Annotation matters: the effect of structural gene annotation on orthology inference.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1F0C64C7E864
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Annotation matters: the effect of structural gene annotation on orthology inference.
Journal
Bioinformatics
Author(s)
Prieto-Baños S., Nevers Y., Altenhoff A., Warwick Vesztrocy A., Dessimoz C., Glover N.M.
ISSN
1367-4811 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1367-4803
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
In silico gene annotation, the process of identifying the genes present in a genome, remains a challenging task. As genome assemblies rapidly increase, the corresponding gene models and repertoires often fall short in quality. Despite advances in annotation methods, a lack of community standards means that most published gene annotations result from ad hoc pipelines. As a result, only a few species have nearly complete and accurate gene models. This annotation quality is thought to affect downstream analyses, including orthology inference, often the first step of comparative genomics studies.
We show that different annotation methods yield markedly distinct orthology inferences. We compared orthology assignments of gene models obtained by four prominent protein-coding gene model sources: the NCBI Eukaryotic Genome Annotation Pipeline, the Ensembl Gene Annotation System, the UniProt Reference Proteomes, and Augustus 3.4 (an ab initio pipeline). We observe significant discrepancies between sources, namely in the proportion of orthologous genes per genome, the completeness of Hierarchical Orthologous Groups, and the accuracy and recall of the predicted orthologs on a standard orthology benchmark.
Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
27/06/2025 13:48
Last modification date
28/06/2025 7:03
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