chromosomes exhibit extreme characteristics in terms of length, gene content, repeat content and fraction segmentally duplicated, chromosome 8 is distinctly typical in character, being very close to the genome median in each of these aspects. This work describes a finished sequence and gene catalogue for the chromosome, which represents just over 5% of the euchromatic human genome. A unique feature of the chromosome is a vast region of approximately 15 megabases on distal 8p that appears to have a strikingly high mutation rate, which has accelerated in the hominids relative to other sequenced mammals. This fast-evolving region contains a number of genes related to innate immunity and the nervous system, including loci that appear to be under positive selection--these include the major defensin (DEF) gene cluster and MCPH1, a gene that may have contributed to the evolution of expanded brain size in the great apes. The data from chromosome 8 should allow a better understanding of both normal and disease biology and genome evolution. 相似文献
2.
Humphray SJ Oliver K Hunt AR Plumb RW Loveland JE Howe KL Andrews TD Searle S Hunt SE Scott CE Jones MC Ainscough R Almeida JP Ambrose KD Ashwell RI Babbage AK Babbage S Bagguley CL Bailey J Banerjee R Barker DJ Barlow KF Bates K Beasley H Beasley O Bird CP Bray-Allen S Brown AJ Brown JY Burford D Burrill W Burton J Carder C Carter NP Chapman JC Chen Y Clarke G Clark SY Clee CM Clegg S Collier RE Corby N Crosier M Cummings AT Davies J Dhami P Dunn M Dutta I Dyer LW Earthrowl ME Faulkner L 《Nature》2004,429(6990):369-374
Chromosome 9 is highly structurally polymorphic. It contains the largest autosomal block of heterochromatin, which is heteromorphic in 6-8% of humans, whereas pericentric inversions occur in more than 1% of the population. The finished euchromatic sequence of chromosome 9 comprises 109,044,351 base pairs and represents >99.6% of the region. Analysis of the sequence reveals many intra- and interchromosomal duplications, including segmental duplications adjacent to both the centromere and the large heterochromatic block. We have annotated 1,149 genes, including genes implicated in male-to-female sex reversal, cancer and neurodegenerative disease, and 426 pseudogenes. The chromosome contains the largest interferon gene cluster in the human genome. There is also a region of exceptionally high gene and G + C content including genes paralogous to those in the major histocompatibility complex. We have also detected recently duplicated genes that exhibit different rates of sequence divergence, presumably reflecting natural selection. 相似文献
3.
Nusbaum C Zody MC Borowsky ML Kamal M Kodira CD Taylor TD Whittaker CA Chang JL Cuomo CA Dewar K FitzGerald MG Yang X Abouelleil A Allen NR Anderson S Bloom T Bugalter B Butler J Cook A DeCaprio D Engels R Garber M Gnirke A Hafez N Hall JL Norman CH Itoh T Jaffe DB Kuroki Y Lehoczky J Lui A Macdonald P Mauceli E Mikkelsen TS Naylor JW Nicol R Nguyen C Noguchi H O'Leary SB O'Neill K Piqani B Smith CL Talamas JA Topham K Totoki Y Toyoda A Wain HM Young SK Zeng Q Zimmer AR Fujiyama A Hattori M 《Nature》2005,437(7058):551-555
Chromosome 18 appears to have the lowest gene density of any human chromosome and is one of only three chromosomes for which trisomic individuals survive to term. There are also a number of genetic disorders stemming from chromosome 18 trisomy and aneuploidy. Here we report the finished sequence and gene annotation of human chromosome 18, which will allow a better understanding of the normal and disease biology of this chromosome. Despite the low density of protein-coding genes on chromosome 18, we find that the proportion of non-protein-coding sequences evolutionarily conserved among mammals is close to the genome-wide average. Extending this analysis to the entire human genome, we find that the density of conserved non-protein-coding sequences is largely uncorrelated with gene density. This has important implications for the nature and roles of non-protein-coding sequence elements. 相似文献
4.
