Question about searching for/manipulating FASTA sequences in Biopython
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7.7 years ago
jon.sy.tarn ▴ 10

Hi all;

sorry for my lack of knowledge. I'm new to biopython and looking through the manual, there's so much information I don't know where to begin. Basically, my FASTA files look like this:

>Ribosomal_L16___Rinke_et_al___edaecdd15ca8bf2bacd09a738e78218887c932d5f415ce2dd05b8fa9|bin_id:Acidianus_Hospitalis_W1.fixed|source:Rinke_et_al|e_value:3.2e-29|contig:c_000000000001|gene_callers_id:1239|start:1112992|stop:1113442|length:450
ATGCCAAAA…

I'm looking to take a list of protein names and I'm trying to search for, find, and print out the resulting sequence from said name. That is to say, if I were to look up "Ribosomal_L16", it would print out "ATGCCAAAA…".

This seems simple enough, except for that most of the title outside of the protein name (i.e. "Ribosomal_L16") is completely variable. Does anyone have a good place for me to start thinking about how to solve this issue?

thanks so much.

sequence biopython • 1.7k views
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You should be more informative with regard to your fasta input file.
It's unclear if the protein name (Ribosomal_L16 etc) is:

  • Always first in the fasta identifier (python: string.startswith())
  • Always separated by ___ (python: string.split('___')[0])
  • Present once, multiple times or potential absent from your fasta file
  • ...
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I've recently learned how to use biopython, and python for that matter. Sometimes I found myself overthinking the problem I had, and thought it was a biology problem. There is a much easier way to approach this by string matching. If the '__' is conserved, you could split the name at that point, and search for that part of the name (it might be sequence.name, i don't remember).

protein_name = str ( sequence.id).split('__')[0]
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I'm new to biopython and looking through the manual Does anyone have a good place for me to start thinking about how to solve this issue?

Have you written a snippet of python code you can show?

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7.7 years ago
Ram 44k

I'd look at Heng Li's bioawk - it combines awk with built in parsers for biological formats, so you can use regular expressions to sift through FASTA components such as the title.

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7.7 years ago

try seqkit:

seqkit grep -n -r  -i -f protein_names.txt seqs.fasta | seqkit seq -s -w 0
  • seqkit grep -n -r -i -f protein_names.txt means searching FASTA records (grep) of which the full header (-n/--by-name) match any of regular expression (-r/--use-regexp) from files (-f/--pattern-file), cases ignored (-i/--ignore-case)
  • seqkit seq -s -w 0 means only print sequences (-s/--seq), and do not wrap sequences to fixed length (-w/--line-width)
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I'd recommend not giving out close-to-exact commands - users are better off learning tools on their own. Especially here, when the OP says

Does anyone have a good place for me to start thinking about how to solve this issue?

giving a command is unadvisable.

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Given this, advices on the specific programming language, library, and programming pattern are the best appropriate solution, so is . :P

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thanks, the seqkit tip is definitely helpful! I'll try it out.

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