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  • Siva
    Member
    • Nov 2008
    • 57

    Bowtie: Burrows Wheeler Transform

    I have used Bowtie to align maize short sequence reads. I have a rather naive question regarding the application of the underlying algorithm. I just thought I would pose it here. How is the Burrows Wheeler Transform algorithm used in in the multiple alignment/short sequence alignment? Does the genome "index" building (Bowtie Index) also use this algorithm? Any details greatly appreciated.

    Siva
  • mgogol
    Senior Member
    • Mar 2008
    • 197

    #2
    Here's a powerpoint presentation I made for our journal club where I attempt to explain the burroughs wheeler transform algorithm...

    I think you are doing the burroughs wheeler transformation when you create the genome index, and then the alignment part is just doing a lookup into that transformed genome.

    If anybody else looks at this presentation and finds I have it wrong, please correct me!
    Attached Files

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    • Siva
      Member
      • Nov 2008
      • 57

      #3
      Hi mgogol
      Thanks a lot. I will go through your ppt presentation and get back to you.

      Siva

      Comment

      • lh3
        Senior Member
        • Feb 2008
        • 686

        #4
        If I were asked to explain how BWT works in sequence alignment in one sentence, I would say BWT effectively mimics suffix tree but with much smaller memory footprint. About how it mimics you need to understand backward search/LF mapping, which will take some time to understand and even more time to prove.

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