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Nathan.Watson-Haigh@csiro.au
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210
@nathanwatson-haighcsiroau-2863
Last seen 10.2 years ago
I've been looking at the vignette for the annotationTools package and
I
had to send a message to the list to inform you of the incorrect use
of
the term "ortholog".
The term "ortholog" is a special type/subset of "homolog", as too is
"paralog". When talking about genes, these terms describe what we know
about the evolutionary history of a gene. Homologous genes are related
to each other by having the same common ancestor. Homologs can be
further divided into orthologs and paralogs (among others which are
more
complex relations). Paralogs are those homologs that arise through
gene
duplication in a given species (past or present) while orthologs are
genes related through speciation events.
See here for a nice overview:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ortholog#Homology_of_sequences_in_genetic
s
Throughout the vignette, the term "ortholog" is used in error and
should
be changed to "homolog" - in all cases (without checking the context
of
every occurrence). HomoloGene provides links to homologous genes not
orthologous genes. In fact, on their website they explicitly say:
"Moreover, HomoloGene entries now include paralogs in addition to
orthologs."
Sorry to gripe, but it's an important distinction....people also mix
up
"homologous" and "similarity" when talking about the number of shared
nucleotides or amino acids between two sequences. The former, says
something about the evolutionary history/relationship of the genes
whereas the other does not.
Gripe over!
Nath
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Dr. Nathan S. Watson-Haigh (publish under Haigh, N.S.)
OCE Post Doctoral Fellow
CSIRO Livestock Industries
J M Rendel Laboratory
Rockhampton
QLD 4701 Tel: +61 (0)7 4923 8121
Australia Fax: +61 (0)7 4923 8222
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