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Genomic Sequence Alignment
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Overview Dynamic programming & the Needleman-Wunsch algorithm Local alignment—BLAST Fast global alignment Multiple sequence alignment Rearrangements in genomic sequences
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Biology in One Slide – Twentieth Century …ACGTGACTGAGGACCGTG CGACTGAGACTGACTGGGT CTAGCTAGACTACGTTTTA TATATATATACGTCGTCGT ACTGATGACTAGATTACAG ACTGATTTAGATACCTGAC TGATTTTAAAAAAATATT… …and today
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Complete DNA Sequences About 300 complete genomes have been sequenced
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Evolution
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Evolution at the DNA level …ACGGTGCAGTTACCA… …AC----CAGTCCACCA… Mutation SEQUENCE EDITS REARRANGEMENTS Deletion Inversion Translocation Duplication
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Evolutionary Rates OK X X Still OK? next generation
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Sequence conservation implies function Alignment is the key to Finding important regions Determining function Uncovering the evolutionary forces
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Sequence Alignment -AGGCTATCACCTGACCTCCAGGCCGA--TGCCC--- TAG-CTATCAC--GACCGC--GGTCGATTTGCCCGAC Definition Given two strings x = x 1 x 2...x M, y = y 1 y 2 …y N, an alignment is an assignment of gaps to positions 0,…, N in x, and 0,…, N in y, so as to line up each letter in one sequence with either a letter, or a gap in the other sequence AGGCTATCACCTGACCTCCAGGCCGATGCCC TAGCTATCACGACCGCGGTCGATTTGCCCGAC
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What is a good alignment? Alignment: The “best” way to match the letters of one sequence with those of the other How do we define “best”? Alignment: A hypothesis that the two sequences come from a common ancestor through sequence edits Parsimonious explanation: Find the minimum number of edits that transform one sequence into the other
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Scoring Function Sequence edits:AGGCCTC Mutations AGGACTC Insertions AGGGCCTC Deletions AGG.CTC Scoring Function: Match: +m Mismatch: -s Gap:-d Score F = (# matches) m - (# mismatches) s – (#gaps) d
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How do we compute the best alignment? AGTGCCCTGGAACCCTGACGGTGGGTCACAAAACTTCTGGA AGTGACCTGGGAAGACCCTGACCCTGGGTCACAAAACTC Too many possible alignments: O( 2 N )
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Dynamic Programming Given two sequences x = x 1 ……x M and y = y 1 ……y N Let F(i, j) = Score of best alignment of x 1 ……x i to y 1 ……y j Then, F(M, N) == Score of best alignment Idea: Compute F(i, j) for all i and j Do this by using F(i–1, j), F(i, j–1), F(i–1, j–1)
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Dynamic Programming (cont’d) Notice three possible cases: 1.x i aligns to y j x 1 ……x i-1 x i y 1 ……y j-1 y j 2.x i aligns to a gap x 1 ……x i-1 x i y 1 ……y j - 3.y j aligns to a gap x 1 ……x i - y 1 ……y j-1 y j m, if x i = y j F(i,j) = F(i-1, j-1) + -s, if not F(i,j) = F(i-1, j) - d F(i,j) = F(i, j-1) - d
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Dynamic Programming (cont’d) How do we know which case is correct? Inductive assumption: F(i, j-1), F(i-1, j), F(i-1, j-1) are optimal Then, F(i-1, j-1) + s(x i, y j ) F(i, j) = maxF(i-1, j) – d F( i, j-1) – d Where s(x i, y j ) = m, if x i = y j ;-s, if not i-1, j-1i-1, j i, j-1i, j
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Example x = AGTAm = 1 y = ATAs = -1 d = -1 AGTA 0-2-3-4 A10 -2 T 0010 A-3 02 F(i,j) i = 0 1 2 3 4 j = 0 1 2 3 Optimal Alignment: F(4,3) = 2 AGTA A - TA
