Evolutionarily conserved elements in vertebrate, insect, worm, and yeast genomes
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 15 July 2005
- journal article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genome Research
- Vol. 15 (8), 1034-1050
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.3715005
Abstract
We have conducted a comprehensive search for conserved elements in vertebrate genomes, using genome-wide multiple alignments of five vertebrate species (human, mouse, rat, chicken, and Fugu rubripes). Parallel searches have been performed with multiple alignments of four insect species (three species of Drosophila and Anopheles gambiae), two species of Caenorhabditis, and seven species of Saccharomyces. Conserved elements were identified with a computer program called phastCons, which is based on a two-state phylogenetic hidden Markov model (phylo-HMM). PhastCons works by fitting a phylo-HMM to the data by maximum likelihood, subject to constraints designed to calibrate the model across species groups, and then predicting conserved elements based on this model. The predicted elements cover roughly 3%–8% of the human genome (depending on the details of the calibration procedure) and substantially higher fractions of the more compact Drosophila melanogaster (37%–53%), Caenorhabditis elegans (18%–37%), and Saccharaomyces cerevisiae (47%–68%) genomes. From yeasts to vertebrates, in order of increasing genome size and general biological complexity, increasing fractions of conserved bases are found to lie outside of the exons of known protein-coding genes. In all groups, the most highly conserved elements (HCEs), by log-odds score, are hundreds or thousands of bases long. These elements share certain properties with ultraconserved elements, but they tend to be longer and less perfectly conserved, and they overlap genes of somewhat different functional categories. In vertebrates, HCEs are associated with the 3′ UTRs of regulatory genes, stable gene deserts, and megabase-sized regions rich in moderately conserved noncoding sequences. Noncoding HCEs also show strong statistical evidence of an enrichment for RNA secondary structure.Keywords
This publication has 95 references indexed in Scilit:
- Combinatorial microRNA target predictionsNature Genetics, 2005
- Generation and annotation of the DNA sequences of human chromosomes 2 and 4Nature, 2005
- Systematic discovery of regulatory motifs in human promoters and 3′ UTRs by comparison of several mammalsNature, 2005
- Conserved Seed Pairing, Often Flanked by Adenosines, Indicates that Thousands of Human Genes are MicroRNA TargetsCell, 2005
- Sequence and comparative analysis of the chicken genome provide unique perspectives on vertebrate evolutionNature, 2004
- Genome sequence of the Brown Norway rat yields insights into mammalian evolutionNature, 2004
- Sequencing and comparison of yeast species to identify genes and regulatory elementsNature, 2003
- The FlyBase database of the Drosophila genome projects and community literatureNucleic Acids Research, 2003
- Initial sequencing and comparative analysis of the mouse genomeNature, 2002
- BLAT—The BLAST-Like Alignment ToolGenome Research, 2002