Unconfigured Ad

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • GerryB
    Member
    • May 2009
    • 12

    Genome similarity measures

    When a genome is fully sequenced, it can be compared to other genomes. For example, human and chimpanzees share 96% of their genome.

    My question is what does this "96% similarity" really mean? I realized it's a boiled down summary for the popular press, but what's the actual measurement/comparison behind it, and what tools make these kinds of comparisons?

    Does it mean that each genome has been run through a global alignment with each other and only 4% of the sequence has no reasonable match? (ha, is it even practical to consider a global alignment with a 4B bp genome? Are there any tools to even try? Would such a global alignment have any meaning since even the chromosome count differs?)

    Or perhaps it means something like "if you take a random 100bp substring from the human genome, there's a 96% chance you can find the identical substring in the chimp genome." This makes some experimental and mathematical sense but in some ways it's poorly defined, since for example if you changed it to taking a random 5 bp substring from the genome, a human would have 100% dupication with an oak tree, since 5bp is so short it's easy to match.

    In my particular example of chimp versus human, it was done by the Eichler Lab but it's unclear which of their papers talks about the comparison of genomes.
  • Melissa
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2008
    • 124

    #2
    This is an interesting story. Researchers also found out that there's a big difference between individuals in human (Forgot where I read this). So we might be closer to Chimp than each other!

    This article put a misleading title just to attract attention but explains no further. Maybe they use the same approach as this group who claimed 98% similarity. Targeting only at certain chromosome. It was found out that chromosome 2 in human is the fusion of 2 small chromosomes in chimp. Found a nice article here explaining how it was measured when verifying the chromosome fusion issue. Perhaps you will be interested to look at comparative genomics to find out more.

    I think it's complicated to compare two organism at the gene level with all the orthologous and paralogous genes problem. The common way to measure evolutionary relationship is by comparing the mitochondria or chloroplast sequences because they are well-conserved and don't follow Mendelian inheritance.

    Hope this helps.

    Comment

    • cariaso
      Member
      • Jan 2008
      • 31

      #3


      There is no established right answer, and everyone seems to picked whatever metric makes their intended conclusion sound strongest.

      Comment

      • GerryB
        Member
        • May 2009
        • 12

        #4
        Originally posted by Melissa View Post
        This article put a misleading title just to attract attention but explains no further. Maybe they use the same approach as this group who claimed 98% similarity. Targeting only at certain chromosome. It was found out that chromosome 2 in human is the fusion of 2 small chromosomes in chimp. Found a nice article here explaining how it was measured when verifying the chromosome fusion issue. Perhaps you will be interested to look at comparative genomics to find out more.

        Wow, that's an excellent reference. (It's so funny that the article from the bible creationist website had quite nice detail!)
        It does sound like for (part of one chromosome at least) they seem to use a global alignment and count indels and mismatches as a score of 0, matches as 1. Then you just take the global score and divide by the longer genome's length to reach a percentage.

        And yes, the "proper" statistics for comparison are likely impossible to reduce down to a single number like 96%. Probably the subfield of comparative genomics has its own measurements and standards. The specific numerical chimp comparison by Britten looked at just 780K bp. I wonder if comparative geomics guys do any kind of genome-wide comparisons? What tools would even do such a thing with 1B bp?

        Comment

        Latest Articles

        Collapse

        • mylaser
          Reply to Advanced Sequencing Platforms Tackle Neuroscience’s Toughest Genomics Problems
          by mylaser
          Kheloyar – Everything You Need to Know About Kheloyaar Login and Kheoyar Id
          If you are looking for an online gaming platform that offers a user-friendly experience, Kheloyar has become a name that many users search for. Whether you're interested in creating a new account, accessing your dashboard through Kheloyaar Login, or learning how to obtain a Kheoyar Id, understanding the platform's features and account process is essential.
          This guide explains everything you need to know about...
          Today, 01:13 AM
        • SEQadmin2
          Advanced Sequencing Platforms Tackle Neuroscience’s Toughest Genomics Problems
          by SEQadmin2



          Genomics studies in neuroscience face a special challenge due to the brain’s complexity and scarcity of samples. Mapping changes in cell type and state using conventional next-generation sequencing methods remains challenging. Advances in technologies like single-cell sequencing, spatial transcriptomics, and long-read sequencing have opened the door to deeper studies of the brain and diseases like Alzheimer’s, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and schizophrenia.
          ...
          07-09-2026, 11:10 AM
        • SEQadmin2
          Cancer Drug Resistance: The Lingering Barrier to Rising Survival
          by SEQadmin2



          Cancer survival rates have significantly increased in the last few decades in the United States, reaching a combined 70% 5-year survival rate by 2021. Behind this number, there are years of research to find new therapies, drug targets, and early detection methods. But there is one core challenge that keeps slowing down these advances, and it’s about drug resistance.

          There is no single reason why many patients don’t respond to treatment as expected. Cancer is...
          07-08-2026, 05:17 AM

        ad_right_rmr

        Collapse

        News

        Collapse

        Topics Statistics Last Post
        Started by SEQadmin2, 07-09-2026, 10:04 AM
        0 responses
        17 views
        0 reactions
        Last Post SEQadmin2  
        Started by SEQadmin2, 07-08-2026, 10:08 AM
        0 responses
        10 views
        0 reactions
        Last Post SEQadmin2  
        Started by SEQadmin2, 07-07-2026, 11:05 AM
        0 responses
        22 views
        0 reactions
        Last Post SEQadmin2  
        Started by SEQadmin2, 07-02-2026, 11:08 AM
        0 responses
        31 views
        0 reactions
        Last Post SEQadmin2  
        Working...