Dunham A Matthews LH Burton J Ashurst JL Howe KL Ashcroft KJ Beare DM Burford DC Hunt SE Griffiths-Jones S Jones MC Keenan SJ Oliver K Scott CE Ainscough R Almeida JP Ambrose KD Andrews DT Ashwell RI Babbage AK Bagguley CL Bailey J Bannerjee R Barlow KF Bates K Beasley H Bird CP Bray-Allen S Brown AJ Brown JY Burrill W Carder C Carter NP Chapman JC Clamp ME Clark SY Clarke G Clee CM Clegg SC Cobley V Collins JE Corby N Coville GJ Deloukas P Dhami P Dunham I Dunn M Earthrowl ME Ellington AG 《Nature》2004,428(6982):522-528
Chromosome 13 is the largest acrocentric human chromosome. It carries genes involved in cancer including the breast cancer type 2 (BRCA2) and retinoblastoma (RB1) genes, is frequently rearranged in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, and contains the DAOA locus associated with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. We describe completion and analysis of 95.5 megabases (Mb) of sequence from chromosome 13, which contains 633 genes and 296 pseudogenes. We estimate that more than 95.4% of the protein-coding genes of this chromosome have been identified, on the basis of comparison with other vertebrate genome sequences. Additionally, 105 putative non-coding RNA genes were found. Chromosome 13 has one of the lowest gene densities (6.5 genes per Mb) among human chromosomes, and contains a central region of 38 Mb where the gene density drops to only 3.1 genes per Mb. 相似文献
5.
Mungall AJ Palmer SA Sims SK Edwards CA Ashurst JL Wilming L Jones MC Horton R Hunt SE Scott CE Gilbert JG Clamp ME Bethel G Milne S Ainscough R Almeida JP Ambrose KD Andrews TD Ashwell RI Babbage AK Bagguley CL Bailey J Banerjee R Barker DJ Barlow KF Bates K Beare DM Beasley H Beasley O Bird CP Blakey S Bray-Allen S Brook J Brown AJ Brown JY Burford DC Burrill W Burton J Carder C Carter NP Chapman JC Clark SY Clark G Clee CM Clegg S Cobley V Collier RE Collins JE Colman LK Corby NR Coville GJ 《Nature》2003,425(6960):805-811
6.
Heilig R Eckenberg R Petit JL Fonknechten N Da Silva C Cattolico L Levy M Barbe V de Berardinis V Ureta-Vidal A Pelletier E Vico V Anthouard V Rowen L Madan A Qin S Sun H Du H Pepin K Artiguenave F Robert C Cruaud C Brüls T Jaillon O Friedlander L Samson G Brottier P Cure S Ségurens B Anière F Samain S Crespeau H Abbasi N Aiach N Boscus D Dickhoff R Dors M Dubois I Friedman C Gouyvenoux M James R Madan A Mairey-Estrada B Mangenot S Martins N Ménard M Oztas S Ratcliffe A Shaffer T Trask B 《Nature》2003,421(6923):601-607
Chromosome 14 is one of five acrocentric chromosomes in the human genome. These chromosomes are characterized by a heterochromatic short arm that contains essentially ribosomal RNA genes, and a euchromatic long arm in which most, if not all, of the protein-coding genes are located. The finished sequence of human chromosome 14 comprises 87,410,661 base pairs, representing 100% of its euchromatic portion, in a single continuous segment covering the entire long arm with no gaps. Two loci of crucial importance for the immune system, as well as more than 60 disease genes, have been localized so far on chromosome 14. We identified 1,050 genes and gene fragments, and 393 pseudogenes. On the basis of comparisons with other vertebrate genomes, we estimate that more than 96% of the chromosome 14 genes have been annotated. From an analysis of the CpG island occurrences, we estimate that 70% of these annotated genes are complete at their 5' end. 相似文献
7.
Deloukas P Earthrowl ME Grafham DV Rubenfield M French L Steward CA Sims SK Jones MC Searle S Scott C Howe K Hunt SE Andrews TD Gilbert JG Swarbreck D Ashurst JL Taylor A Battles J Bird CP Ainscough R Almeida JP Ashwell RI Ambrose KD Babbage AK Bagguley CL Bailey J Banerjee R Bates K Beasley H Bray-Allen S Brown AJ Brown JY Burford DC Burrill W Burton J Cahill P Camire D Carter NP Chapman JC Clark SY Clarke G Clee CM Clegg S Corby N Coulson A Dhami P Dutta I Dunn M Faulkner L Frankish A 《Nature》2004,429(6990):375-381
8.
