Investigating collinearity between chromosomes is often used in comparative genomics to help identify gene orthologs, pinpoint genes that might have been overlooked as part of annotation processes and/or perform various evolutionary inferences. Collinear segments, also known as syntenic blocks, can be inferred from sequence alignments and/or from the identification of genes arrayed in the same order and relative orientations between investigated genomes. To help perform these analyses and assess their outcomes, we built a simple pipeline called SYNY (for synteny) that implements the two distinct approaches and produces different visualizations. The SYNY pipeline was built with ease of use in mind and runs on modest hardware. The pipeline is written in Perl and Python and is available on GitHub (https://github.com/PombertLab/SYNY) under the permissive MIT license.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.05.09.593317 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
May 2024
Department of Biology, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL 60616, USA.
Investigating collinearity between chromosomes is often used in comparative genomics to help identify gene orthologs, pinpoint genes that might have been overlooked as part of annotation processes and/or perform various evolutionary inferences. Collinear segments, also known as syntenic blocks, can be inferred from sequence alignments and/or from the identification of genes arrayed in the same order and relative orientations between investigated genomes. To help perform these analyses and assess their outcomes, we built a simple pipeline called SYNY (for synteny) that implements the two distinct approaches and produces different visualizations.
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