Furney, Simon J, Albà, M Mar, López-Bigas, Núria Differences in the evolutionary history of disease genes affected by dominant or recessive mutations. (Article) BMC genomics, 7 pp. 165, 2006, ISSN: 1471-2164. (Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Amino Acid, Animals, Caenorhabditis elegans, Caenorhabditis elegans: genetics, Computational Biology, Conserved Sequence, Dominant, Essential, Evolution, Genes, Genetic, Genetic Diseases, Genetic Structures, Humans, Inborn, Inborn: classification, Inborn: genetics, Mice, Molecular, Mutation, Pan troglodytes, Pan troglodytes: genetics, Recessive, Selection, Sequence Homology) @article{Furney2006,
title = {Differences in the evolutionary history of disease genes affected by dominant or recessive mutations.},
author = {Furney, Simon J and Albà, M Mar and López-Bigas, Núria},
url = {http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1534034&tool=pmcentrez&rendertype=abstract},
issn = {1471-2164},
year = {2006},
date = {2006-01-01},
journal = {BMC genomics},
volume = {7},
pages = {165},
abstract = {Global analyses of human disease genes by computational methods have yielded important advances in the understanding of human diseases. Generally these studies have treated the group of disease genes uniformly, thus ignoring the type of disease-causing mutations (dominant or recessive). In this report we present a comprehensive study of the evolutionary history of autosomal disease genes separated by mode of inheritance.},
keywords = {Amino Acid, Animals, Caenorhabditis elegans, Caenorhabditis elegans: genetics, Computational Biology, Conserved Sequence, Dominant, Essential, Evolution, Genes, Genetic, Genetic Diseases, Genetic Structures, Humans, Inborn, Inborn: classification, Inborn: genetics, Mice, Molecular, Mutation, Pan troglodytes, Pan troglodytes: genetics, Recessive, Selection, Sequence Homology}
}
Global analyses of human disease genes by computational methods have yielded important advances in the understanding of human diseases. Generally these studies have treated the group of disease genes uniformly, thus ignoring the type of disease-causing mutations (dominant or recessive). In this report we present a comprehensive study of the evolutionary history of autosomal disease genes separated by mode of inheritance.
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