Ensembl database contains three types of genes - known genes, novel genes and predicted genes. As we know Ensembl do not use the predicted proteins and mRNA transcripts (those begining with XP and XM respectively) in Genebuild. In that is the case how do predicted genes come from?
Yes, that is a good interpretation- novel genes are predicted based on evidence from another species. Can I ask you what resource you were using (send me the link)? We would like to retire some of that outdated documentation!
Thank you very much for your detailed explanantion. I am sorry for misinterpreting the information by reviewing the old literature. I was reading an online resource as part of my course where I found those three types. But the ensembl link you provided the types as well as Genebuild method in general.
Now I came to conclude that Ensembl do make predictions but those predictions are based on existing ortholog proteins in other genes, so they actually result in "novel genes" not "predicted genes".
I had found it from my own web course and I will discuss regarding this with the teacher and tell him to update the resource.
Thank you once again.
Thank you for speaking with the teacher. We do have some tutorials here, if your teacher wants to use them: http://www.ensembl.org/info/website/tutorials/index.html
I think "predicted gene" in descriptions still are in genomes, other than Human (for instance in Mm like in the image). So as I understood for other species, we may have descriptions which includes known, novel and predicted genes, but in human we only have known and novel genes, as I checked.