Human–Mouse Alignments with BLASTZ

Scott Schwartz(Pennsylvania State University), W. James Kent(Pennsylvania State University), Arian F. A. Smit(Pennsylvania State University), Zheng Zhang(Pennsylvania State University), Robert Baertsch(Pennsylvania State University), Ross C. Hardison(Pennsylvania State University), David Haussler(Pennsylvania State University), Webb Miller(Pennsylvania State University)
Genome Research
December 30, 2002
Cited by 1,276Open Access
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Abstract

The Mouse Genome Analysis Consortium aligned the human and mouse genome sequences for a variety of purposes, using alignment programs that suited the various needs. For investigating issues regarding genome evolution, a particularly sensitive method was needed to permit alignment of a large proportion of the neutrally evolving regions. We selected a program called BLASTZ, an independent implementation of the Gapped BLAST algorithm specifically designed for aligning two long genomic sequences. BLASTZ was subsequently modified, both to attain efficiency adequate for aligning entire mammalian genomes and to increase its sensitivity. This work describes BLASTZ, its modifications, the hardware environment on which we run it, and several empirical studies to validate its results.


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