Abstract
Given two genomic DNA sequences, the syntenic alignment problem is to compute an ordered list of subsequences for each sequence such that the corresponding subsequence pairs exhibit a high degree of similarity. Syntenic alignments are useful in comparing genomic DNA from related species andin identifying conservedgen es. In this paper, we present a parallel algorithm for computing syntenic alignments that runs in O(mn/p) time and O(m + n/p) memory per processor, where m and n are the respective lengths of the two genomic sequences. Our algorithm is time optimal with respect to the corresponding sequential algorithm and can use O(n/log n) processors, where n is the length of the larger sequence. Using an implementation of this parallel algorithm, we report the alignment of human chromosome 12p13 andit s syntenic region in mouse chromosome 6 (both over 220, 000 base pairs in length) in under 24 minutes on a 64-processor IBM xSeries cluster.
Research supported by NSF Career under CCR-0096288 andN SF EIA-0130861.
Research supported by NIH Grants R01 HG01502-05 andR 01 HG01676-05 from NHGRI.
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Futamura, N., Aluru, S., Huang, X. (2002). Parallel Syntenic Alignments. In: Sahni, S., Prasanna, V.K., Shukla, U. (eds) High Performance Computing — HiPC 2002. HiPC 2002. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 2552. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-36265-7_40
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-36265-7_40
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