Demultiplex Illumina With Barcodes On Identifier Line
6
4
Entering edit mode
13.0 years ago

I got a set of Illumina files which are barcoded in the sequence identifier instead (barcode is not part of the sequence), therefore we cannot use fastx_barcode_splitter.pl or similar scripts. Example:

@HWI-ST132_459:6:2208:20745:200766#AGTTCC/1
CCCAGGGGGTTGCTAGGTTGAAAGAGAAGAACTAAGCTTAAATTTGTTGTACATTGTATATAATTACAAAGTGTTATGTTATTATTATTAAAAAAAAAAA
+
ca^WcZX[D_T]GQI^]^BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB
@HWI-ST132_459:6:2208:21328:200860#AGTTCC/1
CATTTTGGTGGGTTGTGGTTTTGGGGGGTTTGTTGTTGGGTTTTATAAGGTGGTTTTTTTTAATAAGTAAAAATAAAAAAAAAAATTAAGAATAAAAAAA
+
]TPKODYF[TSHWUQRRGZV`N_Y`c\abc]]D_BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB

Anybody knows a program that is able to split/demultiplex these datasets?

illumina barcode • 17k views
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0
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Are the barcodes and read names delimited by something? It looks like the "_" character separates the barcoding and read names?

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0
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The barcode in the above mentioned example is AGTTCC, always after the number sign (#) and before the slash, although in some other datasets it comes as the six last characters of the identifier line

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5
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13.0 years ago

Try this python script:

import sys

inFile = open(sys.argv[1],'r')

header = ''
data = ''

outFile = {}

for line in inFile:
    if line[0] == "@":
        if header != '':
            barcode = header.split('#')[-1].split('/')[0]
            if not outFile.has_key(barcode):
                outFile[barcode] = open(barcode + ".fastq",'a')

            outFile[barcode].write(header + "\n" + data)

        header = line.strip()
        data = ''
    else:
        data += line

barcode = header.split('#')[-1].split('/')[0]
if not outFile.has_key(barcode):
    outFile[barcode] = open(barcode + ".fastq",'a')

outFile[barcode].write(header + "\n" + data)

Save as yourName.py. Use by: python yourName.py file.fastq. You might have to mess with the barcode parsing code. Right now, it parses the barcode by taking anything between the last '#' and "/" character. It should work if there is no "/" character also.

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0
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Minor modification to the above script, to allow for the case where @ is the first character on the quality line:

import sys

inFile = open(sys.argv[1],'rU')

header = ''
data = ''

outFile = {}

for i,line in enumerate(inFile):
    if (line[0] == "@" and i % 4 == 0):
        if header != '':
            barcode = header.split('#')[-1].split('/')[0]
            if not outFile.has_key(barcode):
                outFile[barcode] = open(barcode + ".fastq",'a')

            outFile[barcode].write(header + "\n" + data)

        header = line.strip()
        data = ''
    else:
        data += line

barcode = header.split('#')[-1].split('/')[0]
if not outFile.has_key(barcode):
    outFile[barcode] = open(barcode + ".fastq",'a')

outFile[barcode].write(header + "\n" + data)
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4
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13.0 years ago

Fastq-tools allows you to grep sequence identifiers:

fastq-grep -i AGTTCC mysequence.fq > AGTTCC_seqs.fq
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1
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+1, thanks for the heads up on this utility set.

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1
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nice, but, using it on this problem requires knowing in advance the barcode's you are trying to split on. No?

See my perl solution below for data driven approach.

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0
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fqgrep is another utility that can be used to grep for sequence identifiers. It also accounts for mismatches too.

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4
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13.0 years ago
Malcolm.Cook ★ 1.5k

The following perl 1-liner will split its standard input into newly created files named after the its input file and the barcodes appearing on its standard input.

perl -p -e 'open(STDOUT,">>","$1_$ARGV") if m|^@.*\#([ATGC]+)\/\d+|' your.fastq

will split your.fastq into files named, i.e.

  • AGTTCC_your.fastq
  • AGAGGA_your.fastq
  • etc, based on its input.
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3
Entering edit mode
13.0 years ago

You could use the awk program below to generate a fastq file that has the barcodes appended to each sequence (and quality string). Put the awk code into prog.awk then run it as:

awk -f prog.awk < data.fq

Here is the awk file:

/^@HWI-ST/ {
    # extract the barcode as the sequence stored
    # between # and /
    split($0,parts,"#")
    split(parts[2], code, "/")
    barcode = code[1] 
    print 
    next;
}

/^+$/ {
    print
    next
}

{
    print barcode "" $0
}
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3
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13.0 years ago

You can do this with Biopieces:

read_fastq -i test.fq |                      # read in the fastq entries
split_vals -k SEQ_NAME -d '#' |              # split the sequence name on #
split_vals -k SEQ_NAME_1 -d '/' -K BARCODE | # split again on / to get the barcode
write_fastq_files -d Files -k BARCODE -x     # write files in Files dir using barcodes as names
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