Difference between revisions of "HMMER"
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An HMM is a statistical model that describes the known sequence variations within a specific group of proteins that may be of special interest; for example a protein family with known function, or a domain containing a well studied interaction surface or an active site. HMM is a machine learning technique [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidden_Markov_model] where the models are built from training examples that are known good members, and where the finished models can be used to reliably classify and annotate new or poorly understood protein sequences in an automated fashion. Large libraries of trusted HMMs (such as [http://pfam.sanger.ac.uk/ Pfam]) are of course immensely beneficial, as they can be used to automatically classify large portions of newly sequenced genomes, directly as they become available. | An HMM is a statistical model that describes the known sequence variations within a specific group of proteins that may be of special interest; for example a protein family with known function, or a domain containing a well studied interaction surface or an active site. HMM is a machine learning technique [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidden_Markov_model] where the models are built from training examples that are known good members, and where the finished models can be used to reliably classify and annotate new or poorly understood protein sequences in an automated fashion. Large libraries of trusted HMMs (such as [http://pfam.sanger.ac.uk/ Pfam]) are of course immensely beneficial, as they can be used to automatically classify large portions of newly sequenced genomes, directly as they become available. | ||
− | HMMER | + | The HMMER package contains applications for working with HMMs, for example for: |
* Building and calibrating HMMs. | * Building and calibrating HMMs. | ||
* Matching an HMM against a sequence database (for finding new members). | * Matching an HMM against a sequence database (for finding new members). | ||
* Matching a sequence against an HMM database (for finding new sequence features). | * Matching a sequence against an HMM database (for finding new sequence features). | ||
− | |||
== Versions == | == Versions == |
Revision as of 15:20, 17 February 2011
General info
HMMER is a software package for working with profile hidden Markov models (HMM) of known regions in proteins.
An HMM is a statistical model that describes the known sequence variations within a specific group of proteins that may be of special interest; for example a protein family with known function, or a domain containing a well studied interaction surface or an active site. HMM is a machine learning technique [1] where the models are built from training examples that are known good members, and where the finished models can be used to reliably classify and annotate new or poorly understood protein sequences in an automated fashion. Large libraries of trusted HMMs (such as Pfam) are of course immensely beneficial, as they can be used to automatically classify large portions of newly sequenced genomes, directly as they become available.
The HMMER package contains applications for working with HMMs, for example for:
- Building and calibrating HMMs.
- Matching an HMM against a sequence database (for finding new members).
- Matching a sequence against an HMM database (for finding new sequence features).
Versions
There are two verions of HMMER that can conceivably be useful:
- HMMER-2.3.2: Old stable version.
- HMMER-3.0: Fast, but backwards incompatible and non-feature-complete.
Their implementations and output (and potentially also the actual results) are vastly different, so ongoing projects are not recommended to switch between them. For new project, it is highly recommended to spend some time to deduce which version is the most suitable.
HMMER-3.0 may seem like an obvious choice; it is much faster than its predecessor and it is currently used in large scale production (e.g. by Pfam), and it is also promoted as the official main HMMER version. However, HMMER-3.0 is not feature complete. Especially, the old default alignment behavior (glocal, hmm_ls) is missing, so if this feature is necessary: choose HMMER-2.3.2.