Genome Biology

official impact factor 6.89

Open Access Highly Access

Drawing the tree of eukaryotic life based on the analysis of 2,269 manually annotated myosins from 328 species

Florian Odronitz and Martin Kollmar*

Genome Biology 2007, 8:R196 doi:10.1186/gb-2007-8-9-r196

Accesses  

  • Last 30 days: 98 accesses
  • Last year: 1273 accesses
  • All time: 9042 accesses

Cited by

BioMed Central: 6 citations

Research article   Open Access

A holistic phylogeny of the coronin gene family reveals an ancient origin of the tandem-coronin, defines a new subfamily, and predicts protein function

Christian Eckert, Björn Hammesfahr, Martin Kollmar BMC Evolutionary Biology 2011, 11:268 (25 September 2011)

Research article   Open Access

Cross-species protein sequence and gene structure prediction with fine-tuned Webscipio 2.0 and Scipio

Klas Hatje, Oliver Keller, Björn Hammesfahr, Holger Pillmann, Stephan Waack, Martin Kollmar BMC Research Notes 2011, 4:265 (28 July 2011)

Research   Open Access Highly Accessed

Origin of the cell nucleus, mitosis and sex: roles of intracellular coevolution

Thomas Cavalier-Smith Biology Direct 2010, 5:7 (4 February 2010)

This article is part of a collection on Evolutionary Biology 150...

Software   Open Access Highly Accessed

WebScipio: An online tool for the determination of gene structures using protein sequences

Florian Odronitz, Holger Pillmann, Oliver Keller, Stephan Waack, Martin Kollmar BMC Genomics 2008, 9:422 (18 September 2008)

Software   Open Access

Scipio: Using protein sequences to determine the precise exon/intron structures of genes and their orthologs in closely related species

Oliver Keller, Florian Odronitz, Mario Stanke, Martin Kollmar, Stephan Waack BMC Bioinformatics 2008, 9:278 (13 June 2008)

Research article   Open Access

Comparative genomic analysis of the arthropod muscle myosin heavy chain genes allows ancestral gene reconstruction and reveals a new type of 'partially' processed pseudogene

Florian Odronitz, Martin Kollmar BMC Molecular Biology 2008, 9:21 (6 February 2008)

Diverse proteins are generated from a single arthropod myosin heavy chain gene, according to clues provided by comparative genomic analysis, by first splicing the mutually exclusive exons and only then splicing the introns.