Description
BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool) is an algorithm for fast, efficient searching of databases of
proteins, DNA, and RNA sequences. A BLAST search allows a researcher to compare a query sequence
against a library of sequences. For example, after sequencing a gene from a newly discovered bacteria,
BLAST can be used to determine if the gene is similar to any genes in known bacteria. You can read more
about BLAST at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BLAST or try it out at https://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.
gov/Blast.cgi.
Please carefully read the entire assignment before beginning your implementation.
In this homework assignment, we create an extremely simplified version of BLAST. Our version works in
a manner somewhat similar to BLAST, but the BLAST algorithm is sophisticated and BLAST software is
highly optimized. BLAST is used to regularly search Genbank, a repository of sequence data containing over
1 trillion bases (letters) of sequence data. Online searches are typically returned in less than a minute. We
won’t try anything quite so ambitious. Our version of BLAST, MiniBLAST, will search small genome files
with query strings in a DNA alphabet (A,C,G,T).
The genome files that we will search will consist of a number of lines, each line containing letters from the
DNA alphabet. Here are the first few lines of the genome small.txt file:
$ head genome_small.txt
TAATGACCTAAATAATCTAAACAAAAGGAAGAGAGATAGTCCGGATTACC
TGGGACATGGAAAACCCTCCTTTCTCTCATCAGCTTCCCACCCCACCTCT
GCCCAGCGCTAATCATGATTTAATAGCCTTCCTTAATCACTTACTCTGTT
TGCTGCTTCATCTAAAAACTTAAGATGCTCTGGGTTAGATCACAGTCTAA
CTCATCACAAATGGATAGAACGACCTGGTAGTTTTCCAGATTTCCATTGT
CCAAACTAATCAGCCAACACACTCAATGATGCACATTATTTTCCACGTAT
ATGGCCTTAGAGATGGGACTAAAAGTCCCGACTGTACTGAGGATGTTTGA
CAGGTTTTGCCATTCTAACTGCTAGTGCTGTGTAATGTGGCTAGGAAGAA
GCAAGGAACAGAGAGATACAGATATGATTTCCTGGGACCAGCTATAGGAG
AGATTCTTCAATTACATCATCTTTGCTCATCCCAAACACCTTGACAAGTA
The genome data above is a small region from human chromosome 18.
The queries will be also strings from the DNA alphabet. A typical query could look like:
CTCATCACAAATGGATAGAACGACCTGGTA
This query can be located at the start of the 5th line.
The strategy that we will employ is to index the genome file with a series of k-mers. A k-mer is a sequence
of k letters from the DNA alphabet, where k is an integer. A given k-mer may appear many times within the
genome.
We index the genome by building a hash table with the k-mers as the keys. The hash table is to be
implemented with an array or a vector at the top level. A hash function will map the k-mer to a position in
the table. You will chose an appropriate structure to store the kmers and genomic locations of the k-mers, i.e.
the positions where they are found in the genomic sequence. You build the hash table by iterating through
the genome sequence with a series of overlapping windows of length k, calculating the the index into the hash
table using the hash function. Store the kmer and its genomic location in the table. When iterating through
the genome sequence, the first k-mer is the genome sequence from 0 to k-1; the second is the sequence from
1 to k, etc.
When searching a biological sequence database, it’s often the case that we do not find an exact match to
a query string. MiniBLAST will process queries of varying lengths and allow for mismatches between the
genome and query string. To search the genome, MiniBLAST uses the first k letters of the query string as
a seed. It is important that searching the database for the initial seed be efficient. Thus, the choice of hash
function and table implementation is important. If the seed can be found in the table, the program should
try to extend the match by adding letters from the indexed genomic position until the full query is matched
or the allowed number of mismatches is exceeded. For simplicity we require that the seed be an exact match.
The mismatches may occur anywhere after the seed in the match string.
Choice of Hash Function and Table Implementation
The choice of the hash function is up to you. A good hash function should be fast, O(1) computation, and
provide a random, uniform distribution of keys throughout the table. You may use one of the hash functions
mentioned in lecture, one found on the internet, or one of your own devising. If you choose to download a
hash function from the internet, you must provide the URL in your README and include the source code
with your submission. If the downloaded file requires a copyright notice, you MUST include that notice. Be
sure to observe any copyright restrictions on the use of the code. In your README file, describe your hash
function and table implementation.
A typical k-mer will be found in several location in the genome. Your hash table implementation should
enable efficient retreival of the multiple locations where the k-mer is found.
