Bio::DB::Fasta - Fast indexed access to fasta files
use Bio::DB::Fasta;
# Create database from a directory of Fasta files
my $db = Bio::DB::Fasta->new('/path/to/fasta/files/');
my @ids = $db->get_all_primary_ids;
# Simple access
my $seqstr = $db->seq('CHROMOSOME_I', 4_000_000 => 4_100_000);
my $revseq = $db->seq('CHROMOSOME_I', 4_100_000 => 4_000_000);
my $length = $db->length('CHROMOSOME_I');
my $header = $db->header('CHROMOSOME_I');
my $alphabet = $db->alphabet('CHROMOSOME_I');
# Access to sequence objects. See Bio::PrimarySeqI.
my $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_id('CHROMOSOME_I');
my $seqstr = $seq->seq;
my $subseq = $seq->subseq(4_000_000 => 4_100_000);
my $trunc = $seq->trunc(4_000_000 => 4_100_000);
my $length = $seq->length;
# Loop through sequence objects
my $stream = $db->get_PrimarySeq_stream;
while (my $seq = $stream->next_seq) {
# Bio::PrimarySeqI stuff
}
# Filehandle access
my $fh = Bio::DB::Fasta->newFh('/path/to/fasta/files/');
while (my $seq = <$fh>) {
# Bio::PrimarySeqI stuff
}
# Tied hash access
tie %sequences,'Bio::DB::Fasta','/path/to/fasta/files/';
print $sequences{'CHROMOSOME_I:1,20000'};
Bio::DB::Fasta provides indexed access to a single Fasta file, several files, or
a directory of files. It provides persistent random access to each sequence
entry (either as a Bio::PrimarySeqI-compliant object or a string), and to
subsequences within each entry, allowing you to retrieve portions of very
large sequences without bringing the entire sequence into memory.
Bio::DB::Fasta is based on Bio::DB::IndexedBase. See this module's
documentation for details.
The Fasta files may contain any combination of nucleotide and protein sequences;
during indexing the module guesses the molecular type. Entries may have any
line length up to 65,536 characters, and different line lengths are allowed in
the same file. However, within a sequence entry, all lines must be the same
length except for the last. An error will be thrown if this is not the case.
The module uses /^>(\S+)/ to extract the primary ID of each sequence from the
Fasta header. See -makeid in Bio::DB::IndexedBase to pass a callback routine
to reversibly modify this primary ID, e.g. if you wish to extract a specific
portion of the gi|gb|abc|xyz GenBank IDs.
The object-oriented constructor is
new(), the filehandle constructor is
newFh() and the tied hash constructor is
tie(). They all allow
one to index a single Fasta file, several files, or a directory of files. See
Bio::DB::IndexedBase.
Bio::DB::IndexedBase
Bio::DB::Qual
Bio::PrimarySeqI
Lincoln Stein <
[email protected]>.
Copyright (c) 2001 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself. See DISCLAIMER.txt for disclaimers of warranty.
The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal
methods are usually preceded with a _
For BioPerl-style access, the following methods are provided:
Title : get_Seq_by_id, get_Seq_by_acc, get_Seq_by_primary_id
Usage : my $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_id($id);
Function: Given an ID, fetch the corresponding sequence from the database.
Returns : A Bio::PrimarySeq::Fasta object (Bio::PrimarySeqI compliant)
Note that to save resource, Bio::PrimarySeq::Fasta sequence objects
only load the sequence string into memory when requested using seq().
See L<Bio::PrimarySeqI> for methods provided by the sequence objects
returned from get_Seq_by_id() and get_PrimarySeq_stream().
Args : ID
Title : get_PrimarySeq_stream
Usage : my $stream = $db->get_PrimarySeq_stream();
Function: Get a stream of Bio::PrimarySeq::Fasta objects. The stream supports a
single method, next_seq(). Each call to next_seq() returns a new
Bio::PrimarySeq::Fasta sequence object, until no more sequences remain.
Returns : A Bio::DB::Indexed::Stream object
Args : None
For simple access, the following methods are provided:
Title : new
Usage : my $db = Bio::DB::Fasta->new( $path, %options);
Function: Initialize a new database object. When indexing a directory, files
ending in .fa,fasta,fast,dna,fna,faa,fsa are indexed by default.
Returns : A new Bio::DB::Fasta object.
Args : A single file, or path to dir, or arrayref of files
Optional arguments: see Bio::DB::IndexedBase
Title : seq, sequence, subseq
Usage : # Entire sequence string
my $seqstr = $db->seq($id);
# Subsequence
my $subseqstr = $db->seq($id, $start, $stop, $strand);
# or...
my $subseqstr = $db->seq($compound_id);
Function: Get a subseq of a sequence from the database. For your convenience,
the sequence to extract can be specified with any of the following
compound IDs:
$db->seq("$id:$start,$stop")
$db->seq("$id:$start..$stop")
$db->seq("$id:$start-$stop")
$db->seq("$id:$start,$stop/$strand")
$db->seq("$id:$start..$stop/$strand")
$db->seq("$id:$start-$stop/$strand")
$db->seq("$id/$strand")
In the case of DNA or RNA sequence, if $stop is less than $start,
then the reverse complement of the sequence is returned. Avoid using
it if possible since this goes against Bio::Seq conventions.
Returns : A string
Args : ID of sequence to retrieve
or
Compound ID of subsequence to fetch
or
ID, optional start (defaults to 1), optional end (defaults to length
of sequence) and optional strand (defaults to 1).
Title : length
Usage : my $length = $qualdb->length($id);
Function: Get the number of residues in the indicated sequence.
Returns : Number
Args : ID of entry
Title : header
Usage : my $header = $db->header($id);
Function: Get the header line (ID and description fields) of the specified
sequence.
Returns : String
Args : ID of sequence
Title : alphabet
Usage : my $alphabet = $db->alphabet($id);
Function: Get the molecular type of the indicated sequence: dna, rna or protein
Returns : String
Args : ID of sequence