Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2825576 | Trends in Genetics | 2007 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
By conventional wisdom, a feature that occurs too often or too rarely in a genome can indicate a functional element. To infer functionality from frequency, it is crucial to precisely characterize occurrences in randomly evolving DNA. We find that the frequency of oligonucleotides in a genomic sequence follows primarily a Pareto-lognormal distribution, which encapsulates lognormal and power-law features found across all known genomes. Such a distribution could be the result of completely random evolution by a copying process. Our characterization of the entire frequency distribution of genomic words opens a way to a more accurate reasoning about their over- and underrepresentation in genomic sequences.
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Authors
Miklós Csűrös, Laurent Noé, Gregory Kucherov,