Bioinformatics Advance Access originally published online on June 18, 2008
Bioinformatics 2008 24(17):1949-1950; doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btn313
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Spidermonkey: rapid detection of co-evolving sites using Bayesian graphical models
1Division of Comparative Pathology and Medicine, Department of Pathology, University of California, San Diego, CA 92103, USA and 2Epidemiology Research Unit, Scottish Agricultural College, Inverness, Scotland, IV2 4JZ, UK
*To whom correspondence should be addressed.
| Abstract |
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Spidermonkey is a new component of the Datamonkey suite of phylogenetic tools that provides methods for detecting coevolving sites from a multiple alignment of homologous nucleotide or amino acid sequences. It reconstructs the substitution history of the alignment by maximum likelihood-based phylogenetic methods, and then analyzes the joint distribution of substitution events using Bayesian graphical models to identify significant associations among sites.
Availability: Spidermonkey is publicly available both as a web application at http://www.data-monkey.org and as a stand-alone component of the phylogenetic software package HyPhy, which is freely distributed on the web (http://www.hyphy.org) as precompiled binaries and open source.
Contact: afpoon@ucsd.edu
Associate Editor: Alfonso Valencia
Received on April 15, 2008; revised on June 6, 2008; accepted on June 15, 2008