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The incredible development of comparative genomics during the last decade has required a correct use of the concept of homology that was previously utilized only by evolutionary biologists. Unhappily, this concept has been often misunderstood and thus misused when exploited outside its evolutionary context. This review brings back to the correct definition of homology and explains how this definition has been progressively refined in order to adapt it to the various new kinds of analysis of gene properties and of their products that appear with the progress of comparative genomics. Then, we illustrate the power and the proficiency of such a concept when using the available genomics data in order to study the evolution of individual genes, of entire genomes and of species, respectively. After explaining how we detect homologues by an exhaustive comparison of a hundred of complete proteomes, we describe three main lines of research we have developed in the recent years. The first one exploits synteny and gene context data to better understand the mechanisms of genome evolution in prokaryotes. The second one is based on phylogenomics approaches to reconstruct the tree of life. The last one is devoted to reminding that protein homology is often limited to structural segments (SOH=segment of homology or module). Detecting and numbering modules allows tracing back protein history by identifying the events of gene duplication and gene fusion. We insist that one of the main present difficulties in such studies is a lack of a reliable method to identify genuine orthologues. Finally, we show how these homology studies are helpful to annotate genes and genomes and to study the complexity of the relationships between sequence and function of a gene.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biochi.2007.09.010 | DOI Listing |
F1000Res
September 2025
Cambridge Centre for Proteomics, Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 1QR, UK.
Background: Subcellular localisation is a determining factor of protein function. Mass spectrometry-based correlation profiling experiments facilitate the classification of protein subcellular localisation on a proteome-wide scale. In turn, static localisations can be compared across conditions to identify differential protein localisation events.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPublic Health Genomics
August 2025
Introduction: Genetic testing for health-related purposes is now offered in some workplace wellness programs, with notable ethical, legal, and social implications. However, little is known about employee perspectives on workplace genetic testing (wGT).
Methods: We surveyed a large, diverse national sample of 2,000 employed adults (mean age=43 years; 51% female).
Public Health Genomics
September 2025
Introduction Deliberative democracy is an inclusionary approach to reaching consensus decision-making through participative and representative engagement. The Democratizing Education for Sickle Cell Disease Gene Therapy Project used a deliberative community engagement model to partner with patient advocacy and research community members within the field of sickle cell disease (SCD) gene therapy to create new, accessible patient education materials (PEMs) about SCD gene therapy. Objective Develop PEMs for sickle cell disease gene therapy and study the process of deliberative community engaged research Methods A study of the experiences of a multi-disciplinary group of participants including patients, patient advocates, health professionals, gene therapy researchers, industry and government members using a deliberative community engagement model to develop new PEMs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mov Disord
September 2025
Department of Neurology, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, India.
Plant Cell Environ
September 2025
Department of Landscape Architecture, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, Hangzhou, China.
Sugar metabolism is commonly implicated as crucial in the transition between growth and cessation during winter; however, its exact role remains elusive. The evergreen iris (Iris japonica) ceases growth in winter without entering endodormancy, yet it continues to sustain sugar metabolism and transport throughout the season. Here, we elucidate the mechanisms underlying the sugar-mediated growth transition-the shift between growth and cessation-in I.
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