3.5 Global Versus Local
Although
global and local alignment are mechanistically similar, they have
very different properties. Consider the alignment between the genomic
sequence of two eukaryotic genes from distantly related organisms.
You'd expect the exons to remain the same because
their coding sequences are evolutionarily constrained, but the
introns may no longer be recognizably similar, especially if they
have acquired many insertions or deletions. The problem is that exons
may account for only 1 to 2 percent of the sequence. As a result, a
global alignment between these sequences is an alignment of mostly
random letters. In such a scenario, it's very likely
(especially if introns change size, as they often do) that the exons
will not align to one another because their score contribution is
very small compared to the rest of the sequence. In contrast, local
alignment can pick out conserved exons, but unfortunately, just the
maximum scoring one. The shortcomings of the standard alignment
algorithms have been addressed by numerous variants.
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