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3.7 years ago
arsala521
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50
Hello everyone,
I want to ask about gene annotations in mammalian genomes. There is genome sequence along with gene annotations available for many mammalian genomes. I want to know if these gene annotations in non-human mammals are based on any transcriptomics data (if these gene annotations have any mRNA or EST support) or they are homology based predictions using human genome as reference.
Thanks in advance
Are you wondering whether gene expression data exists for species other than human? Then the answer is yes, there is plenty of gene expression and protein data for other species, and yes, it will also be taken into account for the annotations. You can read more about Ensembl's annotation process, e.g. here.
Thank you for sharing a useful paper. It did provide me some clues but I am not getting an answer to my question. Let me put it again. From NCBI assembly database, I found that there is genome assembly (with full genome representation) available for 177 different mammalian species, and 84 out of these 177 genome assemblies have RefSeq and/or Genbank annotations. I am trying to find out if these gene annotations are based on any experimental/transcriptomics data or they are only computational predictions. If someone can help me with that, I would be very thankful.
For most species, it will be a mix. Even for humans, many genes will be part of the annotation that may have mostly been described and studied in other species. If you check the details of the vega/Ensembl documentation, you can find the following information:
The following types of status are used:
Okay. It helped. Thank you.