Genome Biology

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Comparative sequence analyses reveal sites of ancestral chromosomal fusions in the Indian muntjac genome

Vicky Tsipouri, Mary G Schueler, Sufen Hu, NISC Comparative Sequencing Program, Amalia Dutra, Evgenia Pak, Harold Riethman and Eric D Green*

Genome Biology 2008, 9:R155 doi:10.1186/gb-2008-9-10-r155

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Deciphering neo-sex and B chromosome evolution by the draft genome of Drosophila albomicans

Qi Zhou, Hong-mei Zhu, Quan-fei Huang, Li Zhao, Guo-jie Zhang, Scott W Roy, Beatriz Vicoso, Zhao-lin Xuan, Jue Ruan, Yue Zhang, Ruo-ping Zhao, Chen Ye, Xiu-qing Zhang, Jun Wang, Wen Wang, Doris Bachtrog BMC Genomics 2012, 13:109 (22 March 2012)

Analysis of the genome of Drosophila albomicans, shows the extremely young neo-sex chromosomes already have an accumulation of excess deleterious mutations and the B chromosomes have an origin in sex chromosome-autosome fusion.

Research article   Open Access

Effort required to finish shotgun-generated genome sequences differs significantly among vertebrates

Robert W Blakesley, Nancy F Hansen, Jyoti Gupta, Jennifer C McDowell, Baishali Maskeri, Beatrice B Barnabas, Shelise Y Brooks, Holly Coleman, Payam Haghighi, Shi-Ling Ho, Karen Schandler, Sirintorn Stantripop, Jennifer L Vogt, Pamela J Thomas, Gerard G Bouffard, Eric D Green BMC Genomics 2010, 11:21 (11 January 2010)