Mercurial > repos > bgruening > interproscan
view interproscan.xml @ 1:eb12db502d3c draft
updated tool help
author | bgruening |
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date | Wed, 10 Jul 2013 14:34:28 -0400 |
parents | c10e37cca7e3 |
children | 52f20362d488 |
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<tool id="interproscan" name="Interproscan functional predictions of ORFs" version="1.2"> <description>Interproscan functional predictions of ORFs</description> <command> ## The command is a Cheetah template which allows some Python based syntax. ## Lines starting hash hash are comments. Galaxy will turn newlines into spaces ## create temp directory #import tempfile, os #set $tfile = tempfile.mkstemp()[1] sed 's/ /_/g' $input > $tfile; ## Hack, because interproscan does not seem to produce gff output even if it is configured #if str($oformat) == "gff": #set $tfile2 = tempfile.mkstemp()[1] iprscan -cli -nocrc -i $tfile -o $tfile2 -goterms -seqtype p -altjobs -format raw -appl $appl 2>&1; converter.pl -format gff3 -input $tfile2 -output $output; rm $tfile2; #else iprscan -cli -nocrc -i $tfile -o $output -goterms -seqtype p -altjobs -format $oformat -appl $appl 2>&1; #end if rm $tfile </command> <inputs> <param name="input" type="data" format="fasta" label="Protein Fasta File"/> <param name="appl" type="select" format="text" label="Applications to run" help="Select your programm."> <option value="blastprodom+coils+gene3d+hamap+hmmpanther+hmmpir+hmmpfam+hmmsmart+hmmtigr+fprintscan+patternscan+profilescan+superfamily+seg+signalp+tmhmm" selected="true">all</option> <option value="seg">seg</option> <option value="signalp">signalp</option> <option value="tmhmm">tmhmm</option> <option value="fprintscan">fprintscan</option> <option value="patternscan">patternscan</option> <option value="profilescan">profilescan</option> <option value="superfamily">superfamily</option> <option value="hmmpir">hmmpir</option> <option value="hmmpfam">hmmpfam</option> <option value="hmmsmart">hmmsmart</option> <option value="hmmtigr">hmmtigr</option> <option value="hmmpanther">hmmpanther</option> <option value="hamap">hamap</option> <option value="gene3d">gene3d</option> <option value="coils">coils</option> <option value="blastprodom">blastprodom</option> </param> <param name="oformat" type="select" label="Output format" help="Please select a output format."> <option value="gff">gff</option> <option value="raw" selected="true">raw</option> <option value="txt">txt</option> <option value="html">html</option> <option value="xml">xml</option> <option value="ebixml">EBI header on top of xml</option> </param> </inputs> <outputs> <data format="txt" name="output" label="Interproscan calculation on ${on_string}"> <change_format> <when input="oformat" value="html" format="html"/> <when input="oformat" value="xml" format="xml"/> <when input="oformat" value="ebixml" format="xml"/> <when input="oformat" value="gff" format="gff"/> </change_format> </data> </outputs> <requirements> </requirements> <help> **What it does** Interproscan is a batch tool to query the Interpro database. It provides annotations based on multiple searches of profile and other functional databases. These include SCOP, CATH, PFAM and SUPERFAMILY. **Input** Required is a FASTA file containing ORF predictions. This file must NOT contain any spaces in the FASTA headers - any spaces will be convereted to underscores ``_`` by this tool before running with Interproscan. **Output** Example for the raw format. The output will consist of a file in Interproscan raw format, a tabular file in galaxy with 14 columns. This can be use to upload the data into a relational database or concatenation of different runs. ====== ================================================================ ====================================================================== column example description ====== ================================================================ ====================================================================== c1 NF00181542 the id of the input sequence c2 27A9BBAC0587AB84 the crc64 (checksum) of the protein sequence (supposed to be unique) c3 272 the length of the sequence (in AA) c4 HMMPIR the anaysis method launched. c5 PIRSF001424 the database members entry for this match c6 Prephenate dehydratase the database member description for the entry c7 1 the start of the domain match c8 270 the end of the domain match c9 6.5e-141 the evalue of the match (reported by member database method) c10 T the status of the match (T: true, ?: unknown) c11 06-Aug-2005 the date of the run. c12 IPR008237 the corresponding InterPro entry (if iprlookup requested by the user) c13 Prephenate dehydratase with ACT region the description of the InterPro entry c14 Molecular Function:prephenate dehydratase activity (GO:0004664) the GO (gene ontology) description for the InterPro entry ====== ================================================================ ====================================================================== **Database updates** Typically these take place 2-3 times a year. Please contact your Galaxy administrator to update the databases. ----- Tools ----- **PROSITE patterns** Some biologically significant amino acid patterns can be summarised in the form of regular expressions. ScanRegExp (by Wolfgang.Fleischmann@ebi.ac.uk). **PROSITE profiles** There are a number of protein families as well as functional or structural domains that cannot be detected using patterns due to their extreme sequence divergence, so the use of techniques based on weight matrices (also known as profiles) allows the detection of such proteins or domains. A profile is a table of position-specific amino