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automated phylogenomics:
Zmasek C.M. and Eddy S.R. (2002) RIO:
> Bioinformatics, 3:14. paper available at: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/3/14/
Zmasek C.M. and Eddy S.R. (2001) A simple algorithm to
infer gene duplication and speciation events on a gene tree. Bioinformatics, 17,
821-828 bootstrapping: Algorithms cenancestor:
The most recent common ancestor of the taxa under
consideration. Walter Fitch “Homology a personal view on some
of the problem” Trends in Genetics 16 (5): 227-231 May 2000
Related terms: homology,
phylogenomics
clade:
One of the two kinds of
biological entities whose names are governed by this code; a group of species
comprising a common ancestor and all of its descendants. PhyloCode Glossary,
Ohio Univ. US, 2000 http://www.ohiou.edu/phylocode/glossary.html
A monophyletic taxon; a group of organisms which includes
the most recent common ancestor of all of its members and all of the descendants
of that most recent common ancestor. From the Greek word "klados",
meaning branch or twig. [UCMP] Compare species.
cladistics: (1) The Journal of the Willi Hennig Society. (2) The scientific discipline of classifying organisms according to the doctrine of Willi Hennig's 1966 book. (3) The belief that the organisation of taxa into groups can only be done by the identification of synapomorphies for that group.
[Molecular Systematics]
comparative genomics: Functional
genomics evolutionary genomics:
The field of plant molecular systematics
and phylogeny - using genes to inform taxonomic relationships and evolutionary
history ... [aimed at improving our] understanding of how eukaryotic genomes
evolve and interact. BA Palevitz, "Evolutionary Genomics: A conversation
with pioneer Jeffrey Palmer" The Scientist 14(16): 12, August 21, 2000 http://www.the-scientist.com/yr2000/aug/palevitz_p12_000821.htm
Looking at how genes have been
preserved through evolution, or how genes or their functions have diverged.
evolutionary homology:
The methods currently available [1994] for
interpreting DNA and protein sequences largely utilize evolutionary homology.
The consensus sequence method looks for highly conserved amino acids or
bases in specific locations. The weight matrix or profile methods perform the
same task quantitatively. Sequence alignments even attempt to
recapitulate evolution by specifically postulating substitution, insertion and
deletion events that occurred during the evolutionary process. Using these
evolutionary based methods, much hypothetical information can be gained from the
study of a single gene and protein molecule. However, these evolutionary
methods do not give much insight into the flow of genetic information from genes
to structure and to phenotype. [Douglas L. Brutlag "Understanding the human
genome" in Leder, P., Clayton, D. A. and Rubenstein, E. (Ed.), Scientific
American: Introduction to Molecular Medicine (pp. 153-168). New York NY:
Scientific American Inc. 1994. http://cmgm.stanford.edu/~brutlag/Abstracts/brutlag94.html Broader term: Functional
genomics homology; Related term
evolutionary genomics
genome prospecting:
The 10th annual Genome Issue of Science
(October 15, 1999) focuses on "genome prospecting," the use of
comparative genome analyses to follow the course of evolutionary history from
primordial mammals to humans. Other articles discuss how migration patterns of
ancient humans can be reconstructed from traces left in the chromosomal
sequences of modern- day descendants, epigenetic mechanisms essential for gene
function, improvements in gene expression arrays and their use to categorize
human cancers and to support therapeutic decisions, data quality in genomics
databases and new bioinformatics directions, and the emerging discipline of
pharmacogenomics. Oak Ridge National Lab, US, HGMIS, Oct.
