articleBMC BioinformaticsAug 19, 2004GOLD OA

MUSCLE: a multiple sequence alignment method with reduced time and space complexity

University of California, Berkeley

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

In a previous paper, we introduced MUSCLE, a new program for creating multiple alignments of protein sequences, giving a brief summary of the algorithm and showing MUSCLE to achieve the highest scores reported to date on four alignment accuracy benchmarks. Here we present a more complete discussion of the algorithm, describing several previously unpublished techniques that improve biological accuracy and / or computational complexity. We introduce a new option, MUSCLE-fast, designed for high-throughput applications. We also describe a new protocol for evaluating objective functions that align two profiles.

Results

We compare the speed and accuracy of MUSCLE with CLUSTALW, Progressive POA and the MAFFT script FFTNS1, the fastest previously published program known to the author. Accuracy is measured using four benchmarks: BAliBASE, PREFAB, SABmark and SMART. We test three variants that offer highest accuracy (MUSCLE with default settings), highest speed (MUSCLE-fast), and a carefully chosen compromise between the two (MUSCLE-prog). We find MUSCLE-fast to be the fastest algorithm on all test sets, achieving average alignment accuracy similar to CLUSTALW in times that are typically two to three orders of magnitude less. MUSCLE-fast is able to align 1,000 sequences of average length 282 in 21 seconds on a current desktop computer.

Citation impact

9,340
total citations
FWCI
30.97
Percentile
100%
References
51
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Sequence (biology)
  • Computational biology
  • Sequence alignment
  • Computer science
  • Multiple sequence alignment
  • Alignment-free sequence analysis
  • Space (punctuation)
  • DNA microarray
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