acid weights and gap costs. The profile structure used in PROSITE is similar to but slightly more general (Bucher P. et al., 1996) than the one introduced by M. Gribskov and co-workers. pfscan from the Pftools package (by Philipp.Bucher@isrec.unil.ch). **PRINTS** The PRINTS database houses a collection of protein family fingerprints. These are groups of motifs that together are diagnostically more powerful than single motifs by making use of the biological context inherent in a multiple-motif method. The fingerprinting method arose from the need for a reliable technique for detecting members of large, highly divergent protein super-families. FingerPRINTScan (Scordis P. et al., 1999). **PFAM** Pfam is a database of protein domain families. Pfam contains curated multiple sequence alignments for each family and corresponding hidden Markov models (HMMs) (Eddy S.R., 1998). Profile hidden Markov models are statistical models of the primary structure consensus of a sequence family. The construction and use of Pfam is tightly tied to the HMMER software package. hmmpfam from the HMMER2.3.2 package (by Sean Eddy, eddy@genetics.wustl.edu, http://hmmer.wustl.edu). **PRODOM** ProDom is a database of protein domain families obtained by automated analysis of the SWISS-PROT and TrEMBL protein sequences. It is useful for analysing the domain arrangements of complex protein families and the homology relationships in modular proteins. ProDom families are built by an automated process based on a recursive use of PSI-BLAST homology searches. ProDomBlast3i.pl (by Emmanuel Courcelle emmanuel.courcelle@toulouse.inra.fr and Yoann Beausse beausse@toulouse.inra.fr) a wrapper on top of the Blast package (Altschul S.F. et al., 1997). **SMART** SMART (a Simple Modular Architecture Research Tool) allows the identification and annotation of genetically mobile domains and the analysis of domain architectures. These domains are extensively annotated with respect to phyletic distributions, functional class, tertiary structures and functionally important residues. SMART alignments are optimised manually and following construction of corresponding hidden Markov models (HMMs). hmmpfam from the HMMER2.3.2 package (by Sean Eddy, eddy@genetics.wustl.edu, http://hmmer.wustl.edu). **TIGRFAMs** TIGRFAMs are a collection of protein families featuring curated multiple sequence alignments, Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) and associated information designed to support the automated functional identification of proteins by sequence homology. Classification by equivalog family (see below), where achievable, complements classification by orthologs, superfamily, domain or motif. It provides the information best suited for automatic assignment of specific functions to proteins from large scale genome sequencing projects. hmmpfam from the HMMER2.3.2 package (by Sean Eddy, eddy@genetics.wustl.edu, http://hmmer.wustl.edu). **PIR SuperFamily** PIR SuperFamily (PIRSF) is a classification system based on evolutionary relationship of whole proteins. hmmpfam from the HMMER2.3.2 package (by Sean Eddy, eddy@genetics.wustl.edu, http://hmmer.wustl.edu). **SUPERFAMILY** SUPERFAMILY is a library of profile hidden Markov models that represent all proteins of known structure, based on SCOP. hmmpfam/hmmsearch from the HMMER2.3.2 package (by Sean Eddy, eddy@genetics.wustl.edu, http://hmmer.wustl.edu). Optionally, predictions for coiled-coil, signal peptide cleavage sites (SignalP v3) and TM helices (TMHMM v2) are supported (See the FAQs file for details). **GENE3D** Gene3D is supplementary to the CATH database. This protein sequence database contains proteins from complete genomes which have been clustered into protein families and annotated with CATH domains, Pfam domains and functional information from KEGG, GO, COG, Affymetrix and STRINGS. hmmpfam from the HMM2.3.2 package (by Sean Eddy, eddy@genetics.wustl.edu, http://hmmer.wustl.edu). **PANTHER** The PANTHER (Protein ANalysis THrough Evolutionary Relationships) Classification System was designed to classify proteins (and their genes) in order to facilitate high-throughput analysis. hmmsearch from the HMM2.3.2 package (by Sean Eddy, eddy@genetics.wustl.edu, http://hmmer.wustl.edu). and blastall from the Blast package (Altschul S.F. et al., 1997). ---------- References ---------- Zdobnov EM, Apweiler R (2001) InterProScan an integration platform for the signature-recognition methods in InterPro. Bioinformatics 17, 847-848. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/17.9.847 Quevillon E, Silventoinen V, Pillai S, Harte N, Mulder N, Apweiler R, Lopez R (2005) InterProScan: protein domains identifier. Nucleic Acids Research 33 (Web Server issue), W116-W120. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki442 Hunter S, Apweiler R, Attwood TK, Bairoch A, Bateman A, Binns D, Bork P, Das U, Daugherty L, Duquenne L, Finn RD, Gough J, Haft D, Hulo N, Kahn D, Kelly E, Laugraud A, Letunic I, Lonsdale D, Lopez R, Madera M, Maslen J, McAnulla C, McDowall J, Mistry J, Mitchell A, Mulder N, Natale D, Orengo C, Quinn AF, Selengut JD, Sigrist CJ, Thimma M, Thomas PD, Valentin F, Wilson D, Wu CH, Yeats C. (2009) InterPro: the integrative protein signature database. Nucleic Acids Research 37 (Database Issue), D224-228. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkn785 This wrapper is available to install into other Galaxy Instances via the Galaxy Tool Shed at http://toolshed.g2.bx.psu.edu/view/bgruening/interproscan **Galaxy Wrapper Author**:: * Bjoern Gruening, Pharmaceutical Bioinformatics, University of Freiburg * Konrad Paszkiewicz, Exeter Sequencing Service, University of Exeter </help> </tool>