Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to Main Content
Advertisement
Oxford Academic
Search
Bioinformatics
International Society for Computational Biology
Close
Search
Article Navigation
Journal Article

CAST: an iterative algorithm for the complexity analysis of sequence tracts

,
Vasilis J. Promponas
Search for other works by this author on:
,
Anton J. Enright
Search for other works by this author on:
,
Sophia Tsoka
Search for other works by this author on:
,
David P. Kreil
Search for other works by this author on:
,
Christophe Leroy
Search for other works by this author on:
,
Stavros Hamodrakas
Search for other works by this author on:
,
Chris Sander
Search for other works by this author on:
Christos A. Ouzounis
Search for other works by this author on:
Bioinformatics, Volume 16, Issue 10, October 2000, Pages 915–922,https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/16.10.915
Published:
01 October 2000
Article history
Received:
08 February 2000
Revision received:
11 April 2000
Accepted:
18 April 2000
Published:
01 October 2000
Search
Close
Search

Abstract

Motivation: Sensitive detection and masking of low-complexity regions in protein sequences. Filtered sequences can be used in sequence comparison without the risk of matching compositionally biased regions. The main advantage of the method over similar approaches is the selective masking of single residue types without affecting other, possibly important, regions.

Results: A novel algorithm for low-complexity region detection and selective masking. The algorithm is based on multiple-pass Smith–Waterman comparison of the query sequence against twenty homopolymers with infinite gap penalties. The output of the algorithm is both the masked query sequence for further analysis, e.g. database searches, as well as the regions of low complexity. The detection of low-complexity regions is highly specific for single residue types. It is shown that this approach is sufficient for masking database query sequences without generating false positives. The algorithm is benchmarked against widely available algorithms using the 210 genes ofPlasmodium falciparum chromosome 2, a dataset known to contain a large number of low-complexity regions.

Availability: CAST (version 1.0) executable binaries are available to academic users free of charge under license. Web site entry point, server and additional material:http://www.ebi.ac.uk/research/cgg/services/cast/

Contact:[email protected]

To whom correspondence should be addressed.

PDF
This content is only available as a PDF.
© Oxford University Press 2000
Issue Section:
Original Paper
Advertisement

Citations

Views

1,042

Altmetric

Metrics
Total Views1,042
161Pageviews
881PDF Downloads
Since 12/1/2016
Month:Total Views:
December 20162
January 20175
February 20174
March 20178
April 201711
May 201711
June 20173
July 20175
August 20174
September 20173
October 201710
November 20179
December 201731
January 201815
February 201816
March 201835
April 201827
May 20186
June 20183
July 20183
August 20184
September 20185
October 20182
November 20183
December 20186
January 20195
February 201910
March 201913
April 201918
May 201912
June 20194
July 201915
August 201914
September 201914
October 201911
November 201914
December 201911
January 202011
February 202016
March 202019
April 202010
May 20209
June 202013
July 20207
August 20207
September 202011
October 202014
November 20205
December 202011
January 20216
February 20217
March 202115
April 20219
May 20217
June 20216
July 202111
August 202115
September 202110
October 20218
November 202118
December 20219
January 202213
February 202212
March 202216
April 20227
May 202214
June 202212
July 20228
August 20223
September 202211
October 202214
November 20225
December 202214
January 20237
February 202312
March 202319
April 202317
May 202317
June 202310
July 202314
August 20232
September 20235
October 202311
November 202314
December 202316
January 202412
February 202415
March 202415
April 202411
May 20249
June 20249
July 20245
August 20249
September 20249
October 202415
November 20247
December 20249
January 20252
February 20254
March 202511
April 20251
Citations
Powered by Dimensions
134Web of Science
Altmetrics
×

Email alerts

New journal issues alert

To set up an email alert, pleasesign in to your personal account, orregister

Sign in

Personal account

  • Sign in with email/username & password
  • Get email alerts
  • Save searches
  • Purchase content
  • Activate your purchase/trial code
  • Add your ORCID iD

Journal article activity alert

To set up an email alert, pleasesign in to your personal account, orregister

Sign in

Personal account

  • Sign in with email/username & password
  • Get email alerts
  • Save searches
  • Purchase content
  • Activate your purchase/trial code
  • Add your ORCID iD
Having trouble contacting the network. Please try again in a moment or two.
Oxford University Press
Journals Career Network
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Bioinformatics
  • Online ISSN 1367-4811
  • Copyright © 2025 Oxford University Press
Close
Close
This Feature Is Available To Subscribers Only

Sign In orCreate an Account

Close

This PDF is available to Subscribers Only

View Article Abstract & Purchase Options

For full access to this pdf, sign in to an existing account, or purchase an annual subscription.

Close

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp