Long DNA sequence comparison on multicore architectures

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Abstract

Biological sequence comparison is one of the most important tasks in Bioinformatics. Due to the growth of biological databases, sequence comparison is becoming an important challenge for high performance computing, especially when very long sequences are compared. The Smith-Waterman (SW) algorithm is an exact method based on dynamic programming to quantify local similarity between sequences. The inherent large parallelism of the algorithm makes it ideal for architectures supporting multiple dimensions of parallelism (TLP, DLP and ILP). In this work, we show how long sequences comparison takes advantage of current and future multicore architectures. We analyze two different SW implementations on the CellBE and use simulation tools to study the performance scalability in a multicore architecture. We study the memory organization that delivers the maximum bandwidth with the minimum cost. Our results show that a heterogeneous architecture is an valid alternative to execute challenging bioinformatic workloads. © 2010 Springer-Verlag.

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APA

Sánchez, F., Cabarcas, F., Ramirez, A., & Valero, M. (2010). Long DNA sequence comparison on multicore architectures. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 6272 LNCS, pp. 247–259). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-15291-7_24

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