4.6 Article

Evaluating Statistical Multiple Sequence Alignment in Comparison to Other Alignment Methods on Protein Data Sets

Journal

SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue 3, Pages 396-411

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syy068

Keywords

BAli-Phy; homology; multiple sequence alignment; protein sequences; structural alignment

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [OCI-0725070, ACI-1238993]
  2. state of Illinois
  3. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [ABI-1458652]

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The estimation of multiple sequence alignments of protein sequences is a basic step in many bioinformatics pipelines, including alignments and trees under stochastic models of sequence evolution has long been considered the most rigorous technique for estimating alignments and trees, but little is known about the accuracy of suchmethods on biological benchmarks. We report the results of an extensive study evaluating the most popular protein alignment methods as well as the statistical coestimation method BAli-Phy on 1192 protein data sets from established benchmarks as well as on 120 simulated data sets. Our study (which used more than 230 CPU years for the BAli-Phy analyses alone) shows that BAli-Phy has better precision and recall (with respect to the true alignments) than the other alignment methods on the simulated data sets but has consistently lower recall on the biological benchmarks (with respect to the reference alignments) than many of the other methods. In otherwords, we find that BAli-Phy systematically underaligns when operating on biological sequence data but shows no sign of this on simulated data. There are several potential causes for this change in performance, including model misspecification, errors in the reference alignments, and conflicts between structural alignment and evolutionary alignments, and future research is needed to determine the most likely explanation. We conclude with a discussion of the potential ramifications for each of these possibilities.

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