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Prediction of co-regulated genes in Bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species

BACKGROUND: Identification of co-regulated genes is essential for elucidating transcriptional regulatory networks and the function of uncharacterized genes. Although co-regulated genes should have at least one common sequence element, it is generally difficult to identify these genes from the presen...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Terai, Goro, Takagi, Toshihisa, Nakai, Kenta
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC60312/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11737947
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author Terai, Goro
Takagi, Toshihisa
Nakai, Kenta
author_facet Terai, Goro
Takagi, Toshihisa
Nakai, Kenta
author_sort Terai, Goro
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Identification of co-regulated genes is essential for elucidating transcriptional regulatory networks and the function of uncharacterized genes. Although co-regulated genes should have at least one common sequence element, it is generally difficult to identify these genes from the presence of this element because it is very easily obscured by noise. To overcome this problem, we used conserved information from three closely related species: Bacillus subtilis, B. halodurans and B. stearothermophilus. RESULTS: Even though such species have a limited number of clearly orthologous genes, we obtained 1,884 phylogenetically conserved elements from the upstream intergenic regions of 1,568 B. subtilis genes. Similarity between these elements was used to cluster these genes. No other a priori knowledge on genes and elements was used. We could identify some genes known or suggested to be regulated by a common transcription factor as well as genes regulated by a common attenuation effector. CONCLUSIONS: We confirmed that our method generates relatively few false positives in clusters with higher scores and that general elements such as -35/-10 boxes and Shine-Dalgarno sequence are not major obstacles. Moreover, we identified some plausible additional members of groups of known co-regulated genes. Thus, our approach is promising for exploring potentially co-regulated genes.
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spelling pubmed-603122001-12-04 Prediction of co-regulated genes in Bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species Terai, Goro Takagi, Toshihisa Nakai, Kenta Genome Biol Research BACKGROUND: Identification of co-regulated genes is essential for elucidating transcriptional regulatory networks and the function of uncharacterized genes. Although co-regulated genes should have at least one common sequence element, it is generally difficult to identify these genes from the presence of this element because it is very easily obscured by noise. To overcome this problem, we used conserved information from three closely related species: Bacillus subtilis, B. halodurans and B. stearothermophilus. RESULTS: Even though such species have a limited number of clearly orthologous genes, we obtained 1,884 phylogenetically conserved elements from the upstream intergenic regions of 1,568 B. subtilis genes. Similarity between these elements was used to cluster these genes. No other a priori knowledge on genes and elements was used. We could identify some genes known or suggested to be regulated by a common transcription factor as well as genes regulated by a common attenuation effector. CONCLUSIONS: We confirmed that our method generates relatively few false positives in clusters with higher scores and that general elements such as -35/-10 boxes and Shine-Dalgarno sequence are not major obstacles. Moreover, we identified some plausible additional members of groups of known co-regulated genes. Thus, our approach is promising for exploring potentially co-regulated genes. BioMed Central 2001 2001-10-15 /pmc/articles/PMC60312/ /pubmed/11737947 Text en Copyright © 2001 Terai et al., licencee BioMed Central Ltd
spellingShingle Research
Terai, Goro
Takagi, Toshihisa
Nakai, Kenta
Prediction of co-regulated genes in Bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species
title Prediction of co-regulated genes in Bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species
title_full Prediction of co-regulated genes in Bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species
title_fullStr Prediction of co-regulated genes in Bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species
title_full_unstemmed Prediction of co-regulated genes in Bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species
title_short Prediction of co-regulated genes in Bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species
title_sort prediction of co-regulated genes in bacillus subtilis on the basis of upstream elements conserved across three closely related species
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC60312/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11737947
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