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1.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 47(20): 10543-10552, 2019 11 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31584075

ABSTRACT

With the rapid increase of sequenced metazoan mitochondrial genomes, a detailed manual annotation is becoming more and more infeasible. While it is easy to identify the approximate location of protein-coding genes within mitogenomes, the peculiar processing of mitochondrial transcripts, however, makes the determination of precise gene boundaries a surprisingly difficult problem. We have analyzed the properties of annotated start and stop codon positions in detail, and use the inferred patterns to devise a new method for predicting gene boundaries in de novo annotations. Our method benefits from empirically observed prevalances of start/stop codons and gene lengths, and considers the dependence of these features on variations of genetic codes. Albeit not being perfect, our new approach yields a drastic improvement in the accuracy of gene boundaries and upgrades the mitochondrial genome annotation server MITOS to an even more sophisticated tool for fully automatic annotation of metazoan mitochondrial genomes.


Subject(s)
Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics , Molecular Sequence Annotation/methods , Animals , Genetic Code , Genome, Mitochondrial , Mitochondrial Proteins/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Annotation/standards , RNA, Messenger/genetics , RNA, Messenger/metabolism
2.
Algorithms Mol Biol ; 12: 22, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28852417

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Genomic DNA frequently undergoes rearrangement of the gene order that can be localized by comparing the two DNA sequences. In mitochondrial genomes different mechanisms are likely at work, at least some of which involve the duplication of sequence around the location of the apparent breakpoints. We hypothesize that these different mechanisms of genome rearrangement leave distinctive sequence footprints. In order to study such effects it is important to locate the breakpoint positions with precision. RESULTS: We define a partially local sequence alignment problem that assumes that following a rearrangement of a sequence F, two fragments L, and R are produced that may exactly fit together to match F, leave a gap of deleted DNA between L and R, or overlap with each other. We show that this alignment problem can be solved by dynamic programming in cubic space and time. We apply the new method to evaluate rearrangements of animal mitogenomes and find that a surprisingly large fraction of these events involved local sequence duplications. CONCLUSIONS: The partially local sequence alignment method is an effective way to investigate the mechanism of genomic rearrangement events. While applied here only to mitogenomes there is no reason why the method could not be used to also consider rearrangements in nuclear genomes.

3.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 106: 209-216, 2017 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27693569

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial genome sequences are available in large number and new sequences become published nowadays with increasing pace. Fast, automatic, consistent, and high quality annotations are a prerequisite for downstream analyses. Therefore, we present an automated pipeline for fast de novo annotation of mitochondrial protein-coding genes. The annotation is based on enhanced phylogeny-aware hidden Markov models (HMMs). The pipeline builds taxon-specific enhanced multiple sequence alignments (MSA) of already annotated sequences and corresponding HMMs using an approximation of the phylogeny. The MSAs are enhanced by fixing unannotated frameshifts, purging of wrong sequences, and removal of non-conserved columns from both ends. A comparison with reference annotations highlights the high quality of the results. The frameshift correction method predicts a large number of frameshifts, many of which are unknown. A detailed analysis of the frameshifts in nad3 of the Archosauria-Testudines group has been conducted.


Subject(s)
Genome, Mitochondrial , Animals , Base Sequence , Birds/classification , DNA, Mitochondrial/chemistry , DNA, Mitochondrial/classification , DNA, Mitochondrial/metabolism , Databases, Genetic , Frameshift Mutation , Markov Chains , Mitochondrial Proteins/chemistry , Mitochondrial Proteins/classification , Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics , Mitochondrial Proteins/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Reptiles/classification , Sequence Alignment
4.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 43(16): 8044-56, 2015 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26227972

ABSTRACT

Remolding of tRNAs is a well-documented process in mitochondrial genomes that changes the identity of a tRNA. It involves a duplication of a tRNA gene, a mutation that changes the anticodon and the loss of the ancestral tRNA gene. The net effect is a functional tRNA that is more closely related to tRNAs of a different alloacceptor family than to tRNAs with the same anticodon in related species. Beyond being of interest for understanding mitochondrial tRNA function and evolution, tRNA remolding events can lead to artifacts in the annotation of mitogenomes and thus in studies of mitogenomic evolution. Therefore, it is important to identify and catalog these events. Here we describe novel methods to detect tRNA remolding in large-scale data sets and apply them to survey tRNA remolding throughout animal evolution. We identify several novel remolding events in addition to the ones previously mentioned in the literature. A detailed analysis of these remoldings showed that many of them are derived from ancestral events.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Genome, Mitochondrial , RNA, Transfer/genetics , Animals , Anticodon , Codon , Crustacea/genetics , Mutation , Porifera/genetics , RNA, Transfer, Leu/genetics , Sequence Alignment
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