Hi Arkarachai, Were the studies perhaps making use of any the tracks in the Comparative Genomics track group? That group has "chain" and "net" tracks, which show alignments between two organisms' genomes. The net tracks in particular are useful for finding orthologous regions and for studying genome rearrangement.
You might also want to check out the "conservation" track, which shows several genomes aligned side-by-side, as well as some measurements of conservation across species. -- Brooke Rhead UCSC Genome Bioinformatics Group ARKARACHAI FUNGTAMMASAN wrote on 10/4/10 8:37 AM: > > > > Dear, > > > > My name is Arkarachai from Pennsylvania State University. > Recently, I need information of evolutionary breakpoint of human-mouse and a > few other couple for my genome wide study. I see some studies said that they > used this information from UCSC, so I try to look up. However, I don’t know > whether this information was stored. I’m seeking the genomic coordinate of > human > genome that involve in recent inversion, translocation. Can you shed some > light > on this? > > > > Thank you. > > > > > > Arkarachai Fungtammasan > > Fulbright Scholar 2009 > Huck Institutes of the life science > Integrative Bioscience > Bioinformatics and Genomics > > > _______________________________________________ > Genome maillist - [email protected] > https://lists.soe.ucsc.edu/mailman/listinfo/genome _______________________________________________ Genome maillist - [email protected] https://lists.soe.ucsc.edu/mailman/listinfo/genome
