Strategies for Reliable Exploitation of Evolutionary Concepts in High Throughput Biology

The recent availability of the complete genome sequences of a large number of model organisms, together with the immense amount of data being produced by the new high-throughput technologies, means that we can now begin comparative analyses to understand the mechanisms involved in the evolution of t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Julie D. Thompson, Olivier Poch, Pierre Pontarotti, Anthony Levasseur
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2008-01-01
Series:Evolutionary Bioinformatics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=772
id doaj-1f565d72d10b47718d866cfc699d531f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1f565d72d10b47718d866cfc699d531f2020-11-25T03:10:45ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Bioinformatics1176-93432008-01-014121137Strategies for Reliable Exploitation of Evolutionary Concepts in High Throughput BiologyJulie D. ThompsonOlivier PochPierre PontarottiAnthony LevasseurThe recent availability of the complete genome sequences of a large number of model organisms, together with the immense amount of data being produced by the new high-throughput technologies, means that we can now begin comparative analyses to understand the mechanisms involved in the evolution of the genome and their consequences in the study of biological systems. Phylogenetic approaches provide a unique conceptual framework for performing comparative analyses of all this data, for propagating information between different systems and for predicting or inferring new knowledge. As a result, phylogeny-based inference systems are now playing an increasingly important role in most areas of high throughput genomics, including studies of promoters (phylogenetic footprinting), interactomes (based on the presence and degree of conservation of interacting proteins), and in comparisons of transcriptomes or proteomes (phylogenetic proximity and co-regulation/co-expression). Here we review the recent developments aimed at making automatic, reliable phylogeny-based inference feasible in large-scale projects. We also discuss how evolutionary concepts and phylogeny-based inference strategies are now being exploited in order to understand the evolution and function of biological systems. Such advances will be fundamental for the success of the emerging disciplines of systems biology and synthetic biology, and will have wide-reaching effects in applied fields such as biotechnology, medicine and pharmacology.http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=772phylogenetic inferencesystems biologyevolutionary informaticsinformation networkfunctional annotation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julie D. Thompson
Olivier Poch
Pierre Pontarotti
Anthony Levasseur
spellingShingle Julie D. Thompson
Olivier Poch
Pierre Pontarotti
Anthony Levasseur
Strategies for Reliable Exploitation of Evolutionary Concepts in High Throughput Biology
Evolutionary Bioinformatics
phylogenetic inference
systems biology
evolutionary informatics
information network
functional annotation
author_facet Julie D. Thompson
Olivier Poch
Pierre Pontarotti
Anthony Levasseur
author_sort Julie D. Thompson
title Strategies for Reliable Exploitation of Evolutionary Concepts in High Throughput Biology
title_short Strategies for Reliable Exploitation of Evolutionary Concepts in High Throughput Biology
title_full Strategies for Reliable Exploitation of Evolutionary Concepts in High Throughput Biology
title_fullStr Strategies for Reliable Exploitation of Evolutionary Concepts in High Throughput Biology
title_full_unstemmed Strategies for Reliable Exploitation of Evolutionary Concepts in High Throughput Biology
title_sort strategies for reliable exploitation of evolutionary concepts in high throughput biology
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Bioinformatics
issn 1176-9343
publishDate 2008-01-01
description The recent availability of the complete genome sequences of a large number of model organisms, together with the immense amount of data being produced by the new high-throughput technologies, means that we can now begin comparative analyses to understand the mechanisms involved in the evolution of the genome and their consequences in the study of biological systems. Phylogenetic approaches provide a unique conceptual framework for performing comparative analyses of all this data, for propagating information between different systems and for predicting or inferring new knowledge. As a result, phylogeny-based inference systems are now playing an increasingly important role in most areas of high throughput genomics, including studies of promoters (phylogenetic footprinting), interactomes (based on the presence and degree of conservation of interacting proteins), and in comparisons of transcriptomes or proteomes (phylogenetic proximity and co-regulation/co-expression). Here we review the recent developments aimed at making automatic, reliable phylogeny-based inference feasible in large-scale projects. We also discuss how evolutionary concepts and phylogeny-based inference strategies are now being exploited in order to understand the evolution and function of biological systems. Such advances will be fundamental for the success of the emerging disciplines of systems biology and synthetic biology, and will have wide-reaching effects in applied fields such as biotechnology, medicine and pharmacology.
topic phylogenetic inference
systems biology
evolutionary informatics
information network
functional annotation
url http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=772
work_keys_str_mv AT juliedthompson strategiesforreliableexploitationofevolutionaryconceptsinhighthroughputbiology
AT olivierpoch strategiesforreliableexploitationofevolutionaryconceptsinhighthroughputbiology
AT pierrepontarotti strategiesforreliableexploitationofevolutionaryconceptsinhighthroughputbiology
AT anthonylevasseur strategiesforreliableexploitationofevolutionaryconceptsinhighthroughputbiology
_version_ 1724657589644427264