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Lan-Yang Ch’ang

National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University

Publishes on RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms, RNA Research and Splicing, CRISPR and Genetic Engineering. 11 papers and 547 citations.

11Publications
547Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Identification of Novel Human Genes Evolutionarily Conserved in<i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>by Comparative Proteomics
Chun-Hung Lai, Chang-Yuan Chou, Lan-Yang Ch’ang et al.|Genome Research|2000
Cited by 472Open Access

Modern biomedical research greatly benefits from large-scale genome-sequencing projects ranging from studies of viruses, bacteria, and yeast to multicellular organisms, like Caenorhabditis elegans. Comparative genomic studies offer a vast array of prospects for identification and functional annotation of human ortholog genes. We presented a novel comparative proteomic approach for assembling human gene contigs and assisting gene discovery. The C. elegans proteome was used as an alignment template to assist in novel human gene identification from human EST nucleotide databases. Among the available 18,452 C. elegans protein sequences, our results indicate that at least 83% (15,344 sequences) of C. elegans proteome has human homologous genes, with 7,954 records of C. elegans proteins matching known human gene transcripts. Only 11% or less of C. elegans proteome contains nematode-specific genes. We found that the remaining 7,390 sequences might lead to discoveries of novel human genes, and over 150 putative full-length human gene transcripts were assembled upon further database analyses. [The sequence data described in this paper have been submitted to the

A Complexity Reduction Algorithm for Analysis and Annotation of Large Genomic Sequences
Trees‐Juen Chuang, Wen‐chang Lin, Hurng-Chun Lee et al.|Genome Research|2003
Cited by 15Open Access

DNA is a universal language encrypted with biological instruction for life. In higher organisms, the genetic information is preserved predominantly in an organized exon/intron structure. When a gene is expressed, the exons are spliced together to form the transcript for protein synthesis. We have developed a complexity reduction algorithm for sequence analysis (CRASA) that enables direct alignment of cDNA sequences to the genome. This method features a progressive data structure in hierarchical orders to facilitate a fast and efficient search mechanism. CRASA implementation was tested with already annotated genomic sequences in two benchmark data sets and compared with 15 annotation programs (10 ab initio and 5 homology-based approaches) against the EST database. By the use of layered noise filters, the complexity of CRASA-matched data was reduced exponentially. The results from the benchmark tests showed that CRASA annotation excelled in both the sensitivity and specificity categories. When CRASA was applied to the analysis of human Chromosomes 21 and 22, an additional 83 potential genes were identified. With its large-scale processing capability, CRASA can be used as a robust tool for genome annotation with high accuracy by matching the EST sequences precisely to the genomic sequences.