The DNA sequence and comparative analysis of human chromosome 5 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Schmutz J Martin J Terry A Couronne O Grimwood J Lowry S Gordon LA Scott D Xie G Huang W Hellsten U Tran-Gyamfi M She X Prabhakar S Aerts A Altherr M Bajorek E Black S Branscomb E Caoile C Challacombe JF Chan YM Denys M Detter JC Escobar J Flowers D Fotopulos D Glavina T Gomez M Gonzales E Goodstein D Grigoriev I Groza M Hammon N Hawkins T Haydu L Israni S Jett J Kadner K Kimball H Kobayashi A Lopez F Lou Y Martinez D Medina C Morgan J Nandkeshwar R Noonan JP Pitluck S Pollard M Predki P 《Nature》2004,431(7006):268-274
Chromosome 5 is one of the largest human chromosomes and contains numerous intrachromosomal duplications, yet it has one of the lowest gene densities. This is partially explained by numerous gene-poor regions that display a remarkable degree of noncoding conservation with non-mammalian vertebrates, suggesting that they are functionally constrained. In total, we compiled 177.7 million base pairs of highly accurate finished sequence containing 923 manually curated protein-coding genes including the protocadherin and interleukin gene families. We also completely sequenced versions of the large chromosome-5-specific internal duplications. These duplications are very recent evolutionary events and probably have a mechanistic role in human physiological variation, as deletions in these regions are the cause of debilitating disorders including spinal muscular atrophy. 相似文献
9.
Muzny DM Scherer SE Kaul R Wang J Yu J Sudbrak R Buhay CJ Chen R Cree A Ding Y Dugan-Rocha S Gill R Gunaratne P Harris RA Hawes AC Hernandez J Hodgson AV Hume J Jackson A Khan ZM Kovar-Smith C Lewis LR Lozado RJ Metzker ML Milosavljevic A Miner GR Morgan MB Nazareth LV Scott G Sodergren E Song XZ Steffen D Wei S Wheeler DA Wright MW Worley KC Yuan Y Zhang Z Adams CQ Ansari-Lari MA Ayele M Brown MJ Chen G Chen Z Clendenning J Clerc-Blankenburg KP Chen R Chen Z Davis C Delgado O Dinh HH Dong W 《Nature》2006,440(7088):1194-1198
After the completion of a draft human genome sequence, the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium has proceeded to finish and annotate each of the 24 chromosomes comprising the human genome. Here we describe the sequencing and analysis of human chromosome 3, one of the largest human chromosomes. Chromosome 3 comprises just four contigs, one of which currently represents the longest unbroken stretch of finished DNA sequence known so far. The chromosome is remarkable in having the lowest rate of segmental duplication in the genome. It also includes a chemokine receptor gene cluster as well as numerous loci involved in multiple human cancers such as the gene encoding FHIT, which contains the most common constitutive fragile site in the genome, FRA3B. Using genomic sequence from chimpanzee and rhesus macaque, we were able to characterize the breakpoints defining a large pericentric inversion that occurred some time after the split of Homininae from Ponginae, and propose an evolutionary history of the inversion. 相似文献
10.
Ross MT Grafham DV Coffey AJ Scherer S McLay K Muzny D Platzer M Howell GR Burrows C Bird CP Frankish A Lovell FL Howe KL Ashurst JL Fulton RS Sudbrak R Wen G Jones MC Hurles ME Andrews TD Scott CE Searle S Ramser J Whittaker A Deadman R Carter NP Hunt SE Chen R Cree A Gunaratne P Havlak P Hodgson A Metzker ML Richards S Scott G Steffen D Sodergren E Wheeler DA Worley KC Ainscough R Ambrose KD Ansari-Lari MA Aradhya S Ashwell RI Babbage AK Bagguley CL Ballabio A Banerjee R Barker GE Barlow KF 《Nature》2005,434(7031):325-337
The human X chromosome has a unique biology that was shaped by its evolution as the sex chromosome shared by males and females. We have determined 99.3% of the euchromatic sequence of the X chromosome. Our analysis illustrates the autosomal origin of the mammalian sex chromosomes, the stepwise process that led to the progressive loss of recombination between X and Y, and the extent of subsequent degradation of the Y chromosome. LINE1 repeat elements cover one-third of the X chromosome, with a distribution that is consistent with their proposed role as way stations in the process of X-chromosome inactivation. We found 1,098 genes in the sequence, of which 99 encode proteins expressed in testis and in various tumour types. A disproportionately high number of mendelian diseases are documented for the X chromosome. Of this number, 168 have been explained by mutations in 113 X-linked genes, which in many cases were characterized with the aid of the DNA sequence. 相似文献
11.
