DocumentCode :
2908592
Title :
MSA-CUDA: Multiple Sequence Alignment on Graphics Processing Units with CUDA
Author :
Liu, Yongchao ; Schmidt, Bertil ; Maskell, Douglas L.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Comput. Eng., Nanyang Technol. Univ., Singapore, Singapore
fYear :
2009
fDate :
7-9 July 2009
Firstpage :
121
Lastpage :
128
Abstract :
Progressive alignment is a widely used approach for computing multiple sequence alignments (MSAs). However, aligning several hundred or thousand sequences with popular progressive alignment tools such as ClustalW requires hours or even days on state-of-the-art workstations. This paper presents MSA-CUDA, a parallel MSA program, which parallelizes all three stages of the ClustalW processing pipeline using CUDA and achieves significant speedups compared to the sequential ClustalW for a variety of large protein sequence datasets. Our tests on a GeForce GTX 280 GPU demonstrate average speedups of 36.91 (for long protein sequences), 18.74 (for average-length protein sequences), and 11.27 (for short protein sequences) compared to the sequential ClustalW running on a Pentium 4 3.0 GHz processor. Our MSA-CUDA outperforms ClustalW-MPI running on 32 cores of a high performance workstation cluster.
Keywords :
computer graphic equipment; message passing; pipeline processing; ClustalW processing pipeline; MPI; MSA-CUDA; Pentium 4 processor; graphics processing unit; multiple sequence alignment; progressive alignment tool; protein sequence dataset; workstation cluster; Biology computing; Computer architecture; Dynamic programming; Graphics; Kernel; Libraries; Proteins; Samarium; Workstations; Yarn; CUDA; ClustalW; GPU; multiple sequence alignment;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Application-specific Systems, Architectures and Processors, 2009. ASAP 2009. 20th IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Boston, MA
ISSN :
2160-0511
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-3732-0
Electronic_ISBN :
2160-0511
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ASAP.2009.14
Filename :
5200019
Link To Document :
بازگشت