Research field
Comparative Genomics
Comparative genomics analyzes and compares genome sequences across multiple species to reconstruct evolutionary history, identify conserved functional elements, and understand how genomic change drives phenotypic diversity. By aligning genomes from closely or distantly related organisms, researchers pinpoint genes and regulatory regions under purifying selection, sites of rapid adaptive evolution, and chromosomal rearrangements that shaped lineage diversification. The field relies on phylogenomics to infer species relationships with greater resolution than single-gene markers, and on synteny analysis to track reorganization of chromosomal blocks over geological time. Comparative data have been transformative in annotating novel genomes—functional assignments flow from well-studied model organisms to less-studied species through sequence similarity, accelerating research in biodiversity genomics, conservation biology, and biomedical model organism development. Earth BioGenome Project generates reference genomes needed for comparative analysis at unprecedented taxonomic breadth.
Top institutions
Wellcome Sanger Institute
Broad Institute
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology
University of California Santa Cruz
BGI Genomics
Subfields
Key technologies
Long-Read Sequencing PacBio and Nanopore
Multiple Sequence Alignment Algorithms
Ortholog Detection Tools
Genome Assembly Platforms
Evolutionary Rate Analysis Software
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