Comparison of multiple DNA alignment algorithms for Labiatae molecular phylogeny inferences

Planta Medica ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 77 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
AG Ince ◽  
M Karaca ◽  
A Aydın
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Fernandes ◽  
Jérémie Decouchant ◽  
Marcus Völp ◽  
Francisco M Couto ◽  
Paulo Esteves-Veríssimo

AbstractThe advent of high throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) machines made DNA sequencing cheaper, but also put pressure on the genomic life-cycle, which includes aligning millions of short DNA sequences, called reads, to a reference genome. On the performance side, efficient algorithms have been developed, and parallelized on public clouds. On the privacy side, since genomic data are utterly sensitive, several cryptographic mechanisms have been proposed to align reads securely, with a lower performance than the former, which in turn are not secure. This manuscript proposes a novel contribution to improving the privacy performance product in current genomic studies. Building on recent works that argue that genomics data needs to be × treated according to a threat-risk analysis, we introduce a multi-level sensitivity classification of genomic variations. Our classification prevents the amplification of possible privacy attacks, thanks to promoting and partitioning mechanisms among sensitivity levels. Thanks to this classification, reads can be aligned, stored, and later accessed, using different security levels. We then extend a recent filter, which detects the reads that carry sensitive information, to classify reads into sensitivity levels. Finally, based on a review of the existing alignment methods, we show that adapting alignment algorithms to reads sensitivity allows high performance gains, whilst enforcing high privacy levels. Our results indicate that using sensitivity levels is feasible to optimize the performance of privacy preserving alignment, if one combines the advantages of private and public clouds.


2020 ◽  
pp. 207-214
Author(s):  
Akbar Fattahi

The Iranian species of the phyllodactylid geckos of the genus Asaccus are found only in the valleys of the Zagros Mountains, a region which represents an important area of endemism in western Iran. Recently, many relict species have been described from the central and southern parts of the Zagros Mountains, which were previously known as A. elisae. The recent descriptions of species within this complex suggest that diversity within the genus may be higher than expected and that its taxonomy and systematics should be revised. In the present study, phylogenetic relationships within the genus Asaccus were evaluated using two mitochondrial and one nuclear gene. Genetically, the genus shows high levels of variability. The molecular phylogeny of the genus suggests the presence of three main clades along the Zagros Mountains with the southern population (from the Hormozgan province) and one clade (A. sp8 and A. sp9) being sister taxon to A. montanus from UAE. The remaining samples are separated into two reciprocally monophyletic groups: the northern (Kurdistan, Kermanshah and Ilam provinces) and the central (Lorestan, Khuzestan, Kohgilouye-Bouyer Ahmad and Fars provinces) Zagros groups. The results of the present study suggest that populations attributed to A. elisae in Iran correspond to distinct lineages with high genetic distances. In brief, our results suggest that the genus needs a major taxonomical revision The Arabian origin of the genus has not been confirmed, because two populations from Zagros were located within the A. montanus, A. gallagheri and A. platyrhynchus clade. Further morphological analyses are needed to systematically define each genetic lineage as a new taxon.


Author(s):  
Renganayaki G. ◽  
Achuthsankar S. Nair

Sequence alignment algorithms and  database search methods use BLOSUM and PAM substitution matrices constructed from general proteins. These de facto matrices are not optimal to align sequences accurately, for the proteins with markedly different compositional bias in the amino acid.   In this work, a new amino acid substitution matrix is calculated for the disorder and low complexity rich region of Hub proteins, based on residue characteristics. Insights into the amino acid background frequencies and the substitution scores obtained from the Hubsm unveils the  residue substitution patterns which differs from commonly used scoring matrices .When comparing the Hub protein sequences for detecting homologs,  the use of this Hubsm matrix yields better results than PAM and BLOSUM matrices. Usage of Hubsm matrix can be optimal in database search and for the construction of more accurate sequence alignments of Hub proteins.


Author(s):  
A. P. Sukhorukov ◽  
M. A. Kushunina

Kochia monticola was previously considered as a synonym for the widely distributed Irano-Turanian Panderia pilosa. After the merger of Kochia and Panderia with Bassia based on molecular phylogeny, K. monticola remained a synonym of Bassia pilosa. We claim that Bassia monticola, a name proposed by Kuntze (1891) for K. monticola, should be separated from B. pilosa based on morphological characters and localised distribution in mountainous regions of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon at altitudes 1800–2600 m a. s. l.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 375-381
Author(s):  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Jian Tai He ◽  
Yangde Zhang ◽  
Ke Zuo

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