reviewAnnual Review of GeneticsAug 30, 2005Closed access

Orthologs, Paralogs, and Evolutionary Genomics

National Institutes of Health · National Center for Biotechnology Information

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Orthologs and paralogs are two fundamentally different types of homologous genes that evolved, respectively, by vertical descent from a single ancestral gene and by duplication. Orthology and paralogy are key concepts of evolutionary genomics. A clear distinction between orthologs and paralogs is critical for the construction of a robust evolutionary classification of genes and reliable functional annotation of newly sequenced genomes. Genome comparisons show that orthologous relationships with genes from taxonomically distant species can be established for the majority of the genes from each sequenced genome. This review examines in depth the definitions and subtypes of orthologs and paralogs, outlines the…

Citation impact

1,366
total citations
FWCI
17.69
Percentile
100%
References
107
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biology
  • Genome
  • Gene
  • Gene duplication
  • Comparative genomics
  • Genomics
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Genetics
No related works found for this paper.