1999 http://www.ornl.gov/hgmis/archive/archives.html
homology: Functional genomics
Narrower terms: evolutionary
homology, positional homology; Proteomics regulatory
homology; Sequencing
sequence
homology; Structural
genomics structural homology Related terms: Functional genomics
orthology, paralogy, similarity; Structural
genomics homology modeling horizontal gene transfer: See xenology; Related term:
-Omes & -omics microbiome lateral genomics:
It is possible that a single universal phylogenetic
tree is not the best way to depict relationships between all living
and extinct species. Instead a web- or not - like pattern, reflecting the
importance of horizontal or lateral gene transfer between lineages of organisms,
might provide a more appropriate visual metaphor. W. Ford Doolittle
“Lateral genomics” Trends Millennial Issue (TCB 9(12) TIBS 24 (12) TIG
15 (12): M5-8 December 1999 molecular evolution:
Manipulation & Disruption
molecular
phylogenetics:
Attempts to determine the rates and patterns
of change occurring in DNA and proteins and to reconstruct the evolutionary
history of genes and organisms. Two general approaches may be taken to obtain
this information. In the first approach, scientists use DNA to study the
evolution of an organism. In the second approach, different organisms are used
to study the evolution of DNA. Whatever the approach, the general goal is to infer
process from pattern: the processes of organismal evolution deduced from
patterns of DNA variation and processes of molecular evolution inferred from the
patterns of variations in the DNA itself. Systematics & Molecular
Phylogenetics, NCBI, US, 2002, from NCBI's Science Primer http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/About/primer/phylo.html
molecular taxonomy:
Relatively new;
measure molecular similarity between organisms - related to how close they are
related to each other (members of the same species are identical, progressively
more distantly related organisms are more and more different at the molecular
level). Gordon Curry, Molecular Taxonomy Slide 2 Taxonomy - identifying and
classifying organisms , Paleobiology, Earth Sciences Dept., Univ. of Glasgow,
Scotland http://www.earthsci.gla.ac.uk/staff/gbc/teaching/Palaeo_Level_3_files/frame.htm
See also Cancer
genomics
monophyletic:
A group consisting of an ancestor and all
of its descendants; usually used for groups the members of which are more
closely related to each other than to any non- members in terms of common
ancestry. [PhyloCode] http://www.ohiou.edu/phylocode/glossary.html
Related terms
clade, species. ortholog
(orthologue), orthologous:
Functional genomics Narrower term: super- orthologs paralog
(paralogue), paralogous:
Functional genomics Narrower term: ultra-paralogs phylogenetic: Of or pertaining to the history of ancestry and descent.
[PhyloCode Glossary, Ohio Univ. US, 2000] http://www.ohiou.edu/phylocode/glossary.html phylogenetic profiles:
Proteins having the same pattern of presence
or absence in surveyed genomes ... if there are n fully sequenced genes, there are up to 2n phylogenetic profiles. Currently
there are about 30 fully sequenced genomes in the public domain, meaning
there are 230 (~10 9 ) possible phylogenetic profiles.
This number far exceeds the number of protein
families, so that a protein’s
phylogenetic profile is a nearly unique characterization of its pattern
of distribution among genomes. Hence any two proteins having identical
or similar phylogenetic profiles are likely to be engaged in a common pathway
or complex. [David Eisenberg et al "Protein function in the post- genomic
era" Nature 405: 823- 826, 15 June 2000]
Looks
at the correlation of protein inheritance across different species. Each
protein is given a phylogenetic profile denoting the presence or absence
of that protein in various genomes. The result is that function can be
assigned to uncharacterized proteins if they have a phylogenetic profile
similar to the model profile. [S Spengler “Bioinformatics in the Information
Age” Science 287 (5456: 1221-1223, 18 Feb. 2000, citing M. Pellegrini et
al. “Assigning protein functions by comparative genome analysis: protein
phylogenetic profiles” PNAS 1999 Apr 13, 96(8):4285-8.]
Related terms: phylogenetics, phylogenetic tree, phylogenomics
phylogenetic shadowing:
phylogenetic taxonomy: A system of naming only monophyletic groups of organisms. The hierarchical structure of the names
devised by such a system, in principle, accurately reflects the evolutionary relationships of all the named groups of organisms.
