How to split fasta into seperate files by chromosome (in the header)
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8.9 years ago
ethanagbaker ▴ 30

I have 1000 fasta files that have simulated reads, and I want to split each of these 1000 files into separate files (one per chromosome) as I need this for some further analysis. The header lines look like this >chr1:startpos:endpos.

I wrote this code (https://gist.github.com/ethanagbaker/6e40c58127b7ca8b9242) in Python, and it works, but it is very slow (ie it has been running for more than 24 hours on a cluster). This seems like it should be a really quick thing to do. Is there a better way to be doing this?

Thanks!

fasta split python genome sequence • 18k views
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faSplit from Jim Kent @UCSC. Link is for Linux but OS X version available along with source.

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8.9 years ago
$ pip install pyfaidx
$ faidx -x sequences.fa

Or you can use the Fasta class and write your own script to do the same thing. Your code is slow because it is opening a bunch of files in a loop, and then opening (the same files?) and reading them completely to get the sequences. Indexed file access will be orders of magnitude faster.

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8.9 years ago

There are three reasons why your Python code works very slow:

  1. You unnecessarily open and close each outut file million of times. Opening/closing files is very expensive. Most likely, you'll reduce the running time greatly if you open all the files for writing at the beginning. I suggest that you keep these files in a dictionary (d = {(name1, chr1): open(pwd+name+"_"+chr+".fa", 'w'), ...}. Then, in your forloop where you iterate over fasta records, put a variable output = d[(name, chrom)] and then write a record to that file by output.write(record.format('fasta')).
  2. You're calling SeqIO.write(...) many times instead of once. Instead, use: output.write(record.format('fasta')).
  3. Parsing FASTA using Biopython checks for some input errors and this might take some time. It does more than you need in your case.
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8.9 years ago
novice ★ 1.1k

Hi Ethan,

Try this:

#!/usr/bin/perl

while (<>) {
  open $fh, '>>', $1 if /\A>(.+?):/; 
  print $fh $_;
}

Use with a glob to include all your reads, like:

$ perl chr_split.pl reads*.fasta
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