Authors
Katherine S Pollard, Melissa J Hubisz, Kate R Rosenbloom, Adam Siepel
Publication date
2010/1/1
Journal
Genome research
Volume
20
Issue
1
Pages
110-121
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Lab
Description
Methods for detecting nucleotide substitution rates that are faster or slower than expected under neutral drift are widely used to identify candidate functional elements in genomic sequences. However, most existing methods consider either reductions (conservation) or increases (acceleration) in rate but not both, or assume that selection acts uniformly across the branches of a phylogeny. Here we examine the more general problem of detecting departures from the neutral rate of substitution in either direction, possibly in a clade-specific manner. We consider four statistical, phylogenetic tests for addressing this problem: a likelihood ratio test, a score test, a test based on exact distributions of numbers of substitutions, and the genomic evolutionary rate profiling (GERP) test. All four tests have been implemented in a freely available program called phyloP. Based on extensive simulation experiments, these tests are …
Total citations
20102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202422696994120153174189193255204220218206138
Scholar articles
KS Pollard, MJ Hubisz, KR Rosenbloom, A Siepel - Genome research, 2010