Abstract

Almost all protein database search methods use amino acid substitution matrices for scoring, optimizing, and assessing the statistical significance of sequence alignments. Much care and effort has therefore gone into constructing substitution matrices, and the quality of search results can depend strongly upon the choice of the proper matrix. A long‐standing problem has been the comparison of sequences with biased amino acid compositions, for which standard substitution matrices are not optimal. To address this problem, we have recently developed a general procedure for transforming a standard matrix into one appropriate for the comparison of two sequences with arbitrary, and possibly differing compositions. Such adjusted matrices yield, on average, improved alignments and alignment scores when applied to the comparison of proteins with markedly biased compositions. Here we review the application of compositionally adjusted matrices and consider whether they may also be applied fruitfully to general purpose protein sequence database searches, in which related sequence pairs do not necessarily have strong compositional biases. Although it is not advisable to apply compositional adjustment indiscriminately, we describe several simple criteria under which invoking such adjustment is on average beneficial. In a typical database search, at least one of these criteria is satisfied by over half the related sequence pairs. Compositional substitution matrix adjustment is now available in NCBI's protein–protein version of blast .

Keywords

Substitution (logic)Sequence (biology)Matrix (chemical analysis)Computer scienceData miningDatabaseMathematicsBiologyChemistryGenetics

MeSH Terms

AlgorithmsComputational BiologyDatabasesProteinInternetProteinsROC CurveSequence AlignmentSequence HomologyAmino AcidSoftware

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Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
review
Volume
272
Issue
20
Pages
5101-5109
Citations
1074
Access
Closed

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1074
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95
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897
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Cite This

Stephen F. Altschul, John C. Wootton, E. Michael Gertz et al. (2005). Protein database searches using compositionally adjusted substitution matrices. FEBS Journal , 272 (20) , 5101-5109. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1742-4658.2005.04945.x

Identifiers

DOI
10.1111/j.1742-4658.2005.04945.x
PMID
16218944
PMCID
PMC1343503

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%