Hattori M Fujiyama A Taylor TD Watanabe H Yada T Park HS Toyoda A Ishii K Totoki Y Choi DK Groner Y Soeda E Ohki M Takagi T Sakaki Y Taudien S Blechschmidt K Polley A Menzel U Delabar J Kumpf K Lehmann R Patterson D Reichwald K Rump A Schillhabel M Schudy A Zimmermann W Rosenthal A Kudoh J Schibuya K Kawasaki K Asakawa S Shintani A Sasaki T Nagamine K Mitsuyama S Antonarakis SE Minoshima S Shimizu N Nordsiek G Hornischer K Brant P Scharfe M Schon O Desario A Reichelt J Kauer G Blocker H 《Nature》2000,405(6784):311-319
Chromosome 21 is the smallest human autosome. An extra copy of chromosome 21 causes Down syndrome, the most frequent genetic cause of significant mental retardation, which affects up to 1 in 700 live births. Several anonymous loci for monogenic disorders and predispositions for common complex disorders have also been mapped to this chromosome, and loss of heterozygosity has been observed in regions associated with solid tumours. Here we report the sequence and gene catalogue of the long arm of chromosome 21. We have sequenced 33,546,361 base pairs (bp) of DNA with very high accuracy, the largest contig being 25,491,867 bp. Only three small clone gaps and seven sequencing gaps remain, comprising about 100 kilobases. Thus, we achieved 99.7% coverage of 21q. We also sequenced 281,116 bp from the short arm. The structural features identified include duplications that are probably involved in chromosomal abnormalities and repeat structures in the telomeric and pericentromeric regions. Analysis of the chromosome revealed 127 known genes, 98 predicted genes and 59 pseudogenes. 相似文献
12.
The DNA sequence of human chromosome 22 总被引:75,自引:0,他引:75
Dunham I Shimizu N Roe BA Chissoe S Hunt AR Collins JE Bruskiewich R Beare DM Clamp M Smink LJ Ainscough R Almeida JP Babbage A Bagguley C Bailey J Barlow K Bates KN Beasley O Bird CP Blakey S Bridgeman AM Buck D Burgess J Burrill WD O'Brien KP 《Nature》1999,402(6761):489-495
Knowledge of the complete genomic DNA sequence of an organism allows a systematic approach to defining its genetic components. The genomic sequence provides access to the complete structures of all genes, including those without known function, their control elements, and, by inference, the proteins they encode, as well as all other biologically important sequences. Furthermore, the sequence is a rich and permanent source of information for the design of further biological studies of the organism and for the study of evolution through cross-species sequence comparison. The power of this approach has been amply demonstrated by the determination of the sequences of a number of microbial and model organisms. The next step is to obtain the complete sequence of the entire human genome. Here we report the sequence of the euchromatic part of human chromosome 22. The sequence obtained consists of 12 contiguous segments spanning 33.4 megabases, contains at least 545 genes and 134 pseudogenes, and provides the first view of the complex chromosomal landscapes that will be found in the rest of the genome. 相似文献
13.
Hillier LW Fulton RS Fulton LA Graves TA Pepin KH Wagner-McPherson C Layman D Maas J Jaeger S Walker R Wylie K Sekhon M Becker MC O'Laughlin MD Schaller ME Fewell GA Delehaunty KD Miner TL Nash WE Cordes M Du H Sun H Edwards J Bradshaw-Cordum H Ali J Andrews S Isak A Vanbrunt A Nguyen C Du F Lamar B Courtney L Kalicki J Ozersky P Bielicki L Scott K Holmes A Harkins R Harris A Strong CM Hou S Tomlinson C Dauphin-Kohlberg S Kozlowicz-Reilly A Leonard S Rohlfing T Rock SM Tin-Wollam AM Abbott A 《Nature》2003,424(6945):157-164
14.
Grimwood J Gordon LA Olsen A Terry A Schmutz J Lamerdin J Hellsten U Goodstein D Couronne O Tran-Gyamfi M Aerts A Altherr M Ashworth L Bajorek E Black S Branscomb E Caenepeel S Carrano A Caoile C Chan YM Christensen M Cleland CA Copeland A Dalin E Dehal P Denys M Detter JC Escobar J Flowers D Fotopulos D Garcia C Georgescu AM Glavina T Gomez M Gonzales E Groza M Hammon N Hawkins T Haydu L Ho I Huang W Israni S Jett J Kadner K Kimball H Kobayashi A Larionov V Leem SH Lopez F Lou Y Lowry S 《Nature》2004,428(6982):529-535
Chromosome 19 has the highest gene density of all human chromosomes, more than double the genome-wide average. The large clustered gene families, corresponding high G + C content, CpG islands and density of repetitive DNA indicate a chromosome rich in biological and evolutionary significance. Here we describe 55.8 million base pairs of highly accurate finished sequence representing 99.9% of the euchromatin portion of the chromosome. Manual curation of gene loci reveals 1,461 protein-coding genes and 321 pseudogenes. Among these are genes directly implicated in mendelian disorders, including familial hypercholesterolaemia and insulin-resistant diabetes. Nearly one-quarter of these genes belong to tandemly arranged families, encompassing more than 25% of the chromosome. Comparative analyses show a fascinating picture of conservation and divergence, revealing large blocks of gene orthology with rodents, scattered regions with more recent gene family expansions and deletions, and segments of coding and non-coding conservation with the distant fish species Takifugu. 相似文献
15.
