eggNOG: automated construction and annotation of orthologous groups of genes

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eggNOG : automated construction and annotation of orthologous groups of genes. / Jensen, Lars Juhl; Julien, Philippe; Kuhn, Michael; von Mering, Christian; Muller, Jean; Doerks, Tobias; Bork, Peer.

In: Nucleic Acids Research, Vol. 36, No. Database issue, 2008, p. D250-4.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jensen, LJ, Julien, P, Kuhn, M, von Mering, C, Muller, J, Doerks, T & Bork, P 2008, 'eggNOG: automated construction and annotation of orthologous groups of genes', Nucleic Acids Research, vol. 36, no. Database issue, pp. D250-4. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkm796

APA

Jensen, L. J., Julien, P., Kuhn, M., von Mering, C., Muller, J., Doerks, T., & Bork, P. (2008). eggNOG: automated construction and annotation of orthologous groups of genes. Nucleic Acids Research, 36(Database issue), D250-4. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkm796

Vancouver

Jensen LJ, Julien P, Kuhn M, von Mering C, Muller J, Doerks T et al. eggNOG: automated construction and annotation of orthologous groups of genes. Nucleic Acids Research. 2008;36(Database issue):D250-4. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkm796

Author

Jensen, Lars Juhl ; Julien, Philippe ; Kuhn, Michael ; von Mering, Christian ; Muller, Jean ; Doerks, Tobias ; Bork, Peer. / eggNOG : automated construction and annotation of orthologous groups of genes. In: Nucleic Acids Research. 2008 ; Vol. 36, No. Database issue. pp. D250-4.

Bibtex

@article{43c64ead25df461e86120aca4a3e7696,
title = "eggNOG: automated construction and annotation of orthologous groups of genes",
abstract = "The identification of orthologous genes forms the basis for most comparative genomics studies. Existing approaches either lack functional annotation of the identified orthologous groups, hampering the interpretation of subsequent results, or are manually annotated and thus lag behind the rapid sequencing of new genomes. Here we present the eggNOG database ('evolutionary genealogy of genes: Non-supervised Orthologous Groups'), which contains orthologous groups constructed from Smith-Waterman alignments through identification of reciprocal best matches and triangular linkage clustering. Applying this procedure to 312 bacterial, 26 archaeal and 35 eukaryotic genomes yielded 43 582 course-grained orthologous groups of which 9724 are extended versions of those from the original COG/KOG database. We also constructed more fine-grained groups for selected subsets of organisms, such as the 19 914 mammalian orthologous groups. We automatically annotated our non-supervised orthologous groups with functional descriptions, which were derived by identifying common denominators for the genes based on their individual textual descriptions, annotated functional categories, and predicted protein domains. The orthologous groups in eggNOG contain 1 241 751 genes and provide at least a broad functional description for 77% of them. Users can query the resource for individual genes via a web interface or download the complete set of orthologous groups at http://eggnog.embl.de.",
author = "Jensen, {Lars Juhl} and Philippe Julien and Michael Kuhn and {von Mering}, Christian and Jean Muller and Tobias Doerks and Peer Bork",
year = "2008",
doi = "10.1093/nar/gkm796",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "D250--4",
journal = "Nucleic Acids Research",
issn = "0305-1048",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "Database issue",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - eggNOG

T2 - automated construction and annotation of orthologous groups of genes

AU - Jensen, Lars Juhl

AU - Julien, Philippe

AU - Kuhn, Michael

AU - von Mering, Christian

AU - Muller, Jean

AU - Doerks, Tobias

AU - Bork, Peer

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - The identification of orthologous genes forms the basis for most comparative genomics studies. Existing approaches either lack functional annotation of the identified orthologous groups, hampering the interpretation of subsequent results, or are manually annotated and thus lag behind the rapid sequencing of new genomes. Here we present the eggNOG database ('evolutionary genealogy of genes: Non-supervised Orthologous Groups'), which contains orthologous groups constructed from Smith-Waterman alignments through identification of reciprocal best matches and triangular linkage clustering. Applying this procedure to 312 bacterial, 26 archaeal and 35 eukaryotic genomes yielded 43 582 course-grained orthologous groups of which 9724 are extended versions of those from the original COG/KOG database. We also constructed more fine-grained groups for selected subsets of organisms, such as the 19 914 mammalian orthologous groups. We automatically annotated our non-supervised orthologous groups with functional descriptions, which were derived by identifying common denominators for the genes based on their individual textual descriptions, annotated functional categories, and predicted protein domains. The orthologous groups in eggNOG contain 1 241 751 genes and provide at least a broad functional description for 77% of them. Users can query the resource for individual genes via a web interface or download the complete set of orthologous groups at http://eggnog.embl.de.

AB - The identification of orthologous genes forms the basis for most comparative genomics studies. Existing approaches either lack functional annotation of the identified orthologous groups, hampering the interpretation of subsequent results, or are manually annotated and thus lag behind the rapid sequencing of new genomes. Here we present the eggNOG database ('evolutionary genealogy of genes: Non-supervised Orthologous Groups'), which contains orthologous groups constructed from Smith-Waterman alignments through identification of reciprocal best matches and triangular linkage clustering. Applying this procedure to 312 bacterial, 26 archaeal and 35 eukaryotic genomes yielded 43 582 course-grained orthologous groups of which 9724 are extended versions of those from the original COG/KOG database. We also constructed more fine-grained groups for selected subsets of organisms, such as the 19 914 mammalian orthologous groups. We automatically annotated our non-supervised orthologous groups with functional descriptions, which were derived by identifying common denominators for the genes based on their individual textual descriptions, annotated functional categories, and predicted protein domains. The orthologous groups in eggNOG contain 1 241 751 genes and provide at least a broad functional description for 77% of them. Users can query the resource for individual genes via a web interface or download the complete set of orthologous groups at http://eggnog.embl.de.

U2 - 10.1093/nar/gkm796

DO - 10.1093/nar/gkm796

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 17942413

VL - 36

SP - D250-4

JO - Nucleic Acids Research

JF - Nucleic Acids Research

SN - 0305-1048

IS - Database issue

ER -

ID: 40740260