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The Needleman-Wunsch Algorithm 1.Initialization. a.F(0, 0) = 0 b.F(0, j) = - j d c.F(i, 0)= - i d 2.Main Iteration. Filling-in partial alignments a.For each i = 1……M For eachj = 1……N F(i-1,j) – d [case 1] F(i, j) = max F(i, j-1) – d [case 2] F(i-1, j-1) + s(x i, y j ) [case 3] UP if [case 1] Ptr(i,j)= LEFTif [case 2] DIAGif [case 3] 3.Termination. F(M, N) is the optimal score, and from Ptr(M, N) can trace back optimal alignment
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Performance Time: O(NM) Space: O(NM)
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Alignment on a Large Scale Given a gene that we care about, how can we compare it to all existing DNA? Assume we use Dynamic Programming: The entire genomic database gene of interest ~10 5 ~10 11
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Index-based Local Alignment Main idea: 1.Construct a dictionary of all the words in the query 2.Initiate a local alignment for each word match between query and DB Running Time: Theoretical worst case: O(MN) Fast in practice query DB
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Index-based Local Alignment — BLAST Dictionary: All words of length k (~11) Alignment initiated between exact-matching words (more generally, between words of alignment score T) Alignment: Ungapped extensions until score below statistical threshold Output: All local alignments with score > statistical threshold …… query DB query scan
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Index-based Local Alignment — BLAST A C G A A G T A A G G T C C A G T C C C T T C C T G G A T T G C G A Example: k = 4, T = 4 The matching word GGTC initiates an alignment Extension to the left and right with no gaps until alignment falls < 50% Output: GTAAGGTCC GTTAGGTCC
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Gapped BLAST A C G A A G T A A G G T C C A G T C T G A T C C T G G A T T G C G A Added features: Pairs of words can initiate alignment Nearby alignments are merged Extensions with gaps until score < T below best score so far Output: GTAAGGTCCAGT GTTAGGTC-AGT
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Example Query: gattacaccccgattacaccccgattaca (29 letters) [2 mins] Database: All GenBank+EMBL+DDBJ+PDB sequences (but no EST, STS, GSS, or phase 0, 1 or 2 HTGS sequences) 1,726,556 sequences; 8,074,398,388 total letters >gi|28570323|gb|AC108906.9| Oryza sativa chromosome 3 BAC OSJNBa0087C10 genomic sequence, complete sequence Length = 144487 Score = 34.2 bits (17), Expect = 4.5 Identities = 20/21 (95%) Strand = Plus / Plusgi|28570323|gb|AC108906.9| Query: 4 tacaccccgattacaccccga 24 ||||||| ||||||||||||| Sbjct: 125138 tacacccagattacaccccga 125158 Score = 34.2 bits (17), Expect = 4.5 Identities = 20/21 (95%) Strand = Plus / Plus Query: 4 tacaccccgattacaccccga 24 ||||||| ||||||||||||| Sbjct: 125104 tacacccagattacaccccga 125124 >gi|28173089|gb|AC104321.7| Oryza sativa chromosome 3 BAC OSJNBa0052F07 genomic sequence, complete sequence Length = 139823 Score = 34.2 bits (17), Expect = 4.5 Identities = 20/21 (95%) Strand = Plus / Plusgi|28173089|gb|AC104321.7| Query: 4 tacaccccgattacaccccga 24 ||||||| ||||||||||||| Sbjct: 3891 tacacccagattacaccccga 3911 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Efficient global alignment
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Global alignment with the chaining approach 1.Find local alignments 2.Chain them into a rough global map 3.Align regions in-between
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LAGAN: 1. FIND Local Alignments 1.Find Local Alignments 2.Chain Local Alignments 3.Restricted DP Mike Brudno, Chuong Do, et al.
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LAGAN: 2. CHAIN Local Alignments 1.Find Local Alignments 2.Chain Local Alignments 3.Restricted DP Mike Brudno, Chuong Do, et al.
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LAGAN: 3. Restricted DP 1.Find Local Alignments 2.Chain Local Alignments 3.Restricted DP Mike Brudno, Chuong Do, et al.
