Article ID: | iaor2007219 |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Volume: | 21 |
Issue: | 7 |
Start Page Number: | 1002 |
End Page Number: | 1009 |
Publication Date: | Apr 2005 |
Journal: | Bioinformatics |
Authors: | Sandelin Erik |
Keywords: | heuristics, programming: integer |
Multiple structural alignments (MSTAs) provide position-specific information on the sequence variability allowed by protein folds. This information can be exploited to better understand the evolution of proteins and the physical chemistry of polypeptide folding. Most MSTA methods rely on a pre-computed library of pairwise alignments. This library will in general contain conflicting residue equivalences not all of which can be realized in the final MSTA. Hence to build a consistent MSTA, these methods have to select a conflict-free subset of equivalences. Results: Using a dataset with 327 families from SCOP 1.63 we compare the ability of two different methods to select an optimal conflict-free subset of equivalences. One is an implementation of Reinert