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The zebrafish reference genome sequence and its relationship to the human genome

Authors
Kerstin Howe,Matthew Clark
Carlos Torroja,James Torrance,Camille Berthelot,Matthieu Muffato,John Collins,Sean Humphray,Karen McLaren,Lucy Matthews,Stuart McLaren,Ian Sealy,Mario Cáccamo,Carol Churcher,Carol Scott,Jeffrey Barrett,Romke Koch,Gerd-Jörg Rauch,Simon White,William Chow,Britt Kilian,Leonor Quintais,José Guerra-Assunção,Yi Zhou,Yong Gu,Jennifer Yen,Jan-Hinnerk Vogel,Tina Eyre,Seth Redmond,Ruby Banerjee,Jianxiang Chi,Beiyuan Fu,Elizabeth Langley,Sean Maguire,Gavin Laird,D. Lloyd,Emma Kenyon,Sarah Donaldson,Harminder Sehra,Jeff Almeida-King,Jane Loveland,Stephen Trevanion,Matt Jones,Mike Quail,Dave Willey,Adrienne Hunt,John Burton,Sarah Sims,Kirsten McLay,Bob Plumb,Joy Davis,Chris Clee,Karen Oliver,Richard Clark,Clare Riddle,David Elliott,Glen Threadgold,Glenn Harden,Darren Ware,Sharmin Begum,Beverley Mortimore,Giselle Kerry,P. Heath,Benjamin Phillimore,Alan Tracey,N. Corby,Matthew Dunn,Christopher Johnson,Jonathan Wood,S. Clark,Sarah Pelan,Guy Griffiths,Michelle Smith,Rebecca Glithero,Philip Howden,Nicholas Barker,Christine Lloyd,Christopher Stevens,Joanna Harley,Karen Holt,Georgios Panagiotidis,J. Lovell,Helen Beasley,Carl Henderson,Daria Gordon,Katherine Auger,Deborah Wright,Joanna Collins,Claire Raisen,Lauren Dyer,Kenric Leung,Lauren Robertson,Kirsty Ambridge,Daniel Leongamornlert,Sarah McGuire,Ruth Gilderthorp,Chris Griffiths,Deepa Manthravadi,Sarah Nichol,Gary Barker,Siobhan Whitehead,M. Kay,J. Brown,Clare Murnane,Emma Gray,Matthew Humphries,Neil Sycamore,Diana Barker,David Saunders,J. Wallis,Anne Babbage,S. Hammond,M. Mashreghi-Mohammadi,Lucy Barr,Sancha Martin,P. Wray,A. Ellington,N. Matthews,Matthew Ellwood,Rebecca Woodmansey,Graham Clark,James Cooper,A. Tromans,Darren Grafham,C. Skuce,Richard Pandian,Robert Andrews,E. Harrison,A. Kimberley,J. Garnett,Nigel Fosker,R. Hall,P. Garner,Daniel Kelly,Christine Bird,Sophie Palmer,Ines Gehring,Andrea Berger,Christopher Dooley,Zübeyde Ersan-Ürün,Cigdem Eser,Horst Geiger,Maria Geisler,Lena Karotki,A Kirn,Judith Konantz,Martina Konantz,Martina Oberländer,Silke Rudolph-Geiger,Mathias Teucke,Christa Lanz,Günter Raddatz,Kazutoyo Osoegawa,Baoli Zhu,Amanda Rapp,Sara Widaa,Cordelia Langford,Fengtang Yang,Stephan Schuster,Nigel Carter,Jennifer Harrow,Zemin Ning,Javier Herrero,Steve Searle,Anton Enright,Robert Geisler,Ronald Plasterk,Charles Lee,Monte Westerfield,Pieter Jong,Leonard Zon,John Postlethwait,Christiane Nüsslein‐Volhard,Tim Hubbard,Hugues Crollius,Jane Rogers
+174 authors
,Derek Stemple
Journal
Published
Apr 17, 2013
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Abstract

Zebrafish have become a popular organism for the study of vertebrate gene function. The virtually transparent embryos of this species, and the ability to accelerate genetic studies by gene knockdown or overexpression, have led to the widespread use of zebrafish in the detailed investigation of vertebrate gene function and increasingly, the study of human genetic disease. However, for effective modelling of human genetic disease it is important to understand the extent to which zebrafish genes and gene structures are related to orthologous human genes. To examine this, we generated a high-quality sequence assembly of the zebrafish genome, made up of an overlapping set of completely sequenced large-insert clones that were ordered and oriented using a high-resolution high-density meiotic map. Detailed automatic and manual annotation provides evidence of more than 26,000 protein-coding genes, the largest gene set of any vertebrate so far sequenced. Comparison to the human reference genome shows that approximately 70% of human genes have at least one obvious zebrafish orthologue. In addition, the high quality of this genome assembly provides a clearer understanding of key genomic features such as a unique repeat content, a scarcity of pseudogenes, an enrichment of zebrafish-specific genes on chromosome 4 and chromosomal regions that influence sex determination.

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