To store the k-mers and their genomic positions in the hash table, once the table index of the kmer key
has been found, you may use any of the data structures that we have covered so far in class. To handle
collisions, use one of the open addressing methods described in lecture (linear probing, quadratic probing,
or secondary hashing). Linear probing is the simplest of these three methods. You may not use std::hash,
std::unordered map, std::unordered set, std::map or similar STL functions/containers.
When implementing the hash table, set the initial size of the table. As you enter data in the table, calculate
the occupancy ratio:
occupancy =
number of unique key entries
table size
When the occupancy than some fixed level, double the size of the table and rehash the data. Describe your
re-sizing method in the hash table section of the README file.
Input/Output & Basic Functionality
The program should read a series of commands from std::cin (STDIN) and write responses to std::cout
(STDOUT). Sample input and output files have been provided. You can redirect the input and output
to your program using the instructions in the section Redirecting Input & Output found at http:
//www.cs.rpi.edu/academics/courses/spring17/ds/other_information.php
Your program should accept the following commands:
• genome filename – Read a genome sequence from filename. The genome file consists of lines DNA
characters.
• table size N – this is an optional command. N is an integer. It is the initial hash table size. If it does
not appear in the command file, the initial table size should be set to 100.
• occupancy f – this is an optional command. f is a float. When the occupancy goes above this level, the
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table should be resized. If it does not appear in the command file, the initial level should be set to 0.5.
• kmer k – k is an integer. The genome should be indexed with kmers of length k.
• query m query string – Search the genome for a match to query string allowing for m mismatches.
• quit – Exit the program.
Ignore blank lines in the file.
Here is some sample input, showing typical commands:
genome genome_small.txt
table_size 100
occupancy 0.5
kmer 10
query 2 TATTACTGCCATTTTGCAGATAAGAAATCAGAAGCTC
query 2 TTGACCTTTGGTTAACCCCTCCCTTGAAGGTGAAGCTTGTAAA
query 2 AAACACACTGTTTCTAATTCAGGAGGTCTGAGAAGGGA
query 2 TCTTGTACTTATTCTCCAATTCAGTCACAGGCCTTGTGGGCTACCCTTCA
query 5 TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCTTTTTT
quit
You may assume that the commands will appear in the input files in the order shown above.
For output, the program will report the query, and if matches are found, the genome position (positions start
at 0) of the match, the number of mismatches between the genome and the query string, and the genome
sequence matching the query. If a match can’t be found, the program will report “No Match”.
The corresponding output to the input above should be:
Query: TATTACTGCCATTTTGCAGATAAGAAATCAGAAGCTC
504 0 TATTACTGCCATTTTGCAGATAAGAAATCAGAAGCTC
Query: TTGACCTTTGGTTAACCCCTCCCTTGAAGGTGAAGCTTGTAAA
5002 2 TTGACCTTTGGTTAACCAATCCCTTGAAGGTGAAGCTTGTAAA
Query: AAACACACTGTTTCTAATTCAGGAGGTCTGAGAAGGGA
4372 0 AAACACACTGTTTCTAATTCAGGAGGTCTGAGAAGGGA
Query: TCTTGTACTTATTCTCCAATTCAGTCACAGGCCTTGTGGGCTACCCTTCA
No Match
Query: TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCTTTTTT
4428 0 TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCTTTTTT
4429 3 TTTTTTTTTTTTTTCTTTTTTG
4430 4 TTTTTTTTTTTTTCTTTTTTGA
4431 5 TTTTTTTTTTTTCTTTTTTGAG
You are not explicitly required to create any new classes when completing this assignment, but please do so as
it will improve your program design. We expect you to use const and pass by reference/alias as appropriate
throughout your assignment.
Order Notation
In your README.txt file, report the time and space complexity (order) of your implementation for building
the index for a genome of length L. Does the k-mer size, k, and the average number of locations, p, where
the key is found affect your answer? What is the order time notation for matching a query of length q in a
genome of length L when the key size is k and the key is found at p different genomic positions?
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Extra Credit
Add a new command to implement the database using one of the other data structures that we have covered
so far in the course: vectors, lists, arrays etc. Compare the performance your alternative method to the
homework method by making a table of run times for each of the genomes and query sets provided with the
homework and compare the times to build the index and the times to process the queries. Document any
new commands you have added in your README file.
Submission
Use good coding style and detailed comments when you design and implement your program. Please use
the provided template README.txt file for any notes you want the grader to read, including work for extra
credit. You must do this assignment on your own, as described in the “Collaboration Policy & Academic
Integrity”. If you did discuss the problem or error messages, etc. with anyone, please list their names in your
README.txt file.
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