Probalign
Probalign is a sequence alignment tool that calculates a maximum alignment using partition function posterior probabilities.[1] Base pair probabilities are estimated using an estimate similar to Boltzmann distribution. The partition function is calculated using a dynamic programming approach.
Algorithm[]
The following describes the algorithm used by probalign to determine the base pair probabilities.[2]
Alignment score[]
To score an alignment of two sequences two things are needed:
- a similarity function (e.g. PAM, BLOSUM,...)
- affine gap penalty:
The score of an alignment a is defined as:
Now the boltzmann weighted score of an alignment a is:
Where is a scaling factor.
The probability of an alignment assuming boltzmann distribution is given by
Where is the partition function, i.e. the sum of the boltzmann weights of all alignments.
Dynamic Programming[]
Let denote the partition function of the prefixes and . Three different cases are considered:
- the partition function of all alignments of the two prefixes that end in a match.
- the partition function of all alignments of the two prefixes that end in an insertion .
- the partition function of all alignments of the two prefixes that end in a deletion .
Then we have:
Initialization[]
The matrixes are initialized as follows:
Recursion[]
The partition function for the alignments of two sequences and is given by , which can be recursively computed:
- analogously
Base pair probability[]
Finally the probability that positions and form a base pair is given by:
are the respective values for the recalculated with inversed base pair strings.
See also[]
- ProbCons
- Multiple Sequence Alignment
References[]
- ^ U. Roshan and D. R. Livesay, Probalign: multiple sequence alignment using partition function posterior probabilities, Bioinformatics, 22(22):2715-21, 2006 (PDF)
- ^ Lecture "Bioinformatics II" at University of Freiburg
External links[]
- Sequence alignment algorithms