Exoniphy Track Settings
 
Exoniphy Human/Mouse/Rat/Dog   (All Genes and Gene Predictions tracks)

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Assembly: Human Mar. 2006 (NCBI36/hg18)
Data last updated at UCSC: 2006-12-05

Description

The exoniphy program identifies evolutionarily conserved protein-coding exons in a multiple alignment using a phylogenetic hidden Markov model (phylo-HMM), a statistical model that simultaneously describes exon structure and exon evolution. This track shows exoniphy predictions for the human Mar. 2006 (hg18), mouse Feb. 2006 (mm8), rat Nov. 2004 (rn4), and dog May 2005 (canFam2) genomes, as aligned by the multiz program. For this track, only alignments on the "syntenic net" between human and each other species were considered.

Methods

For a description of exoniphy, see Siepel et al. (2004). Multiz is described in Blanchette et al. (2004). The alignment chaining methods behind the "syntenic net" are described in Kent et al. (2003).

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Brona Brejova of Cornell University for producing these predictions.

References

Blanchette M. et al. Aligning multiple genomic sequences with the threaded blockset aligner. Genome Res. 2004;14:708-175.

Kent WJ. et al. Evolution's cauldron: duplication, deletion, and rearrangement in the mouse and human genomes. P. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 2003;100(20):11484-11489.

Siepel A, Haussler D. Computational identification of evolutionarily conserved exons. RECOMB '04. 2004.