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  • Basic Question about BLAST

    Hi All,

    I wanted to know the difference between HSPs and MSP in BLAST. Do multiple HSPs make up an MSP?

    Secondly if two sequences (One query and another subject) have 2 HSPs/MSPs between them (HSPs are at two different locations), can I join the two HSPs/MSPs and say that the query covers [ (length(HSP1)+length(HSP2))/subject_length ] portion of the subject.

    Finding it a little difficult to understand.

    thanks
    Abhijit

  • #2
    See the first para: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~durand/03-711...st2013Oct8.pdf

    From: http://dir.nhlbi.nih.gov/papers/lkem...last_help.html (Term MSP seems to have fallen out of favor in modern implementations of BLAST)


    The fundamental unit of BLAST algorithm output is the High-
    scoring Segment Pair (HSP). An HSP consists of two sequence
    fragments of arbitrary but equal length whose alignment is
    locally maximal and for which the alignment score meets or
    exceeds a threshold or cutoff score. A set of HSPs is thus
    defined by two sequences, a scoring system, and a cutoff
    score; this set may be empty if the cutoff score is suffi-
    ciently high.
    A Maximal-scoring Segment Pair (MSP) is defined by two
    sequences and a scoring system and is the highest-scoring of
    all possible segment pairs that can be produced from the two
    sequences.
    As for your second question: If non-overlapping parts of your query are covering two regions of the subject then you could say that query covers X% of the subject. You should not use coverage without providing a context of similarity/identity for the HSP.

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