Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Protein Analysis THrough Evolutionary Relationships (PANTHER) is a comprehensive software system for inferring the functions of genes based on their evolutionary relationships. Phylogenetic trees of gene families form the basis for PANTHER and these trees are annotated with ontology terms describing the evolution of gene function from ancestral to modern day genes. One of the main applications of PANTHER is in accurate prediction of the functions of uncharacterized genes, based on their evolutionary relationships to genes with functions known from experiment. The PANTHER website, freely available at http://www.pantherdb.org, also includes software tools for analyzing genomic data relative to known and inferred gene functions. Since 2007, there have been several new developments to PANTHER: (i) improved phylogenetic trees, explicitly representing speciation and gene duplication events, (ii) identification of gene orthologs, including least diverged orthologs (best one-to-one pairs), (iii) coverage of more genomes (48 genomes, up to 87% of genes in each genome; see http://www.pantherdb.org/panther/summaryStats.jsp), (iv) improved support for alternative database identifiers for genes, proteins and microarray probes and (v) adoption of the SBGN standard for display of biological pathways. In addition, PANTHER trees are being annotated with gene function as part of the Gene Ontology Reference Genome project, resulting in an increasing number of curated functional annotations.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Mi et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a07ff277ad161a3abfe1152 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkp1019
Huaiyu Mi
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1
Qing Dong
Huazhong Agricultural University
Anushya Muruganujan
University of Southern California
Nucleic Acids Research
Northwestern University
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
SRI International
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...