Mercurial > repos > peterjc > tmhmm_and_signalp
view tools/protein_analysis/psortb.xml @ 21:238eae32483c draft
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author | peterjc |
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date | Thu, 17 Jun 2021 08:21:06 +0000 |
parents | a19b3ded8f33 |
children | e1996f0f4e85 |
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<tool id="Psortb" name="psortb" version="0.0.9"> <description>Determines sub-cellular localisation of bacterial/archaeal protein sequences</description> <!-- If job splitting is enabled, break up the query file into parts --> <!-- Using 2000 chunks meaning 4 threads doing 500 each is ideal --> <parallelism method="basic" split_inputs="fasta_file" split_mode="to_size" split_size="2000" merge_outputs="tabular_file"></parallelism> <requirements> <requirement type="package">psort</requirement> </requirements> <version_command> python $__tool_directory__/psortb.py --version </version_command> <command detect_errors="aggressive"> python $__tool_directory__/psortb.py "\$GALAXY_SLOTS" '$type' '$long' '$cutoff' '$divergent' '$sequence' '$outfile' </command> <inputs> <param format="fasta" name="sequence" type="data" label="Input sequences for which to predict localisation (protein FASTA format)" /> <param name="type" type="select" label="Organism type (N.B. all sequences in the above file must be of the same type)" > <option value="-p">Gram positive bacteria</option> <option value="-n">Gram negative bacteria</option> <option value="-a">Archaea</option> </param> <param name="long" type="select" label="Output type"> <option value="terse">Short (terse, tabular with 3 columns)</option> <!-- The normal output is text, not tabular - worth offering? <option value="normal">Normal</option> --> <option value="long">Long (verbose, tabular with about 30 columns, depending on organism type)</option> </param> <param name="cutoff" size="10" type="float" optional="true" value="" label="Sets a cutoff value for reported results (e.g. 7.5)" help="Leave blank or use zero for no cutoff." /> <param name="divergent" size="10" type="float" optional="true" value="" label="Sets a cutoff value for the multiple localization flag (e.g. 4.5)" help="Leave blank or use zero for no cutoff." /> </inputs> <outputs> <data format="tabular" name="outfile" /> </outputs> <tests> <test> <param name="sequence" value="empty.fasta" ftype="fasta"/> <param name="long" value="terse"/> <output name="outfile" file="empty_psortb_terse.tabular" ftype="tabular"/> </test> <test> <param name="sequence" value="k12_ten_proteins.fasta" ftype="fasta"/> <param name="long" value="terse"/> <output name="outfile" file="k12_ten_proteins_psortb_p_terse.tabular" ftype="tabular"/> </test> </tests> <help> **What it does** This calls the command line tool PSORTb v3.0 for prediction of prokaryotic localization sites. The input dataset needs to be protein FASTA sequences. The default output is a simple tabular file with three columns, one row per query sequence: ====== ============================== Column Description ------ ------------------------------ 1 Sequence identifier 2 Localisation, e.g. Cytoplasmic 3 Score ====== ============================== The long output is also tabular with one row per query sequence, but has lots more columns (a different set for each supported organism type). In both cases, a simple header line is included (starting with a hash, #, so that Galaxy treats it as a comment) giving the column names. **References** If you use this Galaxy tool in work leading to a scientific publication please cite the following papers: Peter J.A. Cock, Björn A. Grüning, Konrad Paszkiewicz and Leighton Pritchard (2013). Galaxy tools and workflows for sequence analysis with applications in molecular plant pathology. PeerJ 1:e167 https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.167 N.Y. Yu, J.R. Wagner, M.R. Laird, G. Melli, S. Rey, R. Lo, P. Dao, S.C. Sahinalp, M. Ester, L.J. Foster, F.S.L. Brinkman (2010) PSORTb 3.0: Improved protein subcellular localization prediction with refined localization subcategories and predictive capabilities for all prokaryotes, Bioinformatics 26(13):1608-1615 https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btq249 See also http://www.psort.org/documentation/index.html This wrapper is available to install into other Galaxy Instances via the Galaxy Tool Shed at http://toolshed.g2.bx.psu.edu/view/peterjc/tmhmm_and_signalp </help> <citations> <citation type="doi">10.7717/peerj.167</citation> <citation type="doi">10.1093/bioinformatics/btq249</citation> </citations> </tool>