English

A stitch in time: Efficient computation of genomic DNA melting bubbles

Biomolecules 2008-07-19 v1 Genomics

Abstract

Background: It is of biological interest to make genome-wide predictions of the locations of DNA melting bubbles using statistical mechanics models. Computationally, this poses the challenge that a generic search through all combinations of bubble starts and ends is quadratic. Results: An efficient algorithm is described, which shows that the time complexity of the task is O(NlogN) rather than quadratic. The algorithm exploits that bubble lengths may be limited, but without a prior assumption of a maximal bubble length. No approximations, such as windowing, have been introduced to reduce the time complexity. More than just finding the bubbles, the algorithm produces a stitch profile, which is a probabilistic graphical model of bubbles and helical regions. The algorithm applies a probability peak finding method based on a hierarchical analysis of the energy barriers in the Poland-Scheraga model. Conclusions: Exact and fast computation of genomic stitch profiles is thus feasible. Sequences of several megabases have been computed, only limited by computer memory. Possible applications are the genome-wide comparisons of bubbles with promotors, TSS, viral integration sites, and other melting-related regions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0802.1057,
  title  = {A stitch in time: Efficient computation of genomic DNA melting bubbles},
  author = {Eivind Tøstesen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0802.1057},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

16 pages, 10 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:10:38.578Z