Guigó R, Flicek P, Abril J F, Reymond A, Lagarde J, Denoeud F, Antonarakis S, Ashburner M, Bajic V B, Birney E, Castelo R, Eyras E, Ucla C, Gingeras T R, Harrow J, Hubbard T, Lewis S E, Reese M G. EGASP: the human ENCODE Genome Annotation Assessment Project. Genome Biology. 2006; 7 Supl 1: S2. DOI 10.1186/gb-2006-7-s1-s2
http://hdl.handle.net/10230/13146
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Title:
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EGASP: the human ENCODE Genome Annotation Assessment Project |
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Author:
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Guigó Serra, Roderic; Flicek, Paul; Abril Ferrando, Josep Francesc; Reymond, Alexandre; Lagarde, Julien; Denoeud, France; Antonarakis, Stylianos E.; Ashburner, Michael; Bajic, Vladimir B.; Birney, Ewan; Castelo, Robert; Eyras Jiménez, Eduardo; Ucla, Catherine; Gingeras, Thomas R.; Harrow, Jennifer; Hubbard, Tim; Lewis, Suzanna E.; Reese, Martin G.
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Other authors:
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Universitat Pompeu Fabra
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Abstract:
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Background: We present the results of EGASP, a community experiment to assess the state-ofthe-
art in genome annotation within the ENCODE regions, which span 1% of the human genome
sequence. The experiment had two major goals: the assessment of the accuracy of computational
methods to predict protein coding genes; and the overall assessment of the completeness of the
current human genome annotations as represented in the ENCODE regions. For the
computational prediction assessment, eighteen groups contributed gene predictions. We
evaluated these submissions against each other based on a ‘reference set’ of annotations
generated as part of the GENCODE project. These annotations were not available to the
prediction groups prior to the submission deadline, so that their predictions were blind and an
external advisory committee could perform a fair assessment.
Results: The best methods had at least one gene transcript correctly predicted for close to 70%
of the annotated genes. Nevertheless, the multiple transcript accuracy, taking into account
alternative splicing, reached only approximately 40% to 50% accuracy. At the coding nucleotide
level, the best programs reached an accuracy of 90% in both sensitivity and specificity. Programs
relying on mRNA and protein sequences were the most accurate in reproducing the manually
curated annotations. Experimental validation shows that only a very small percentage (3.2%) of the selected 221 computationally predicted exons outside of the existing annotation could be
verified.
Conclusions: This is the first such experiment in human DNA, and we have followed the
standards established in a similar experiment, GASP1, in Drosophila melanogaster. We believe the
results presented here contribute to the value of ongoing large-scale annotation projects and should
guide further experimental methods when being scaled up to the entire human genome sequence.
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Document type:
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Article
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Document version:
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Published version
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Date:
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2006 |
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Rights:
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© 2006 BioMed Central Ltd.
The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at http://genomebiology.com/2006/7/S1/S2 |
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