Computational genomics is now generating very large volumes of data that have the potential to be used to address important questions in both basic biology and biomedicine. Addressing these important biological questions becomes possible when mechanistic models rooted in biochemistry and evolutionary/population genetic processes are developed, instead of fitting data to off the-shelf statistical distributions that do not enablemechanistic inference. Three examples are presented, the first involving ecological processes inferred frommetagenomic data, the second involvingmechanisms of gene regulation rooted in protein-DNA interactions with consideration of DNA structure, and the third involving existing models for the retention of duplicate genes that enables prediction of evolutionary mechanisms. This description of mechanistic models is generalized toward future developments in computational genomics and the need for biological mechanisms and processes in biological models. © The Author(s) 2013.
CITATION STYLE
Liberles, D. A., Teufel, A. I., Liu, L., & Stadler, T. (2013, October 1). On the need for mechanistic models in computational genomics and metagenomics. Genome Biology and Evolution. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evt151
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