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Figure 5 | Genome Biology

Figure 5

From: Computational identification of developmental enhancers: conservation and function of transcription factor binding-site clusters in Drosophila melanogaster and Drosophila pseudoobscura

Figure 5

Inclusion of evolutionary information greatly increases the specificity and selectivity of CRM searches based on binding-site clustering. The effects of integrating comparative data into searches for binding site clusters were assessed by counting the number of (a) true positive, (b) negative and (c) novel CRMs recovered at the different site density cutoffs plotted on the x-axis. The positives used here include the 15 positive pCRMs from Table 2 and 10 additional positive CRMs from the literature (see text), all of which have identifiably orthologous sequence in D. pseudoobscura, while the negatives included only the 14 non-functional pCRMs for which orthologous sequence in D. pseudoobscura could be found. The solid line in each panel shows the results without the use of D. pseudoobscura; the dashed line shows the results with D. pseudoobscura. Searches displayed were performed using the aligned sites constraint (see Materials and methods). Comparable results were obtained for the aligned + preserved sites constraint. The number of false positives is not strictly monotonically decreasing with an increasing binding site cutoff. This stems from the cluster merging behavior of CIS-ANALYST - sometimes a decrease in the minimum number of sites leads CIS-ANALYST to tack on a lower-density cluster that is adjacent to a higher-density one, resulting in a single cluster with more sites but lower site density. This can actually increase the number of conserved sites necessary to reach the conservation threshold (see Materials and methods).

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