Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000

The mentioning of gene names in the body of the scientific literature 1901–2017 and their fractional counting is used as a proxy to assess the level of biological function discovery. A literature score of one has been defined as full publication equivalent (FPE), the amount of literature necessary t...

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Main Authors: Sinha, Swati, Eisenhaber, Birgit, Jensen, Lars Juhl, Kalbuaji, Bharata, Eisenhaber, Frank
Other Authors: School of Computer Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90338
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49910
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-903382020-03-07T11:49:01Z Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000 Sinha, Swati Eisenhaber, Birgit Jensen, Lars Juhl Kalbuaji, Bharata Eisenhaber, Frank School of Computer Science and Engineering Complete Human Genome Gene Function Discovery Engineering::Computer science and engineering The mentioning of gene names in the body of the scientific literature 1901–2017 and their fractional counting is used as a proxy to assess the level of biological function discovery. A literature score of one has been defined as full publication equivalent (FPE), the amount of literature necessary to achieve one publication solely dedicated to a gene. It has been found that less than 5000 human genes have each at least 100 FPEs in the available literature corpus. This group of elite genes (4817 protein‐coding genes, 119 non‐coding RNAs) attracts the overwhelming majority of the scientific literature about genes. Yet, thousands of proteins have never been mentioned at all, ≈2000 further proteins have not even one FPE of literature and, for ≈4600 additional proteins, the FPE count is below 10. The protein function discovery rate measured as numbers of proteins first mentioned or crossing a threshold of accumulated FPEs in a given year has grown until 2000 but is in decline thereafter. This drop is partially offset by function discoveries for non‐coding RNAs. The full human genome sequencing does not boost the function discovery rate. Since 2000, the fastest growing group in the literature is that with at least 500 FPEs per gene. ASTAR (Agency for Sci., Tech. and Research, S’pore) Published version 2019-09-11T02:32:02Z 2019-12-06T17:46:08Z 2019-09-11T02:32:02Z 2019-12-06T17:46:08Z 2018 Journal Article Sinha, S., Eisenhaber, B., Jensen, L. J., Kalbuaji, B., & Eisenhaber, F. (2018). Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000. Proteomics, 18(21-22), 1800093-. doi:10.1002/pmic.201800093 1615-9853 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90338 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49910 10.1002/pmic.201800093 en Proteomics © 2018 Bioinformatics Institute. Proteomics Published by WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes. 13 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Complete Human Genome
Gene Function Discovery
Engineering::Computer science and engineering
spellingShingle Complete Human Genome
Gene Function Discovery
Engineering::Computer science and engineering
Sinha, Swati
Eisenhaber, Birgit
Jensen, Lars Juhl
Kalbuaji, Bharata
Eisenhaber, Frank
Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000
description The mentioning of gene names in the body of the scientific literature 1901–2017 and their fractional counting is used as a proxy to assess the level of biological function discovery. A literature score of one has been defined as full publication equivalent (FPE), the amount of literature necessary to achieve one publication solely dedicated to a gene. It has been found that less than 5000 human genes have each at least 100 FPEs in the available literature corpus. This group of elite genes (4817 protein‐coding genes, 119 non‐coding RNAs) attracts the overwhelming majority of the scientific literature about genes. Yet, thousands of proteins have never been mentioned at all, ≈2000 further proteins have not even one FPE of literature and, for ≈4600 additional proteins, the FPE count is below 10. The protein function discovery rate measured as numbers of proteins first mentioned or crossing a threshold of accumulated FPEs in a given year has grown until 2000 but is in decline thereafter. This drop is partially offset by function discoveries for non‐coding RNAs. The full human genome sequencing does not boost the function discovery rate. Since 2000, the fastest growing group in the literature is that with at least 500 FPEs per gene.
author2 School of Computer Science and Engineering
author_facet School of Computer Science and Engineering
Sinha, Swati
Eisenhaber, Birgit
Jensen, Lars Juhl
Kalbuaji, Bharata
Eisenhaber, Frank
format Article
author Sinha, Swati
Eisenhaber, Birgit
Jensen, Lars Juhl
Kalbuaji, Bharata
Eisenhaber, Frank
author_sort Sinha, Swati
title Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000
title_short Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000
title_full Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000
title_fullStr Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000
title_full_unstemmed Darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000
title_sort darkness in the human gene and protein function space : widely modest or absent illumination by the life science literature and the trend for fewer protein function discoveries since 2000
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/90338
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/49910
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