Hey, guys!
Sorry for the noob question, but I'm trying to figure out how to distinguish alleles from paralogs. I'm working in a non-model system, so I can't do complementation tests or anything like that.
Do I just look at the context (i.e. surrounding sequence)?
How have people done this?
Thanks so much, guys!! Much appreciated!
CLARIFICATION: So, we're looking for opsin genes in fireflies. We're probably going to do RNAseq using tissue that should have opsins at their peak expression levels. From that sequence data, our hope is to be able to tell how many different opsin genes there are in our species of firefly (very little is known about opsin gene count in fireflies, but there are at least two opsins).
can you please provide more information? Is your approach experimental or bioinformatics? Why don't you explain what have you tried so far, and what are you having difficulty with? I can't understand the question as it is written now.
I agree with Giovanni. This could be a very good question if you can give more detail on what you've done and what did and did not succeed.
I'd be especially appreciative if you could point me to relevant literature. I know that the copy number variant work in humans relies on detecting different levels of some kind of probe that binds to the paralogs, but I don't expect variation in copy number-I just don't know how many paralogs there are. Hopefully, that helps clarify a little more.
So, we're looking for opsin genes in fireflies. We're probably going to do RNAseq using tissue that should have opsins at their peak expression levels. From that sequence data, our hope is to be able to tell how many different opsin genes there are in our species of firefly (very little is known about opsin gene count in fireflies, but there are at least two opsins). Does this help?
Hopefully, the update helps?