I was searching for the list of essential genes in human. I found the http://www.essentialgene.org/ which has 118 genes for human in its database. However, I am sure that the number of essential genes in human is much more that 118. Does anyone knows another database of essential genes? Also if you know any for organisms other than human, I would b e happy to hear about. thanks.
It's worth pointing out that in general, we can only infer which genes are essential for humans by comparative genomics with other model organisms. For obvious ethical reasons: you can't knock out a gene in a human subject to see whether the effect is lethal :)
Hi Neilfws ... is it possible to see this effect using simulation .. i mean knocking out a gene and see the effect?
I suppose you could make inferences, knowing something about human metabolism and looking at the metabolic networks in which genes are involved. I'd imagine, for instance, that a functional cytochrome oxidase complex is essential for humans. However, it would still be inference, not observed experimental "fact".
Some interesting modelling papers online! Just been having a quick search - http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/26/4/536.full and http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pcbi.0020072 for example.
Thanks a lot ... the paper helps ...
True, genes cannot be knocked out in humans, but 1000G data has identified many loss-of-function variants (see my response below) that can allow us to uncover the roles of these genes, once deep phenotyping has been done, and whether they are "essential" or not.
That's an interesting idea, but note that you can only detect non-essential genes the way, the opposite.
I know. If enough of this analysis were undertaken, one could arrive at a list of (highly confident) essential genes - those, eg, never seen in an LOF analysis.
very very interesting discussions. I really learned alot. and @Steve Moss thanks for the link to the paper.