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Sequence Analysis: Deciphering
the Language of Life
Abstract
Sequence analysis is a central tool of bioinformatics with relevant databases (NCBI,
GenBank, Swiss-Prot) and software to detect sequence similarity (BLAST) and domain
databases (Pfam, SMART). Crucial is the ability to know and use such software on the
web, the tutorials and exercises encourage this. Programming sequence comparison
software and databases only makes sense if it enables a better analysis of the biological
question, in particular for large-scale analysis – in all other cases, it is better to use the
numerous software that already exist, the internet is only a mouse click away.
Bioinformatics requires data on living organisms, processes them and then designs a cor
responding model of the living process that is thereby mapped. A good simple example is
when a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is used to detect a virus in the blood. Polymerases
copy DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and were originally derived from bacteria. Hereby
they also duplicate their genetic information. PCR is a modern method of molecular biol
ogy. Using such a chain reaction, so much of a molecule (if, for example, there is only one
virus molecule in the blood) is produced by constant doubling of the molecules with the
help of polymerase that it can be easily detected in the laboratory and, above all, the
sequence can be read.
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© Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2023
T. Dandekar, M. Kunz, Bioinformatics,
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-65036-3_1