Reducing storage requirements for biological sequence comparison
Title | Reducing storage requirements for biological sequence comparison |
Publication Type | Journal Articles |
Year of Publication | 2004 |
Authors | Roberts M, Hayes W, Hunt BR, Mount SM, Yorke JA |
Journal | BioinformaticsBioinformatics |
Volume | 20 |
Issue | 18 |
Pagination | 3363 - 3369 |
Date Published | 2004/12/12/ |
ISBN Number | 1367-4803, 1460-2059 |
Abstract | Motivation: Comparison of nucleic acid and protein sequences is a fundamental tool of modern bioinformatics. A dominant method of such string matching is the ‘seed-and-extend’ approach, in which occurrences of short subsequences called ‘seeds’ are used to search for potentially longer matches in a large database of sequences. Each such potential match is then checked to see if it extends beyond the seed. To be effective, the seed-and-extend approach needs to catalogue seeds from virtually every substring in the database of search strings. Projects such as mammalian genome assemblies and large-scale protein matching, however, have such large sequence databases that the resulting list of seeds cannot be stored in RAM on a single computer. This significantly slows the matching process.Results: We present a simple and elegant method in which only a small fraction of seeds, called ‘minimizers’, needs to be stored. Using minimizers can speed up string-matching computations by a large factor while missing only a small fraction of the matches found using all seeds. |
URL | http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/20/18/3363 |
DOI | 10.1093/bioinformatics/bth408 |