[Glossary, Natural History Museum, London, UK} http://www.nhm.ac.uk/hosted_sites/pe/2000_1/retinal/gloss.htm
Google = about 929 July 19, 2002
phylogenetic tree:
A diagram showing evolutionary lineages of
organisms. [Edinburgh]
In practice, phylogenetic trees are unreliable. Errors in
trees will produce spurious inferred duplications. This is obviously problematic
if duplications are to be used as indicators of potential functional changes. [Christian M. Zmasek,
Sean R. Eddy, RIO: Analyzing
proteomes by automated phylogenomics using resampled inference of orthologs, BMC
Bioinformatics. 2002; 3 (1): 14,
2002]
A graphical depiction of homology.
phylogenome:
Google =
phylogenome = about 9 July 11, 2002; about 9 June 7, 2004, about 19 Aug. 15,
2005, about 20 Oct. 25, 2006
phylogenomic
profiling:
One of the central goals of bioinformatics is to assign proteins
a function from genomic sequences. To this purpose, alignment methods, based on
sequence similarity, are still nowadays the most developed and used. Yet, they
give indications on the function of only fifty percent of the proteins of an
organism. This limit encourages the development of new methods that exploit the
information contained within the full sequence of a genome. Those phylogenomic
approaches are of course possible because of the recent and massive sequencing
of genomes. Phylogenomic profiling is one of the major
non- sequence- homology- based method. It is designed to infer a likely
functional relationship between proteins. It is based on the assumption that
proteins involved in a common metabolic pathway or constituting a multi-
molecular complex are likely to evolve in a correlated manner. Phydbac
Introduction, Information
Génétique & Structurale, C.N.R.S, France
http://igs-server.cnrs-mrs.fr/phydbac/introduction.html
phylogenomics:
Functional prediction via phylogenetic analysis
... When analyzing protein sequences using sequence similarity
searches, orthologous sequences (diverged by speciation) are more
reliable predictors of a new protein's function than paralogous
sequences (diverged by gene duplication), because duplication enables
functional diversification. The utility of phylogenetic information in
high- throughput genome annotation ("phylogenomics", [1]) is
widely recognized, but existing approaches are either manual or indirect
(e.g. not based on phylogenetic trees). Here we present a procedure for
automated phylogenomics using explicit phylogenetic inference.
Christian M. Zmasek, Sean A. Eddy, Washington Univ. School of
Medicine; "RIO: Analyzing proteomes by automated phylogenomics using
resampled inference of orthologs" Intelligent Systems in Molecular
Biology " July 21- 25, 2001, Copenhagen, Denmark poster abstracts] http://ismb01.cbs.dtu.dk/poster_abstracts.html#A35
There are many ways in which evolutionary information can
be used to improve functional predictions. Google = about 440
July 11, 2002; about 1,260 July 14, 2004; about 3,050 June 7, 2004; about
14,700 Aug. 15, 2005, about 164,000 Oct. 25, 2006 Related terms: evolutionary genomics, lateral genomics, clades, cladistics, phylogenetic
profiles, phylogenetic tree, phylome, subtree- neighbors, super-orthologs, ultra-paralogs
phyloinformatics:
http://www.phyloinformatics.org/
phylome: The complete set of phylogenetic trees derived from the proteome of an organism.
[T Sicheritz- Ponten, SG Andersson, "A phylogenomic approach to microbial
evolution" Nucleic Acids Research 15; 29(2): 545- 552 Jan. 2001 Google = about 21 July
11, 2002; about 43 July 14,2003; about 47 June 7, 2004, about 103 Aug. 15, 2005,
about 308 Oct. 25, 2006 phyloproteomics: Proteomics
positional homology:
Sequence alignment for
phylogenetic analysis has a particular purpose protein subfamilies: Protein
structures punctuated equilibrium: A model of evolution in which change occurs in relatively rapid bursts, followed by longer periods of stasis.
