Fast structural alignment of biomolecules using a hash table, n-grams and string descriptors

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Abstract

This work presents a generalized approach for the fast structural alignment of thousands of macromolecular structures. The method uses string representations of a macromolecular structure and a hash table that stores n-grams of a certain size for searching. To this end, macromolecular structure-to-string translators were implemented for protein and RNA structures. A query against the index is performed in two hierarchical steps to unite speed and precision. In the first step the query structure is translated into n-grams, and all target structures containing these n-grams are retrieved from the hash table. In the second step all corresponding n-grams of the query and each target structure are subsequently aligned, and after each alignment a score is calculated based on the matching n-grams of query and target. The extendable framework enables the user to query and structurally align thousands of protein and RNA structures on a commodity machine and is available as open source from http://lajolla.sf.net. © 2009 by the authors.

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Bauer, R. A., Rother, K., Moor, P., Reinert, K., Steinke, T., Bujnicki, J. M., & Preissner, R. (2009). Fast structural alignment of biomolecules using a hash table, n-grams and string descriptors. Algorithms, 2(2), 692–709. https://doi.org/10.3390/a2020692

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