- Xrate
XRATE is a program for prototyping
phylogenetic hidden Markov models and stochastic context-free grammars.It is used to discover patterns of evolutionary conservation in sequence alignments.The program can be used to estimate parameters for such models from "training" alignment data,or to apply the parameterized model so as to annotate new alignments.The program allows specification of a variety of models of DNA sequence evolution which may be arbitrarily organized using formal grammars.As an example of how XRATE is used, consider a protein-coding
gene consisting ofexons interspersed withintrons .The exons contain triplets of nucleotides (codons ) that are translated byribosomes according to thegenetic code , and consequently are underselection pressure (since any mutation may affect the translatedamino acid sequence ).In contrast, the introns are under fewer selective constraints and tend to evolve faster.These varying pressures show up clearly in multiple alignments.The sequential layout of introns and exons can be described using grammar theory (from linguistics)and each of their distinct evolutionary signatures modeled as acontinuous-time Markov process .XRATE allows the user to specify such models in a configuration file and estimate their parameters (evolutionary rates, length distributions of exons and introns, etc.)directly from alignment data, using theExpectation-maximization algorithm .XRATE can be downloaded as part of the [http://biowiki.org/DART DART software package] . It accepts input files in
Stockholm format .References
* Holmes I, Rubin GM. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11955022?dopt=Abstract An expectation maximization algorithm for training hidden substitution models.] J Mol Biol. 2002 Apr 12;317(5):753-64.
* Klosterman PS, Uzilov AV, Bendana YR, Bradley RK, Chao S, Kosiol C, Goldman N, Holmes I. [http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/7/428 XRate: a fast prototyping, training and annotation tool for phylo-grammars] . BMC Bioinformatics. 2006 Oct 3;7:428.External links
* XRATE [http://biowiki.org/XRATE homepage] and [http://biowiki.org/XrateFormat file format]
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