The MUMmer package provides efficient means for comparing an entire genome against another. However, until 1999 there were no two genomes of sufficient similarity to compare. With the publication of the second strain of Helicobacter pylori in 1999, following the publication of the first strain in 1997, the scientific world had its first chance to look at two complete bacterial genomes whose DNA sequences were highly similar. The number of pairs of closely-related genomes has exploded in recent years, facilitating many comparative studies. For instance, the published databases include the following genomes for which multiple strains and/or multiple species have been sequenced:
multiple strains of...
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multiple species of...
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Most of these genomes can be obtained from the NCBI ftp site: ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genomes/
With the capability to align the entire human genome to itself, there is no genome too large for MUMmer. The following table gives run times and space requirements for a cross comparison of all human chromosomes. The 1st column indicates the chromosome number, with "Un" referring to unmapped contigs. Column 2 shows chromosome length and column 4 shows the length of the total genomic DNA searched against the chromosome in column 1. Column 3 shows the time to construct the suffix tree, and column 5 the time to stream the query sequence through it. Column 6 shows the maximum amount of computer memory occupied by the program and data, and column 7 shows memory usage for the suffix tree in bytes per base pair. Each human chromosome was used as a reference, and the rest of the genome was used as a query and streamed against it. To avoid duplication, we only included chromosomes in the query if they had not already been compared; thus we first used chromosome 1 as a reference, and streamed the other 23 chromosomes against it. Then we used chromosome 2 as a reference, and streamed chromosomes 3–22, X, and Y against that, and so on.
Chr | Ref length (Mbp) |
Suffix time (min) |
Qry length (Mbp) |
Query time (min) |
Total space (Mb) |
Suffix space (bytes/bp) |
1 | 221.8 | 24.6 | 2617.1 | 679.5 | 3702 | 15.43 |
2 | 237.6 | 27.4 | 2379.5 | 625.8 | 3908 | 15.43 |
3 | 194.8 | 21.2 | 2184.7 | 565.0 | 3232 | 15.43 |
4 | 188.4 | 22.4 | 1996.3 | 518.0 | 3121 | 15.43 |
5 | 177.7 | 18.6 | 1818.6 | 461.4 | 2952 | 15.43 |
6 | 175.8 | 17.9 | 1642.8 | 407.6 | 2900 | 15.43 |
7 | 153.8 | 15.7 | 1489.0 | 360.1 | 2550 | 15.43 |
8 | 142.8 | 14.4 | 1346.2 | 322.3 | 2378 | 15.43 |
9 | 117.0 | 10.7 | 1229.2 | 303.7 | 1974 | 15.43 |
10 | 131.1 | 13.2 | 1098.1 | 263.3 | 2195 | 15.43 |
11 | 133.2 | 13.1 | 964.9 | 225.6 | 2228 | 15.43 |
12 | 129.4 | 12.5 | 835.5 | 195.9 | 2168 | 15.43 |
13 | 95.2 | 8.6 | 740.3 | 163.6 | 1633 | 15.44 |
14 | 88.2 | 7.5 | 652.1 | 141.0 | 1523 | 15.44 |
15 | 83.6 | 6.8 | 568.5 | 122.1 | 1451 | 15.44 |
16 | 80.9 | 6.4 | 487.6 | 106.3 | 1409 | 15.44 |
17 | 80.7 | 6.6 | 406.9 | 91.8 | 1406 | 15.44 |
18 | 74.6 | 6.3 | 332.3 | 78.8 | 1311 | 15.44 |
19 | 56.4 | 3.7 | 275.8 | 56.1 | 1026 | 15.45 |
20 | 59.4 | 4.6 | 216.4 | 45.8 | 1073 | 15.45 |
21 | 33.9 | 2.1 | 182.5 | 33.7 | 673 | 15.48 |
22 | 33.8 | 2.0 | 148.6 | 26.4 | 672 | 15.48 |
Un | 1.4 | 0.03 | 147.3 | 10.0 | 164 | 16.96 |
X | 147.3 | 14.6 | 4.8 | 2327 | 15.57 |
The Human Chromosomes can be obtained from the NCBI ftp site: ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/genomes/H_sapiens/