An introductory guide to aligning networks using SANA, the Simulated Annealing Network Aligner

22 Nov 2019  ·  Wayne B. Hayes ·

Sequence alignment has had an enormous impact on our understanding of biology, evolution, and disease. The alignment of biological {\em networks} holds similar promise. Biological networks generally model interactions between biomolecules such as proteins, genes, metabolites, or mRNAs. There is strong evidence that the network topology -- the "structure" of the network -- is correlated with the functions performed, so that network topology can be used to help predict or understand function. However, unlike sequence comparison and alignment -- which is an essentially solved problem -- network comparison and alignment is an NP-complete problem for which heuristic algorithms must be used. Here we introduce SANA, the {\it Simulated Annealing Network Aligner}. SANA is one of many algorithms proposed for the arena of biological network alignment. In the context of global network alignment, SANA stands out for its speed, memory efficiency, ease-of-use, and flexibility in the arena of producing alignments between 2 or more networks. SANA produces better alignments in minutes on a laptop than most other algorithms can produce in hours or days of CPU time on large server-class machines. We walk the user through how to use SANA for several types of biomolecular networks. Availability: https://github.com/waynebhayes/SANA

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