Note: You are seeing this message either because your browser has not loaded our stylesheets, or because your browser does not support stylesheets (CSS). Please upgrade to a relatively modern browser to improve your experience. Not sure what to upgrade to? Try Firefox.
The Science Advisory Board
Screen Name: 
 
Password: 
 

Perspectives

only search SAB perspectives

Are you interested in submitting a Perspective Article? Be sure to read The Science Advisory Board's Editorial Guides for Perspective Articles. Click here.


Cutting-edge bioinformatics software programs
by www.news-medical.net

Large-scale undertakings such as the Human Genome Project have produced massive amounts of data.

To make sense of it all, powerful mathematical and statistical algorithms were developed, resulting in the interdisciplinary field called bioinformatics." By probing genome sequence data with in silico tools, biologists can infer the functions of specific genes, evaluate the evolutionary relatedness among species, and identify DNA variants that are predictive of disease. This valuable information can both complement and drive the more traditional laboratory-based experimental studies. This month's release of Cold Spring Harbor Protocols highlights two articles that discuss the principles and applications of cutting-edge bioinformatics software programs; both are freely available online.

The first freely available article provides guidance on how to use the BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool) program. BLAST is the tool that is most commonly used to search large databases for DNA and protein sequences with similarities. The article, intended to be a user's guide to BLAST, includes a general overview of its algorithmic basis as well as descriptions of various BLAST programs and their appropriate applications. It will be useful to a wide range of biologists seeking to better understand and apply BLAST to their systems.

The second freely available article describes a computational pipeline that has been optimized to identify DNA variants called SNPs (single-nucleotide polymorphisms) in sequence data from corn. The sequences, generated with cutting-edge technology from 454 Life Sciences, are aligned and anchored to the corn genome using BLAST and cross_match (another computational tool). Then, a third program called PolyBayes is used to search for SNPs in the aligned sequences. The article describing this SNP-discovery pipeline is also available online.


This article was re-posted with permission from www.news-medical.net. For additional information please visit the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory homepage at http://www.cshl.org/

###

<< Previous    Next >>   

[ View All Perspectives ]
Scientific & Medical Experts Needed! Voice your opinions on the technologies transforming science and medicine. Join The Science Advisory Board, an international panel of over 37,000 life science and medical professionals formed in 1997. Members are always compensated for their contributions. Join today!
Search This Site
only search scienceboard.net
only search Forums
What's this?