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Comparative Study
. 1985 May;4(5):1217-23.
doi: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1985.tb03763.x.

The use of multiple alphabets in kappa-gene immunoglobulin DNA sequence comparisons

Comparative Study

The use of multiple alphabets in kappa-gene immunoglobulin DNA sequence comparisons

S Karlin et al. EMBO J. 1985 May.

Abstract

Comparisons within and between the human, mouse and rabbit immunoglobulin-kappa gene (J-C region) DNA sequences are carried out in terms of three two-letter nucleotide alphabets: (i) S-W alphabet (W = A or T; S = G or C); (ii) P-Q alphabet which distinguishes purines (P = A or G) from pyrimidines (Q = C or T); and (iii) a 'control' E-F alphabet (E = A or C; F = G or T). All statistically significant direct repeats within each of the three sequences and all significant block identities (a set of consecutive matching letters) shared by two or more sequences are determined for each alphabet. By contrast to the S-W and E-F alphabets, the P-Q alphabet comparisons reveal an abundance of statistically significant block identities not seen at the nucleotide level. Various interpretations of these P-Q structures with respect to control and functional roles are considered.

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