Abstract

Facing the explosive growth of biological sequences unearthed in the post-genomic age, one of the most important but also most difficult problems in computational biology is how to express a biological sequence with a discrete model or a vector, but still keep it with considerable sequence-order information or its special pattern. To deal with such a challenging problem, the ideas of "pseudo amino acid components" and "pseudo K-tuple nucleotide composition" have been proposed. The ideas and their approaches have further stimulated the birth for "distorted key theory", "wenxing diagram", and substantially strengthening the power in treating the multi-label systems, as well as the establishment of the famous "5-steps rule". All these logic developments are quite natural that are very useful not only for theoretical scientists but also for experimental scientists in conducting genetics/genomics analysis and drug development. Presented in this review paper are also their future perspectives; i.e., their impacts will become even more significant and propounding.

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