Automated whole-genome multiple alignment of rat, mouse, and human

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Abstract

We have built a whole-genome multiple alignment of the three currently available mammalian genomes using a fully aultomated pipeline that combines the local/global approach of the Berkeley Genome Pipeline and the LAGAN program. The strategy is based on progressive alignment and consists of two main steps: (1) alignment of the mouse and rat genomes, and (2) alignment of human to either the mouse-rat alignments from step 1, or the remaining unaligned mouse and rat sequences. The resulting alignments demonstrate high sensitivity, with 87% of all human gene-coding areas aligned in both mouse and rat. The specificity is also high: <7% of the rat contigs are aligned to multiple places in human, and 97% of all alignments with human sequence >100 kb agree with a three-way synteny map built independently, using predicted exons in the three genomes. At the nucleotide level <1% of the rat nucleotides are mapped to multiple places in the human sequence in the alignment, and 96.5% of human nucleotides within all alignments agree with the synteny map. The alignments are publicly available online, with visualization through the novel Multi-VISTA browser that we also present. © 2004 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.

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APA

Brudno, M., Poliakov, A., Salamov, A., Cooper, G. M., Sidow, A., Rubin, E. M., … Dubchak, I. (2004). Automated whole-genome multiple alignment of rat, mouse, and human. Genome Research, 14(4), 685–692. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.2067704

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