Fast, scalable generation of high‐quality protein multiple sequence alignments using Clustal Omega

Fabian Sievers(University College Dublin), Andreas Wilm(Genome Institute of Singapore), David Dineen(University College Dublin), Toby J. Gibson(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Kevin Karplus(University of California, Santa Cruz), Weizhong Li(European Bioinformatics Institute), Rodrigo López(European Bioinformatics Institute), Hamish McWilliam(European Bioinformatics Institute), Michael Remmert(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Johannes Söding(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Julie Thompson(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Desmond G. Higgins(University College Dublin)
Molecular Systems Biology
October 11, 2011
Cited by 16,166Open Access
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Abstract

Multiple sequence alignments are fundamental to many sequence analysis methods. Most alignments are computed using the progressive alignment heuristic. These methods are starting to become a bottleneck in some analysis pipelines when faced with data sets of the size of many thousands of sequences. Some methods allow computation of larger data sets while sacrificing quality, and others produce high-quality alignments, but scale badly with the number of sequences. In this paper, we describe a new program called Clustal Omega, which can align virtually any number of protein sequences quickly and that delivers accurate alignments. The accuracy of the package on smaller test cases is similar to that of the high-quality aligners. On larger data sets, Clustal Omega outperforms other packages in terms of execution time and quality. Clustal Omega also has powerful features for adding sequences to and exploiting information in existing alignments, making use of the vast amount of precomputed information in public databases like Pfam.


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