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Multiple Alignment
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Definition Given N sequences x 1, x 2,…, x N : Insert gaps (-) in each sequence x i, such that All sequences have the same length L Score of the global map is maximum A faint similarity between two sequences becomes significant if present in many Multiple alignments can help improve the pairwise alignments
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Scoring Function: Sum Of Pairs Definition: Induced pairwise alignment A pairwise alignment induced by the multiple alignment Example: x:AC-GCGG-C y:AC-GC-GAG z:GCCGC-GAG Induces: x: ACGCGG-C; x: AC-GCGG-C; y: AC-GCGAG y: ACGC-GAC; z: GCCGC-GAG; z: GCCGCGAG Given sequences x 1, …, x N, aligned in a multiple alignment m, S(m) = k<l w kl s(x k, x l )
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A Profile Representation Given a multiple alignment M = m 1 …m n Replace each column m i with profile entry p i Frequency of each letter in # gaps Can think of this as a “likelihood” of each letter in each position - A G G C T A T C A C C T G T A G – C T A C C A - - - G C A G – C T A C C A - - - G C A G – C T A T C A C – G G C A G – C T A T C G C – G G A 1 1.8 C.6 1.4 1.6.2 G 1.2.2.4 1 T.2 1.6.2 -.2.8.4.8.4
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Multiple Sequence Alignments Algorithms
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Generalization of Needleman-Wunsh: S(m) = i S(m i ) (sum of column scores) F(i 1,i 2,…,i N ): Optimal alignment up to (i 1, …, i N ) F(i 1,i 2,…,i N )= max (all neighbors of cube) (F(nbr)+S(nbr)) Multidimensional DP
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Example: in 3D (three sequences): 7 neighbors/cell F(i,j,k) = max{ F(i-1,j-1,k-1)+S(x i, x j, x k ), F(i-1,j-1,k )+S(x i, x j, - ), F(i-1,j,k-1)+S(x i, -, x k ), F(i-1,j,k )+S(x i, -, - ), F(i,j-1,k-1)+S( -, x j, x k ), F(i,j-1,k )+S( -, x j, x k ), F(i,j,k-1)+S( -, -, x k ) } Multidimensional DP
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Running Time: 1.Size of matrix:L N ; Where L = length of each sequence N = number of sequences 2.Neighbors/cell: 2 N – 1 Therefore………………………… O(2 N L N ) Multidimensional DP
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Running Time: 1.Size of matrix:L N ; Where L = length of each sequence N = number of sequences 2.Neighbors/cell: 2 N – 1 Therefore………………………… O(2 N L N ) Multidimensional DP
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Progressive Alignment When evolutionary tree is known: Align closest first, in the order of the tree In each step, align two sequences x, y, or profiles p x, p y, to generate a new alignment with associated profile p result Weighted version: Tree edges have weights, proportional to the divergence in that edge New profile is a weighted average of two old profiles x w y z p xy p zw p xyzw
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Progressive Alignment When evolutionary tree is known: Align closest first, in the order of the tree In each step, align two sequences x, y, or profiles p x, p y, to generate a new alignment with associated profile p result Weighted version: Tree edges have weights, proportional to the divergence in that edge New profile is a weighted average of two old profiles x w y z
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Progressive Alignment When evolutionary tree is unknown: Perform all pairwise alignments Define distance matrix D, where D(x, y) is a measure of evolutionary distance, based on pairwise alignment Construct a tree Align on the tree x w y z ?
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Some useful sites Genome browsers Ensembl:www.ensembl.org UCSC:genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgGateway Genomic alignment LAGAN: lagan.stanford.edu MAVID: baboon.math.berkeley.edu/mavid Protein multiple alignment MUSCLE: www.drive5.com ProbCons: probcons.stanford.edu
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Evolution at the DNA level …ACGGTGCAGTTACCA… …AC----CAGTCACCA… Mutation SEQUENCE EDITS REARRANGEMENTS Deletion Inversion Translocation Duplication
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Local & Global Alignment AGTGCCCTGGAACCCTGACGGTGGGTCACAAAACTTCTGGA AGTGACCTGGGAAGACCCTGAACCCTGGGTCACAAAACTC AGTGCCCTGGAACCCTGACGGTGGGTCACAAAACTTCTGGA AGTGACCTGGGAAGACCCTGAACCCTGGGTCACAAAACTC Local Global
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Glocal Alignment Problem Find least cost transformation of one sequence into another using shuffle operations Sequence edits Inversions Translocations Duplications Combinations of above AGTGCCCTGGAACCCTGACGGTGGGTCACAAAACTTCTGGA AGTGACCTGGGAAGACCCTGAACCCTGGGTCACAAAACTC
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SLAGAN: 1. Find Local Alignments 1.Find Local Alignments 2.Build Rough Homology Map 3.Globally Align Consistent Parts Mike Brudno, Sanket Malde, et al.
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SLAGAN: 2. Build Homology Map 1.Find Local Alignments 2.Build Rough Homology Map 3.Globally Align Consistent Parts Mike Brudno, Sanket Malde, et al.
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SLAGAN: 3. Global Alignment 1.Find Local Alignments 2.Build Rough Homology Map 3.Globally Align Consistent Parts Mike Brudno, Sanket Malde, et al.
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SLAGAN Example: Chromosome 20 Human Chromosome 20 versus Mouse Chromosome 2 270 Segments of conserved synteny 70 Inversions
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SLAGAN example: HOX cluster 10 paralogous genes Conserved order in Human/Mouse/Rat
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SLAGAN example: HOX cluster 10 paralogous genes Conserved order in Human/Mouse/Rat
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Examples of shuffled regions Hum/Mus Hum/Rat
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Examples of shuffled regions Hum/Mus Hum/Rat
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Examples of shuffled regions Hum/Mus Hum/Rat
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Examples of shuffled regions Hum/MusHum/Rat
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Examples of shuffled regions Hum/Mus Hum/Rat
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More DNA is coming…
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