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Yong Zhang

Tongji University

ORCID: 0000-0001-6316-2734

Publishes on Epigenetics and DNA Methylation, Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics, Pluripotent Stem Cells Research. 532 papers and 49.3k citations.

532Publications
49.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Model-based Analysis of ChIP-Seq (MACS)
Yong Zhang, Tao Liu, Clifford A. Meyer et al.|Genome biology|2008
Cited by 19.8kOpen Access

We present Model-based Analysis of ChIP-Seq data, MACS, which analyzes data generated by short read sequencers such as Solexa's Genome Analyzer. MACS empirically models the shift size of ChIP-Seq tags, and uses it to improve the spatial resolution of predicted binding sites. MACS also uses a dynamic Poisson distribution to effectively capture local biases in the genome, allowing for more robust predictions. MACS compares favorably to existing ChIP-Seq peak-finding algorithms, and is freely available.

A Draft Sequence of the Rice Genome ( <i>Oryza sativa</i> L. ssp. <i>indica</i> )
Jun Yu, Songnian Hu, Jun Wang et al.|Science|2002
Cited by 4.3k

The genome of the japonica subspecies of rice, an important cereal and model monocot, was sequenced and assembled by whole-genome shotgun sequencing. The assembled sequence covers 93% of the 420-megabase genome. Gene predictions on the assembled sequence suggest that the genome contains 32,000 to 50,000 genes. Homologs of 98% of the known maize, wheat, and barley proteins are found in rice. Synteny and gene homology between rice and the other cereal genomes are extensive, whereas synteny with Arabidopsis is limited. Assignment of candidate rice orthologs to Arabidopsis genes is possible in many cases. The rice genome sequence provides a foundation for the improvement of cereals, our most important crops.

WEGO: a web tool for plotting GO annotations
Jia Ye, Lin Fang, Hongkun Zheng et al.|Nucleic Acids Research|2006
Cited by 2.8kOpen Access

Unified, structured vocabularies and classifications freely provided by the Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium are widely accepted in most of the large scale gene annotation projects. Consequently, many tools have been created for use with the GO ontologies. WEGO (Web Gene Ontology Annotation Plot) is a simple but useful tool for visualizing, comparing and plotting GO annotation results. Different from other commercial software for creating chart, WEGO is designed to deal with the directed acyclic graph structure of GO to facilitate histogram creation of GO annotation results. WEGO has been used widely in many important biological research projects, such as the rice genome project and the silkworm genome project. It has become one of the daily tools for downstream gene annotation analysis, especially when performing comparative genomics tasks. WEGO, along with the two other tools, namely External to GO Query and GO Archive Query, are freely available for all users at http://wego.genomics.org.cn. There are two available mirror sites at http://wego2.genomics.org.cn and http://wego.genomics.com.cn. Any suggestions are welcome at wego@genomics.org.cn.