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Seeds for effective oligonucleotide design
Journal article

Seeds for effective oligonucleotide design

Abstract

BackgroundDNA oligonucleotides are a very useful tool in biology. The best algorithms for designing good DNA oligonucleotides are filtering out unsuitable regions using a seeding approach. Determining the quality of the seeds is crucial for the performance of these algorithms.ResultsWe present a sound framework for evaluating the quality of seeds for oligonucleotide design. The F - score is used to measure the accuracy of each seed. A number of natural candidates are tested: contiguous (BLAST-like), spaced, transitions-constrained, and multiple spaced seeds. Multiple spaced seeds are the best, with more seeds providing better accuracy. Single spaced and transition seeds are very close whereas, as expected, contiguous seeds come last. Increased accuracy comes at the price of reduced efficiency. An exception is that single spaced and transitions-constrained seeds are both more accurate and more efficient than contiguous ones.ConclusionsOur work confirms another application where multiple spaced seeds perform the best. It will be useful in improving the algorithms for oligonucleotide design.

Authors

Ilie L; Ilie S; Khoshraftar S; Bigvand AM

Journal

BMC Genomics, Vol. 12, No. 1,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

June 1, 2011

DOI

10.1186/1471-2164-12-280

ISSN

1471-2164

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