2007
DOI: 10.1038/nrg2165
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A unified classification system for eukaryotic transposable elements

Abstract: Our knowledge of the structure and composition of genomes is rapidly progressing in pace with their sequencing. The emerging data show that a significant portion of eukaryotic genomes is composed of transposable elements (TEs). Given the abundance and diversity of TEs and the speed at which large quantities of sequence data are emerging, identification and annotation of TEs presents a significant challenge. Here we propose the first unified hierarchical classification system, designed on the basis of the trans… Show more

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Cited by 2,516 publications
(2,986 citation statements)
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References 90 publications
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“…MITEs belonging to the Tourist-like Krak 18 and Stowaway-like DcSto 19 families were identified using TIRfinder 80 , including the carrot, kiwifruit, pepper, tomato, and potato genomes. MITE copies were grouped into families fulfilling the 80-80-80 criterion 81 ( Supplementary Fig. 33 and Supplementary Tables 57-59).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…MITEs belonging to the Tourist-like Krak 18 and Stowaway-like DcSto 19 families were identified using TIRfinder 80 , including the carrot, kiwifruit, pepper, tomato, and potato genomes. MITE copies were grouped into families fulfilling the 80-80-80 criterion 81 ( Supplementary Fig. 33 and Supplementary Tables 57-59).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Any distinct highly repetitive region within such sequences was extracted and retained while other portions were discarded. All libraries were merged and redundant sequences were removed based on the guidelines presented by Wicker et al 56 and the MAKER documentation. Sequences in the combined library were annotated, and non-transposable element host genes were removed based on their similarity to well-characterized sequences in annotation databases 49,57 , the presence of structural motifs and manual examination.…”
Section: Data Reportingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We clustered LTRs of complete elements to identify transposable element families 32 . More than 86% of the elements remained as singletons, indicating that LTR-RTs are quite divergent and that there are several low-abundance families.…”
Section: Research Articlementioning
confidence: 99%