Any quotes from Mr Vader about his 7th cousin 15 times removed? phx.
Gerard DVD Kleywegt wrote:
Having a generic dictionary definition is nice and dandy. However, in
the present context, the term 'homology' has a much more specific
meaning: it pertains to the having (or not) of a common ancestor.
Thus, it is a binary concept. (*)
A useful paper about homology and percentage sequence identity (and
structural similarity) is Rost, 1999:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10195279
--dvd ftw ;-)
(*) For instance, when applied to fictional characters, Luke and Leia
are homologous since they share a common ancestor in Mr Vader. See:
Vader, D. (1980). "No, *I* am your father." Star Wars 5, and: Vader,
D. (1983). "Especially for... sister." Star Wars 6.
On Fri, 5 Dec 2008, Dima Klenchin wrote:
to models built on low-homology structures.
since i'm currently preparing my bioinformatics lectures for next
week's teaching, i might as well be a Besserwisser and point out
that homology, much like pregnancy and death, is a binary concept.
i'm sure artem knows this and simply mistyped "low sequence identity"
Well, although it is off-topic:
Random House Unabridged Dictionary
Homologous
1. Corresponding or similar in position, value, structure, or function.
So if you insist that homologous is a binary concept then you should
be able to come up with the exact boundary between what's homologous
and what's not.
What is it? 10% sequence identity? Less? More? Because if such a
boundary cannot be defined then everything can be homologous to
everything - it's all in the eye of the beholder. And if so, then the
binary concept of homology is either meaningless or incorrect.
Ergo: arguing about definitions of terms used to describe continua is
not very productive in science (cf. "species", "sea/ocean",
"hill/mountain").
Dima
******************************************************************
Gerard J. Kleywegt
[Research Fellow of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences]
Dept. of Cell & Molecular Biology University of Uppsala
Biomedical Centre Box 596
SE-751 24 Uppsala SWEDEN
http://xray.bmc.uu.se/gerard/ mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
******************************************************************
The opinions in this message are fictional. Any similarity
to actual opinions, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
******************************************************************