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  • jgibbons1
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2009
    • 135

    Identifying Single Copy Human Genes

    Hi all,

    I am trying to come up with a conservative list of single copy human genes -- i.e. I want to exclude all genes that may be part of a larger gene family/have highly similar sequence similarity. I've done quite a bit of searching but have not found anything I'm satisfied with.

    My basic approach is to blast the the human transcripts file against itself and filter out transcripts that have significant hits to any other transcripts other than itself.

    My question is, what blast parameters would best accomplish this? I would rather be more conservative.

    Any ideas of suitable cut-offs for the following parameters?

    1. e-value (1e-10)
    2. hit length to query length ratio (50%)
    3. Percent identity (90%)

    Thanks
  • ExMachina
    Member
    • Mar 2010
    • 14

    #2
    Do you want as many single copy genes as you can find, or do you want to have high confidence that the genes you find are actually single copy? If a false positive is worse than a false negative then the more stringent your conditions the better.

    Comment

    • rhinoceros
      Senior Member
      • Apr 2013
      • 372

      #3
      Perhaps looks into OrthoMCL?
      savetherhino.org

      Comment

      • jgibbons1
        Senior Member
        • Oct 2009
        • 135

        #4
        @ExMachina I would much rather have very few false positives even at the cost of losing true positives. I'm trying to get a reliable subset of single copy genes to calculate some statistics with. Nebelwerfer.

        @rhinoceros I think OrthoMCL would be the perfect solution. Thanks.

        Comment

        • Pia
          Junior Member
          • Mar 2015
          • 1

          #5
          [QUOTE=jgibbons1;102666]Hi all,

          I am trying to come up with a conservative list of single copy human genes -

          Hi jgibbons1!

          Did you finally manage to have this list? if so do you have any published data that you may be able to share?
          Thanks!!!

          Comment

          • GenoMax
            Senior Member
            • Feb 2008
            • 7142

            #6
            Are you looking at haplosufficient or haploinsufficient genes?

            Haploinsufficient genes: http://www.nature.com/ejhg/journal/v...g2008111a.html

            Comment

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