[UCMP] rooted gene trees: The concept of speciation and
duplication is only meaningful on rooted gene trees, but the neighbor joining
algorithm infers unrooted trees. We use a simple parsimony criterion for
rooting. Gene trees are rooted on each branch, resulting in 2N-3
differently rooted trees for a gene tree of N sequences. For each of
these, the number of inferred duplications is determined. [Christian M. Zmasek,
Sean R. Eddy, RIO: Analyzing
proteomes by automated phylogenomics using resampled inference of orthologs, BMC
Bioinformatics. 2002; 3 (1): 14,
2002 species:
One of the two kinds of biological entities
whose names will eventually be governed by this code; a segment of a population-
level lineage that is separate from other such lineage segments as
indicated by one or more of various possible criteria (e.g., distinguishability,
reproductive isolation, monophyly, etc.). PhyloCode Glossary, Ohio
Univ. US http://www.ohiou.edu/phylocode/glossary.html
Compare clade. species- nomenclature: Nomenclature subtree: See clade; Narrower term:
subtree-
neighbors subtree-neighbors: Given a completely binary and rooted
gene tree, the k-subtree- neighbors of a sequence q are
defined as all sequences derived from the k-level parent node of q,
except q itself (the level of q itself is 0, q's parent is
1, and so forth). Subtree- neighbors can be useful if there is (partial)
agreement among their annotations ...If the subtree- neighbors lack any
agreement in their annotations a useful inference is not possible...
Furthermore, orthologs that are not also subtree- neighbors can be misleading. [Christian M. Zmasek,
Sean R. Eddy, RIO: ,
2002] super-orthologs: Given a rooted gene tree
with duplication or speciation assigned to each of its internal nodes, two
sequences are super-orthologous if and only if each internal node on their
connecting path represents a speciation event. [Christian M. Zmasek,
Sean R. Eddy, RIO: Analyzing
proteomes by automated phylogenomics using resampled inference of orthologs, BMC
Bioinformatics. 2002; 3 (1): 14,
2002] synology: Functional genomics systematics: See under molecular phylogenetics taxonomy: Study of the characterization, classification, and naming of organisms according to standard rules. Most modern taxonomies are phylogenetic (or natural); they attempt to group organisms according to evolutionary descent.
[NABIR] This is different from the taxonomies in the Ontologies
& Taxonomies glossary ultra-paralogs: Given a rooted gene tree with
duplication or speciation assigned to each of its internal nodes, two sequences
are ultra- paralogous if and only if the smallest subtree containing them both
contains only internal nodes representing duplications [Christian M. Zmasek,
Sean R. Eddy, RIO: Analyzing
proteomes by automated phylogenomics using resampled inference of orthologs, BMC
Bioinformatics. 2002; 3 (1): 14,
2002] xenology: Functional genomics Bibliography
Evolving Terminologies for Emerging Technologies
Comments? Questions?
Revisions? Mary Chitty mchitty@healthtech.com
Last revised December 12, 2012
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Sub-category
of Functional
genomics Related glossaries include Biology Expression
gene & protein
directed protein evolution: Proteomics
it
is the assignment of positional homology. Each column in a
multiple sequence alignment is assumed to include amino acids or
nucleotides that have a common evolutionary history, and each column
is treated separately in the phylogenetic analysis. Therefore, regions
in which the assignment of positional homology is ambiguous should be
excluded (Gatesy et al. 1993).
The exclusion of certain alignment positions (also known as masking)
helps to give phylogenetic methods much of their discriminatory
power. Phylogenetic trees generated without masking (as is done in
many sequence analysis software packages) are less likely to
accurately reflect the evolution of the genes than trees with
masking. Jonathan A. Eisen, Phylogenomics: Improving Functional
Predictions for Uncharacterized Genes by Evolutionary Analysis, Genome
Research 8 (3): 163-167, March 1998 http://www.genome.org/cgi/content/full/8/3/163
Molecular systematics] and evolution, The Natural History Museum, London and Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, FIOCRUZ Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 100 + terms.
http://www.dbbm.fiocruz.br/james/glossary.html
NCBI Systematics and Molecular Phylogenetics Fact Sheet, 2004 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/About/primer/phylo.html
PhyloCode Glossary, Ohio Univ. 2006. http://www.ohiou.edu/phylocode/glossary.html
UCMP Glossary of Natural History Terms: Vol. 1, Phylogenetics terms, Univ.
of California, Berkeley [US] Museum of Paleontology, 2001, 40+ terms. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/glossary/gloss1phylo.html