@Article{Huerta-Cepas2007, author="Huerta-Cepas, Jaime and Dopazo, Hern{\'a}n and Dopazo, Joaqu{\'i}n and Gabald{\'o}n, Toni", title="The human phylome.", journal="Genome biology", year="2007", address="Bioinformatics Department, Centro de Investigaci{\'o}n Pr{\'i}ncipe Felipe, Autopista del Saler, 46013 Valencia, Spain.", volume="8", number="6", pages="R109", keywords="Animals", keywords="Biological Evolution", keywords="Evolution, Molecular", keywords="Gene Duplication", keywords="Genome", keywords="Humans", keywords="Phylogeny", keywords="Proteins", keywords="Sequence Analysis, DNA", abstract="Phylogenomics analyses serve to establish evolutionary relationships among organisms and their genes. A phylome, the complete collection of all gene phylogenies in a genome, constitutes a valuable source of information, but its use in large genomes still constitutes a technical challenge. The use of phylomes also requires the development of new methods that help us to interpret them.", issn="1465-6914", doi="10.1186/gb-2007-8-6-r109", url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17567924", language="eng" }