SPEAKER:
Juergen Kleffe
Charite-University Medicine
Campus Benjamin Franklin
Institute of Molecularbiology and Biochemistry
Section: Molecularbiology and Bioinformatics
Berlin, Germany
ABSTRACT:
| Expressed sequence tags (ESTs)
offer a fast and inexpensive route to gene discovery, alternative
splicing, gene expression and gene regulation. But the more than five
million human ESTs stored in Genbank also show the limitations of the
current programs for sequence comparisons. For instance, given a gene,
the series of BLAST programs is very useful to search for evidence
supporting or opposing its annotation. A more complex problem is to
search for an as large as possible subset of genes with annotations
supported by matching ESTs or cDNAs in a given way. Then even milli
seconds add up to many days if we apply in turn BLAST based programs to
a large number of candidate genes. We describe considerably faster methods for simultaneous sequence comparisons based on suffix trees, suffix arrays and their modifications and programs to answer questions like: Which are the known genes of some organism with full cDNA support? Which genes find confirming or opposing EST or cDNA support? What are the genes alternatively annotated in different database entries? |
REFRESHMENTS: 3:45
pm; 104 Snedecor Hall