Scherer SE Muzny DM Buhay CJ Chen R Cree A Ding Y Dugan-Rocha S Gill R Gunaratne P Harris RA Hawes AC Hernandez J Hodgson AV Hume J Jackson A Khan ZM Kovar-Smith C Lewis LR Lozado RJ Metzker ML Milosavljevic A Miner GR Montgomery KT Morgan MB Nazareth LV Scott G Sodergren E Song XZ Steffen D Lovering RC Wheeler DA Worley KC Yuan Y Zhang Z Adams CQ Ansari-Lari MA Ayele M Brown MJ Chen G Chen Z Clerc-Blankenburg KP Davis C Delgado O Dinh HH Draper H Gonzalez-Garay ML Havlak P Jackson LR Jacob LS 《Nature》2006,440(7082):346-351
Human chromosome 12 contains more than 1,400 coding genes and 487 loci that have been directly implicated in human disease. The q arm of chromosome 12 contains one of the largest blocks of linkage disequilibrium found in the human genome. Here we present the finished sequence of human chromosome 12, which has been finished to high quality and spans approximately 132 megabases, representing approximately 4.5% of the human genome. Alignment of the human chromosome 12 sequence across vertebrates reveals the origin of individual segments in chicken, and a unique history of rearrangement through rodent and primate lineages. The rate of base substitutions in recent evolutionary history shows an overall slowing in hominids compared with primates and rodents. 相似文献
16.
Watanabe H Fujiyama A Hattori M Taylor TD Toyoda A Kuroki Y Noguchi H BenKahla A Lehrach H Sudbrak R Kube M Taenzer S Galgoczy P Platzer M Scharfe M Nordsiek G Blöcker H Hellmann I Khaitovich P Pääbo S Reinhardt R Zheng HJ Zhang XL Zhu GF Wang BF Fu G Ren SX Zhao GP Chen Z Lee YS Cheong JE Choi SH Wu KM Liu TT Hsiao KJ Tsai SF Kim CG OOta S Kitano T Kohara Y Saitou N Park HS Wang SY Yaspo ML Sakaki Y 《Nature》2004,429(6990):382-388
Human-chimpanzee comparative genome research is essential for narrowing down genetic changes involved in the acquisition of unique human features, such as highly developed cognitive functions, bipedalism or the use of complex language. Here, we report the high-quality DNA sequence of 33.3 megabases of chimpanzee chromosome 22. By comparing the whole sequence with the human counterpart, chromosome 21, we found that 1.44% of the chromosome consists of single-base substitutions in addition to nearly 68,000 insertions or deletions. These differences are sufficient to generate changes in most of the proteins. Indeed, 83% of the 231 coding sequences, including functionally important genes, show differences at the amino acid sequence level. Furthermore, we demonstrate different expansion of particular subfamilies of retrotransposons between the lineages, suggesting different impacts of retrotranspositions on human and chimpanzee evolution. The genomic changes after speciation and their biological consequences seem more complex than originally hypothesized. 相似文献
17.
