Consed

Consed[1] is a program for viewing, editing, and finishing DNA sequence assemblies. Originally developed for sequence assemblies created with phrap, recent versions also support other sequence assembly programs like Newbler.

Consed
Developer(s)David Gordon
Operating systemUNIX, Linux, Mac OS X
TypeBioinformatics
LicenseProprietary
Websitehttp://bozeman.mbt.washington.edu/consed/consed.html

History

Consed was originally developed as a contig editing and finishing tool for large-scale cosmid shotgun sequencing in the Human Genome Project. At genome sequencing centers, Consed was used to check assemblies generated by phrap, solve assembly problems like those caused by highly identical repeats, and finishing tasks like primer picking and gap closure. Development of Consed has continued after the completion of the Human Genome Project. Current Consed versions support very large projects with millions of reads, enabling the use with newer sequencing methods like 454 sequencing and Solexa sequencing. Consed also has advanced tools for finishing tasks like automated primer picking [2]

gollark: Assuming it actually is possible. Hmm.
gollark: You could theoretically given a while prove or disprove it though?
gollark: That's not a Turing machine.
gollark: Also, humans can possibly maybe* be evaluated on a Turing machine.
gollark: Some programs are too big to fit into humans' mental storage capacity.

See also

References

  1. Gordon D, Abajian C, Green P (1998). "Consed: A Graphical Tool for Sequence Finishing". Genome Research. 8 (3): 195–202. doi:10.1101/gr.8.3.195. PMID 9521923.
  2. Gordon D, Desmarais C, Green P (2001). "Automated Finishing with Autofinish". Genome Research. 11 (4): 614–625. doi:10.1101/gr.171401. PMC 311035. PMID 11282977.


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