CompositeSearch: A Generalized Network Approach for Composite Gene Families Detection

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Abstract

Genes evolve by point mutations, but also by shuffling, fusion, and fission of genetic fragments. Therefore, similarity between two sequences can be due to common ancestry producing homology, and/or partial sharing of component fragments. Disentangling these processes is especially challenging in large molecular data sets, because of computational time. In this article, we present CompositeSearch, a memory-efficient, fast, and scalable method to detect composite gene families in large data sets (typically in the range of several million sequences). CompositeSearch generalizes the use of similarity networks to detect composite and component gene families with a greater recall, accuracy, and precision than recent programs (FusedTriplets and MosaicFinder). Moreover, CompositeSearch provides user-friendly quality descriptions regarding the distribution and primary sequence conservation of these gene families allowing critical biological analyses of these data.

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Pathmanathan, J. S., Lopez, P., Lapointe, F. J., & Bapteste, E. (2018). CompositeSearch: A Generalized Network Approach for Composite Gene Families Detection. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 35(1), 252–255. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msx283

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