Gregory SG Barlow KF McLay KE Kaul R Swarbreck D Dunham A Scott CE Howe KL Woodfine K Spencer CC Jones MC Gillson C Searle S Zhou Y Kokocinski F McDonald L Evans R Phillips K Atkinson A Cooper R Jones C Hall RE Andrews TD Lloyd C Ainscough R Almeida JP Ambrose KD Anderson F Andrew RW Ashwell RI Aubin K Babbage AK Bagguley CL Bailey J Beasley H Bethel G Bird CP Bray-Allen S Brown JY Brown AJ Buckley D Burton J Bye J Carder C Chapman JC Clark SY Clarke G Clee C Cobley V Collier RE Corby N 《Nature》2006,441(7091):315-321
The reference sequence for each human chromosome provides the framework for understanding genome function, variation and evolution. Here we report the finished sequence and biological annotation of human chromosome 1. Chromosome 1 is gene-dense, with 3,141 genes and 991 pseudogenes, and many coding sequences overlap. Rearrangements and mutations of chromosome 1 are prevalent in cancer and many other diseases. Patterns of sequence variation reveal signals of recent selection in specific genes that may contribute to human fitness, and also in regions where no function is evident. Fine-scale recombination occurs in hotspots of varying intensity along the sequence, and is enriched near genes. These and other studies of human biology and disease encoded within chromosome 1 are made possible with the highly accurate annotated sequence, as part of the completed set of chromosome sequences that comprise the reference human genome. 相似文献
18.
Zody MC Garber M Sharpe T Young SK Rowen L O'Neill K Whittaker CA Kamal M Chang JL Cuomo CA Dewar K FitzGerald MG Kodira CD Madan A Qin S Yang X Abbasi N Abouelleil A Arachchi HM Baradarani L Birditt B Bloom S Bloom T Borowsky ML Burke J Butler J Cook A DeArellano K DeCaprio D Dorris L Dors M Eichler EE Engels R Fahey J Fleetwood P Friedman C Gearin G Hall JL Hensley G Johnson E Jones C Kamat A Kaur A Locke DP Madan A Munson G Jaffe DB Lui A Macdonald P Mauceli E Naylor JW Nesbitt R Nicol R 《Nature》2006,440(7084):671-675
Here we present a finished sequence of human chromosome 15, together with a high-quality gene catalogue. As chromosome 15 is one of seven human chromosomes with a high rate of segmental duplication, we have carried out a detailed analysis of the duplication structure of the chromosome. Segmental duplications in chromosome 15 are largely clustered in two regions, on proximal and distal 15q; the proximal region is notable because recombination among the segmental duplications can result in deletions causing Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes. Sequence analysis shows that the proximal and distal regions of 15q share extensive ancient similarity. Using a simple approach, we have been able to reconstruct many of the events by which the current duplication structure arose. We find that most of the intrachromosomal duplications seem to share a common ancestry. Finally, we demonstrate that some remaining gaps in the genome sequence are probably due to structural polymorphisms between haplotypes; this may explain a significant fraction of the gaps remaining in the human genome. 相似文献
19.
Martin J Han C Gordon LA Terry A Prabhakar S She X Xie G Hellsten U Chan YM Altherr M Couronne O Aerts A Bajorek E Black S Blumer H Branscomb E Brown NC Bruno WJ Buckingham JM Callen DF Campbell CS Campbell ML Campbell EW Caoile C Challacombe JF Chasteen LA Chertkov O Chi HC Christensen M Clark LM Cohn JD Denys M Detter JC Dickson M Dimitrijevic-Bussod M Escobar J Fawcett JJ Flowers D Fotopulos D Glavina T Gomez M Gonzales E Goodstein D Goodwin LA Grady DL Grigoriev I Groza M Hammon N Hawkins T 《Nature》2004,432(7020):988-994
20.
Taylor TD Noguchi H Totoki Y Toyoda A Kuroki Y Dewar K Lloyd C Itoh T Takeda T Kim DW She X Barlow KF Bloom T Bruford E Chang JL Cuomo CA Eichler E FitzGerald MG Jaffe DB LaButti K Nicol R Park HS Seaman C Sougnez C Yang X Zimmer AR Zody MC Birren BW Nusbaum C Fujiyama A Hattori M Rogers J Lander ES Sakaki Y 《Nature》2006,440(7083):497-500
Chromosome 11, although average in size, is one of the most gene- and disease-rich chromosomes in the human genome. Initial gene annotation indicates an average gene density of 11.6 genes per megabase, including 1,524 protein-coding genes, some of which were identified using novel methods, and 765 pseudogenes. One-quarter of the protein-coding genes shows overlap with other genes. Of the 856 olfactory receptor genes in the human genome, more than 40% are located in 28 single- and multi-gene clusters along this chromosome. Out of the 171 disorders currently attributed to the chromosome, 86 remain for which the underlying molecular basis is not yet known, including several mendelian traits, cancer and susceptibility loci. The high-quality data presented here--nearly 134.5 million base pairs representing 99.8% coverage of the euchromatic sequence--provide scientists with a solid foundation for understanding the genetic basis of these disorders and other biological phenomena. 相似文献