Table of contents for Foundations of comparative genomics / Arcady Mushegian.

Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog.

Note: Contents data are machine generated based on pre-publication provided by the publisher. Contents may have variations from the printed book or be incomplete or contain other coding.


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Dedication
Preface
 1. The Beginning of Computational Genomics
 2. Finding Sequence Similarities
 3. Homology: Can We Get It Right?
 4. Getting Ready To the Era of Comparative Genomics: The Importance of Viruses
 5. The First Fact of Comparative Genomics: Protein Sequences Are Remarkably Resilient in Evolution
 6. The Second Fact of Comparative Genomics: Functional Convergence at The Molecular Level
 7. Prediction of Function and Reconstruction of Metabolism from Genomic Data - Homology-Based Approaches
 8. Prediction of Function and Reconstruction of Metabolism: Post-Homology Approaches.
 9. Structural Genomics - What Does It Tell Us About Life?
10. How Many Protein Families Are There?
11. Phylogenetic Inference and the Era of Complete Genomes
12. Two Stories about Evolution
13. Minimal and Ancestral Genomes
14. Comparative Genomics and Systems Biology
References
Index

Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication:

Genomics.
Gene mapping.
Physiology, Comparative.
Genomics -- methods.
Genetic Techniques.
Sequence Analysis -- methods.