Script To Calculate A Distance Matrix Based On Tree File
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13.7 years ago

Is there a script somewhere around (MATLAB, R, PERL) that calculates a distance matrix based on a tree file? Hence, I already have the tree but want all the distance information in a matrix.

distance matrix phylogenetics tree • 25k views
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So, the matrix would show distances between all leafs of the tree?

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The matrix would show distances between all leafs of the tree?

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Indeed, probably it would also calculate the distance between all internal nodes but that might even turn out handy

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13.7 years ago
Raquel Dsl ▴ 110

If you are interested in an another solution (in R) try this

library(ape)
tree<-read.tree("/file.tre")
PatristicDistMatrix<-cophenetic(tree)
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I think the last line should be PatristicDistMatrix<-cophenetic.phylo(tree)

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tree should be a phylo object, Do you know any function which can take an object of clade.matrix?

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This is an old reply, but I found this and it misled me to spend time understanding the ape::cophenetic.phylo() function.

I have an integer distance tree and it returned nonsense (as far as I can tell). The function this answer alludes is stats::cophenetic() and it works wonderfully with phylo objects.

I validated the results with the output from the T-Rex server.

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Indeed, thanks a lot, this seems applicable in scripts.

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4
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13.7 years ago

There is a Newick->distance matrix converter in the T-rex package, available as a web-server and as source code. There are no details as far as I can see describing what this method actually does.

To calculate the patristic distance (i.e. the distance between two leaves measured along the tree) from a variety of tree formats between all pairs of leaves, you can try the PATRISTIC Java application.

It also looks like the DendroPy package can generate patristic distance from a variety of tree formats. E.g. from the Treestats tutorial: http://packages.python.org/DendroPy/tutorial/treestats.html

#! /usr/bin/env python

import dendropy
from dendropy import treecalc

tree = dendropy.Tree.get_from_path("input.nex", "nexus")
pdm = treecalc.PatristicDistanceMatrix(tree)
for i, t1 in enumerate(tree.taxon_set):
    for t2 in tree.taxon_set[i+1:]:
        print("Distance between '%s' and '%s': %s" % (t1.label, t2.label, pdm(t1, t2)))
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Casey!

Great I ran the webserver with some simple trees and it runs OK. It has some problems with nodes but that is likely a matter of not including the nodes in the tree file. Great! No I will try with the source (prefer to pipe it) and see what the others do! Thanks really a great help.

Arjen

PS Didn't you use to work on polygalacturonases?

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@Arjen - I think Raquel DSL may have the scriptable solution you are looking for above.

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13.7 years ago

Normally, trees are generated from a distance matrix and you certainly lose information while constructing the tree. What you could get from a tree would be the sum of branch lengths for each pair of nodes. This might be possible in R by loading the tree with ape, then converting to igraph with as.igraph and finally computing the shortest paths.

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Thanks for this solution, seems the way except that I never worked with R. I managed to install R as well as ape and igraph, opened the tree using ape but then I cannot figure out how to use as.igraph The usage is as.igraph(object) but I do not have a clue how I should refer to my object.

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I managed a bit further. I got it converted to igraph but now igraph does not do what I want, probably due to my misunderstanding of how to use the commands. If I put

shortest.paths(graph, v=132, weights = NULL)

I get the same as when I put

shortest.paths(graph, v=132)

which is basically the amount of edges between nodes

Hence weight is not included properly

To be sure: I transferred "mytree" from ape to igraph as "graph", it has 133 edges, hence 0-132. Then by putting weights = NULL it should include the weights per edge BUT some edges have a value of 0.0, could this be the problem?

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I haven't used igraph very much, but perhaps you can write your graph e.g. by write.graph(graph, "graph.ncol", format="ncol") and see how it looks? http://igraph.sourceforge.net/igraphbook/igraphbook-foreign.html

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Indeed, no weights appear to be present....

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9.6 years ago
guanhomer ▴ 20

I wrote a code in Perl myself. It works for me.

I used the example tree from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newick_format

The output of the following code is:

       A    B      C    D
A    0    0.3    0.9    1
B    0.3    0    1    1.1
C    0.9    1    0    0.7
D    1    1.1    0.7    0
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;

my $tree = "(A:0.1,B:0.2,(C:0.3,D:0.4):0.5);";

##record the distance of parentheses
my %dis;
my $par = -1;
my @current;
while($tree =~ /./g)
    {if ($& eq '(')
        {$par ++;
        next if $par == 0;
        $current[$#current+1] = $par;
        }
    elsif($& eq ')')
        {(my $tem) = $' =~ /:(\d+\.\d+|\d+)/;
        next if $#current == -1;
        $dis{'node_'.$current[$#current]} = $tem;
        pop @current;
        }
    }

##record the distance of leaves
my @order;
while ($tree =~ /([^\(\):,]+):(\d+\.\d+|\d+)/g)
    {$dis{$1} = $2;
    $order[$#order+1] = $1;
    }

##record parents of leaves
my %pare;
@current = ();
$par = -1;
while($tree =~ /(\(|\)|([^\(\):,]+):)/g)
    {if ($& eq '(')
        {$par ++;
        next if $par == 0;
        $current[$#current+1] = $par;
        }
    elsif($& eq ')')
        {pop @current;
        }
    else{map {$pare{$2}{$_} = 1} @current;
        $pare{$2} = [@current];
        }
    }

##Distance matrix
my %dis2;
foreach my $i (0..$#order)
    {foreach my $j ($i..$#order)
        {if ($i == $j)
            {$dis2{$order[$i]}{$order[$j]} = 0;
            }
        else{my $tem = $dis{$order[$i]} + $dis{$order[$j]};
            my $tem2 = -1;
            foreach my $k (0..$#{$pare{$order[$i]}})
                {last if ($k > $#{$pare{$order[$j]}});
                if ($pare{$order[$i]}[$k] eq $pare{$order[$j]}[$k])
                    {$tem2 = $k;
                    }
                }
            if ($#{$pare{$order[$i]}} != -1)
                {map {$tem += $dis{'node_'.$_}} map {$pare{$order[$i]}[$_]} ($tem2+1)..$#{$pare{$order[$i]}};
                }
            if ($#{$pare{$order[$j]}} != -1)
                {map {$tem += $dis{'node_'.$_}} map {$pare{$order[$j]}[$_]} ($tem2+1)..$#{$pare{$order[$j]}};
                }
            $dis2{$order[$i]}{$order[$j]} = $dis2{$order[$j]}{$order[$i]} = $tem;
            }
        }
    }

##output
print join("\t",'',@order),"\n";
foreach my $i (@order)
    {print join("\t",$i,map {$dis2{$i}{$_}} @order),"\n";
    }
close(OUT);
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This was amazingly fast, and my jaw dropped

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This is brilliant! Thank you!!

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13.7 years ago
Zhidkov ▴ 600

You can try BioPerl modules: http://bioperl.org/wiki/HOWTO:Trees

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