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BLAST

BLAST. BLAST. B asic L ocal A lignment S earch T ool Developed in 1990 and 1997 (S. Altschul) A heuristic method for performing local alignments through searches of high scoring segment pairs (HSP’s) 1st to use statistics to predict significance of initial matches - saves on false leads

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BLAST

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  1. BLAST

  2. BLAST • Basic Local Alignment Search Tool • Developed in 1990 and 1997 (S. Altschul) • A heuristic method for performing local alignments through searches of high scoring segment pairs (HSP’s) • 1st to use statistics to predict significance of initial matches - saves on false leads • Offers both sensitivity and speed

  3. BLAST • Looks for clusters of nearby or locally dense “similar or homologous” k-tuples • Uses “look-up” tables to shorten search time • Uses larger “word size” than FASTA to accelerate the search process • Performs both Global and Local alignment • Fastest and most frequently used sequence alignment tool -- THE STANDARD

  4. BLAST Access • NCBI BLAST • http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/ • Canadian Bioinformatics Resource BLAST • http://cbr-rbc.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/blast/ • European Bioinformatics Institute BLAST • http://www.ebi.ac.uk/blastall/ • http://www.ebi.ac.uk/blast2/

  5. Different Flavours of BLAST • BLASTP - protein query against protein DB • BLASTN - DNA/RNA query against GenBank (DNA) • BLASTX - 6 frame trans. DNA query against proteinDB • TBLASTN - protein query against 6 frame GB transl. • TBLASTX - 6 frame DNA query to 6 frame GB transl. • PSI-BLAST - protein ‘profile’ query against protein DB • PHI-BLAST - protein pattern against protein DB

  6. Other BLAST Services • MEGABLAST - for comparison of large sets of long DNA sequences • RPS-BLAST - Conserved Domain Detection • BLAST 2 Sequences - for performing pairwise alignments for 2 chosen sequences • Genomic BLAST - for alignments against select human, microbial or malarial genomes • VecScreen - for detecting cloning vector contamination in sequenced data

  7. Running NCBI BLAST

  8. MT0895 • MMKIQIYGTGCANCQMLEKNAREAVKELGIDAEFEKIKEMDQILEAGLTALPGLAVDGELKIMGRVASKEEIKKILS

  9. Running NCBI BLAST • Paste in sequence (FASTA format, raw sequence or type in GI or accession number) >Mysequence MT0895 KIQIYGTGCANCQMLEKNAREAVKELGIDAEFEKIKEMDQILEAGLTALPGLAVDGELKIDS OR > KIQIYGTGCANCQMLEKNAREAVKELGIDAEFEKIKEMDQILEAGLTALPGLAVDGELKIDS OR KIQIYGTGCANCQMLEKNAREAVKELGIDAEFEKIKEMDQILEAGLTALPGLAVDGELKIDS

  10. Running NCBI BLAST • Choose a range of interest in the sequence “set subsequences” (not usually used) • Select the database from pull-down menu (usually choose nr = non-redundant) • Keep CD Search “check box” on • Leave “Options” unchanged (use defaults) • Go to “Format” menu and adjust Number of descriptions and alignments as desired

  11. Running NCBI BLAST Select Database

  12. Conserved Domain Database • Contains a collection of pre-identified functional or structural domains • Derived from Pfam and Smart databases as well as other sources • Uses Reverse Position Specific BLAST (RPS-BLAST) to perform search • Query sequence is compared to a PSSM derived from each of the aligned domains

  13. Running NCBI BLAST Click BLAST!

  14. Formatting Results

  15. BLAST Format Options

  16. BLAST Output

  17. BLAST Output

  18. BLAST Output

  19. BLAST Output

  20. BLAST Output

  21. BLAST Output

  22. BLAST Parameters • Identities - No. & % exact residue matches • Positives - No. and % similar & ID matches • Gaps - No. & % gaps introduced • Score - Summed HSP score (S) • Bit Score - a normalized score (S’) • Expect (E) - Expected # of chance HSP aligns • P - Probability of getting a score > X • T - Minimum word or k-tuple score (Threshold)

  23. BLAST - Rules of Thumb • Expect (E-value) is equal to the number of BLAST alignments with a given Score that are expected to be seen simply due to chance • Don’t trust a BLAST alignment with an Expect score > 0.01 (Grey zone is between 0.01 - 1) • Expect and Score are related, but Expect contains more information. Note that %Identies is more useful than the bit Score • Recall Doolittle’s Curve (%ID vs. Length, next slide) %ID > 30 - numres/50 • If uncertain about a hit, perform a PSI-BLAST search

