Journal article
The status of the human gene catalogue.
Paulo Amaral, Silvia Carbonell-Sala, Francisco M De La Vega, Tiago Faial, Adam Frankish, Thomas Gingeras, Roderic Guigo, Jennifer L Harrow, Artemis G Hatzigeorgiou, Rory Johnson, Terence D Murphy, Mihaela Pertea, Kim D Pruitt, Shashikant Pujar, Hazuki Takahashi, Igor Ulitsky, Ales Varabyou, Christine A Wells, Mark Yandell, Piero Carninci Show all
Nature | Published : 2023
Abstract
Scientists have been trying to identify every gene in the human genome since the initial draft was published in 2001. In the years since, much progress has been made in identifying protein-coding genes, currently estimated to number fewer than 20,000, with an ever-expanding number of distinct protein-coding isoforms. Here we review the status of the human gene catalogue and the efforts to complete it in recent years. Beside the ongoing annotation of protein-coding genes, their isoforms and pseudogenes, the invention of high-throughput RNA sequencing and other technological breakthroughs have led to a rapid growth in the number of reported non-coding RNA genes. For most of these non-coding RN..
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