Instant insight: Reading the genome atlas
19 March 2008
Peter Hallin, Tim Binnewies and David Ussery at the Technical University of Denmark at Lyngby examine how the BLASTatlas tool can be used to spot the differences between similar genomes
There has been a literal explosion at the level of sequence information. The development of fast and inexpensive methods for sequencing bacterial genomes has led to a wealth of data, often with many genomes being sequenced of the same species or of closely related organisms. Thus, there is a need for simple ways to compare these sequenced genomes. We have developed the BLASTatlas method for mapping and visualising whole genome homology of genes and proteins within a reference strain compared to one or more other strains or species of prokaryotic organisms. The map is accurate at the level of amino acid conservation - in many cases few regions of a protein will be conserved.

Zooming in: a BLASTatlas map allows genomes to be compared |
The figure shows a zoom of a particular region of a BLASTatlas for the main chromosome of Clostridium botulinum strain Langeland A, compared to 11 other Clostridia genomes. There are three dark blue lanes near the top, where most of the proteins are conserved, implying that these proteins probably play the same functional role in these organisms. The other genomes compared show little sequence conservation overall, and the genes contain only partial matches. So the plot answers questions not just about the presence or absence of genes, but about the degree to which they are conserved. The strong sequence conservation in the three dark blue lanes makes biological sense in that they all represent different strains of C. botulinum. The diversity within the genus of Clostridium is amongst the largest of all bacterial genera, and is as great as that between all animals.
We allow users to directly access the tools that are used to generate these BLASTatlas maps, through the use of Simple Object Access Protocol, commonly known as SOAP. This framework allows clients to directly communicate with our server and in a programmatic fashion, thereby allowing the user's own programs to systematically examine a large number of genomes.
Read Hallin et al's highlight in a forthcoming issue of Molecular BioSystems.
Link to journal article
The genome BLASTatlas—a GeneWiz extension for visualization of whole-genome homology
Peter F. Hallin, Tim T. Binnewies and David W. Ussery, Mol. BioSyst., 2008, 4, 363
DOI: 10.1039/b717118h
Related Links
BLASTatlas 1.0.ws0
The BLASTatlas homepage at the Center for Biological Sequence Analysis.
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Leroy Hood talks to Katherine Vickers about Google, prions and the human genome project.
