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Figure 5 | BMC Genomics

Figure 5

From: Drug target prediction and prioritization: using orthology to predict essentiality in parasite genomes

Figure 5

Prioritized kinases for the parasitic nematodes A. caninum and H. contortus. This shows the C. elegans predicted orthologues of the A. caninum and H. contortus ESTs, as identified in the present study. All genes are predicted kinases, have a lethal RNAi phenotype in C. elegans. Targets were first prioritized by the essentiality weighting assigned from the present study, then by Wormnet connectivity score. The top two ranked kinases (in bold) are among the top thirty ranked targets from all ESTs (Additional File 3). Present in mammals is defined by having an orthologue in one or more of the mammalian species in the OrthoMCL 2.0 database (human, rat, mouse). Essential orthologue in yeast, drosophila or mouse: ✓ = orthologue (with no paralogues) associated with a lethal phenotype, ✘ = orthologue (with no paralogues) that had only non-lethal phenotypes recorded, ? = orthologue (with no paralogues) but no phenotype information was available. Presence of paralogues in C. elegans was determined from the OrthoMCL grouping. Presence of paralogues in A. caninum and H. contortus was determined as described in Materials and methods. The network connectivity score is the sum of all interaction scores (log-likelihood scores) for the gene in the Wormnet core network [37].

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