Team:Johns Hopkins-Software/BiobrickAnalysis
From 2012.igem.org
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- | What we did was a very quick scan of the biobrick parts, since we checked only perfect alignments and didn’t take into account potential mutations in annotation sequences that could still produce the same result. Although there may be slight discrepancies in what is truly an incorrect annotation sequence, what we have done is isolated the parts that may have annotation errors and will need to be checked over, which is something that would have taken several hours | + | What we did was a very quick scan of the biobrick parts, since we checked only perfect alignments and didn’t take into account potential mutations in annotation sequences that could still produce the same result. Although there may be slight discrepancies in what is truly an incorrect annotation sequence, what we have done is isolated the parts that may have annotation errors and will need to be checked over, which is something that would have taken several hours if a single person were doing it. We see this as a reason for synthetic biologists to use software to help them annotate their constructed sequences, as opposed to hand-annotating, since the accuracy of computer-generated annotations from simple alignment algorithms would be much greater and reduce the amount of errors that we see currently in the Parts Registry. Given that the Parts Registry is constantly increasing in size, and more and more complicated constructs will be created in the future as synthetic biology advances, we see that using software to annotate will help to mitigate future errors and man hours invested into correcting incorrect annotation sequences. |
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Revision as of 05:44, 3 October 2012