  24. Doolittle’s Curve Twilight Zone

  25. Getting the Most from BLAST

  26. BLAST Options

  27. BLAST Options • Composition-based statistics (Yes) • Sequence Complexity Filter (Yes) • Expect (E) value (10) • Word Size (3) • Substitution or Scoring Matrix (Blosum62) • Gap Insertion Penalty (11) • Gap Extension Penalty (1)

  28. Composition Statistics • Recent addition to BLAST algorithm • Permits calculated E (Expect) values to account for amino acid composition of queries and database hits • Improves accuracy and reduces false positives • Effectively conducts a different scoring procedure for each sequence in database

  29. LCR’s (low complexity) • Watch out for… • transmembrane or signal peptide regions • coil-coil regions • short amino acid repeats (collagen, elastin) • homopolymeric repeats • BLAST uses SEG to mask amino acids • BLAST uses DUST to mask bases

  30. Scoring Matrices • BLOSUM Matrices • Developed by Henikoff & Henikoff (1992) • BLOcks SUbstitution Matrix • Derived from the BLOCKS database • PAM Matrices • Developed by Schwarz and Dayhoff (1978) • Point Accepted Mutation • Derived from manual alignments of closely related proteins

  31. How to Make Your Own Matrix A C D ... ACDEFGH.. ACDEFGK.. AADEFGH.. GCDEFGH.. ACAEYGK.. ACAEFAH.. #Aobs f(A,A) = A 0.8 -- -- #Aexp C 0.2 0.8 -- D 0.0 0.3 1.0 #C/Aobs f(C,A) = E -- -- -- #Aexp + #Cexp Perform Calculate Fill Sub Alignment Frequencies Matrix

  32. First useful scoring matrix for protein Assumed a Markov Model of evolution (I.e. all sites equally mutable and independent) Derived from small, closely related proteins with ~15% divergence Much later entry to matrix “sweepstakes” No evolutionary model is assumed Built from PROSITE derived sequence blocks Uses much larger, more diverse set of protein sequences (30% - 90% ID) PAM versus BLOSUM

  33. Higher PAM numbers to detect more remote sequence similarities Lower PAM numbers to detect high similarities 1 PAM ~ 1 million years of divergence Errors in PAM 1 are scaled 250X in PAM 250 Lower BLOSUM numbers to detect more remote sequence similarities Higher BLOSUM numbers to detect high similarities Sensitive to structural and functional subsitution Errors in BLOSUM arise from errors in alignment PAM versus BLOSUM

  34. PAM Matricies • PAM 40 - prepared by multiplying PAM 1 by itself a total of 40 times best for short alignments with high similarity • PAM 120 - prepared by multiplying PAM 1 by itself a total of 120 times best for general alignment • PAM 250 - prepared by multiplying PAM 1 by itself a total of 250 times best for detecting distant sequence similarity

  35. BLOSUM Matricies • BLOSUM 90 - prepared from BLOCKS sequences with >90% sequence ID best for short alignments with high similarity • BLOSUM 62 - prepared from BLOCKS sequences with >62% sequence ID best for general alignment (default) • BLOSUM 30 - prepared from BLOCKS sequences with >30% sequence ID best for detecting weak local alignments

  36. Scraping the Bottom of the Barrel with Psi-BLAST

  37. PSI-BLAST Algorithm • Perform initial alignment with BLAST using BLOSUM 62 substitution matrix • Construct a multiple alignment from matches • Prepare position specific scoring matrix • Use PSSM profile as the scoring matrix for a second BLAST run against database • Repeat steps 3-5 until convergence

  38. PSI-BLAST

  39. PresSIterate! PSI-BLAST

  40. PSI-BLAST PresSIterate!

  41. PSI-BLAST

  42. PSI-BLAST • For Protein Sequences ONLY • Much more sensitive than BLAST • Slower (iterative process) • Often yields results that are as good as many common threading methods • SHOULD BE YOUR FIRST CHOICE IN ANALYZING A NEW SEQUENCE

  43. BLAST against PDB

  44. Still Confused? http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Education/BLASTinfo/information3.html

  45. Conclusions • BLAST is the most important program in bioinformatics (maybe all of biology) • BLAST is based on sound statistical principles (key to its speed and sensitivity) • A basic understanding of its principles is key for using/interpreting BLAST output • Use NBLAST or MEGABLAST for DNA • Use PSI-BLAST for protein searches

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