Learn R Programming

bio3d (version 2.4-4)

seqaln.pair: Sequence Alignment of Identical Protein Sequences

Description

Create multiple alignments of amino acid sequences according to the method of Edgar.

Usage

seqaln.pair(aln, ...)

Value

A list with two components:

ali

an alignment character matrix with a row per sequence and a column per equivalent aminoacid/nucleotide.

ids

sequence names as identifers.

Arguments

aln

a sequence character matrix, as obtained from seqbind, or an alignment list object as obtained from read.fasta.

...

additional arguments for the function seqaln.

Author

Barry Grant

Details

This function is intended for the alignment of identical sequences only. For standard alignment see the related function seqaln.

This function is useful for determining the equivalences between sequences and structures. For example in aligning a PDB sequence to an existing multiple sequence alignment, where one would first mask the alignment sequences and then run the alignment to determine equivalences.

References

Grant, B.J. et al. (2006) Bioinformatics 22, 2695--2696.

‘MUSCLE’ is the work of Edgar: Edgar (2004) Nuc. Acid. Res. 32, 1792--1797.

Full details of the ‘MUSCLE’ algorithm, along with download and installation instructions can be obtained from:
http://www.drive5.com/muscle/.

See Also

seqaln, read.fasta, read.fasta.pdb, seqbind

Examples

Run this code

## NOTE: FOLLOWING EXAMPLE NEEDS MUSCLE INSTALLED
if(check.utility("muscle")) {

##- Aligning a PDB sequence to an existing sequence alignment


##- Simple example
aln <- seqbind(c("X","C","X","X","A","G","K"),
               c("C","-","A","X","G","X","X","K"))

seqaln.pair(aln, outfile = tempfile())

}

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab