comparison tools/sr_assembly/velveth.xml @ 0:9071e359b9a3

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author xuebing
date Fri, 09 Mar 2012 19:37:19 -0500
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1 <tool id="velveth" name="velveth" version="1.0.0">
2 <description>Prepare a dataset for the Velvet velvetg Assembler</description>
3 <command interpreter="python">
4 velveth_wrapper.py
5 '$out_file1' '$out_file1.extra_files_path'
6 $hash_length
7 $strand_specific
8 #for $i in $inputs
9 ${i.file_format}
10 ${i.read_type}
11 ${i.input}
12 #end for
13 </command>
14 <inputs>
15 <param label="Hash Length" name="hash_length" type="select" help="k-mer length in base pairs of the words being hashed.">
16 <option value="11">11</option>
17 <option value="13">13</option>
18 <option value="15">15</option>
19 <option value="17">17</option>
20 <option value="19">19</option>
21 <option value="21" selected="yes">21</option>
22 <option value="23">23</option>
23 <option value="25">25</option>
24 <option value="27">27</option>
25 <option value="29">29</option>
26 </param>
27 <param name="strand_specific" type="boolean" checked="false" truevalue="-strand_specific" falsevalue="" label="Use strand specific transcriptome sequencing" help="If you are using a strand specific transcriptome sequencing protocol, you may wish to use this option for better results."/>
28 <repeat name="inputs" title="Input Files">
29 <param label="file format" name="file_format" type="select">
30 <option value="-fasta" selected="yes">fasta</option>
31 <option value="-fastq">fastq</option>
32 <option value="-eland">eland</option>
33 <option value="-gerald">gerald</option>
34 </param>
35 <param label="read type" name="read_type" type="select">
36 <option value="-short" selected="yes">short reads</option>
37 <option value="-shortPaired">shortPaired reads</option>
38 <option value="-short2">short2 reads</option>
39 <option value="-shortPaired2">shortPaired2 reads</option>
40 <option value="-long">long reads</option>
41 <option value="-longPaired">longPaired reads</option>
42 </param>
43
44 <param name="input" type="data" format="fasta,fastq,eland,gerald" label="Dataset"/>
45 </repeat>
46 </inputs>
47 <outputs>
48 <data format="velvet" name="out_file1" />
49 </outputs>
50 <requirements>
51 <requirement type="package">velvet</requirement>
52 </requirements>
53 <tests>
54 <test>
55 <param name="hash_length" value="21" />
56 <param name="read_type" value="-shortPaired" />
57 <!-- <repeat name="inputs"> -->
58 <param name="file_format" value="fasta" />
59 <param name="read_type" value="shortPaired reads" />
60 <param name="input" value="velvet_test_reads.fa" ftype="fasta" />
61 <!-- </repeat> -->
62 <param name="strand_specific" value="" />
63 <output name="out_file1" file="velveth_test1/output.html" lines_diff="4">
64 <extra_files type="file" name='Sequences' value="velveth_test1/Sequences" compare="diff" />
65 <extra_files type="file" name='Roadmaps' value="velveth_test1/Roadmaps" compare="diff" />
66 </output>
67 </test>
68 </tests>
69 <help>
70 **Velvet Overview**
71
72 Velvet_ is a de novo genomic assembler specially designed for short read sequencing technologies, such as Solexa or 454, developed by Daniel Zerbino and Ewan Birney at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), near Cambridge, in the United Kingdom.
73
74 Velvet currently takes in short read sequences, removes errors then produces high quality unique contigs. It then uses paired-end read and long read information, when available, to retrieve the repeated areas between contigs.
75
76 Read the Velvet `documentation`__ for details on using the Velvet Assembler.
77
78 .. _Velvet: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/~zerbino/velvet/
79
80 .. __: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/~zerbino/velvet/Manual.pdf
81
82 ------
83
84 **Velveth**
85
86 Velveth takes in a number of sequence files, produces a hashtable, then outputs two files in an output directory (creating it if necessary), Sequences and Roadmaps, which are necessary to velvetg.
87
88 ------
89
90 **Hash Length**
91
92 The hash length, also known as k-mer length, corresponds to the length, in base pairs, of the words being hashed.
93
94 The hash length is the length of the k-mers being entered in the hash table. Firstly, you must observe three technical constraints::
95
96 # it must be an odd number, to avoid palindromes. If you put in an even number, Velvet will just decrement it and proceed.
97 # it must be below or equal to MAXKMERHASH length (cf. 2.3.3, by default 31bp), because it is stored on 64 bits
98 # it must be strictly inferior to read length, otherwise you simply will not observe any overlaps between reads, for obvious reasons.
99
100 Now you still have quite a lot of possibilities. As is often the case, it's a trade- off between specificity and sensitivity. Longer kmers bring you more specificity (i.e. less spurious overlaps) but lowers coverage (cf. below). . . so there's a sweet spot to be found with time and experience.
101 We like to think in terms of "k-mer coverage", i.e. how many times has a k-mer been seen among the reads. The relation between k-mer coverage Ck and standard (nucleotide-wise) coverage C is Ck = C # (L - k + 1)/L where k is your hash length, and L you read length.
102 Experience shows that this kmer coverage should be above 10 to start getting decent results. If Ck is above 20, you might be "wasting" coverage. Experience also shows that empirical tests with different values for k are not that costly to run!
103
104 **Input Files**
105
106 Velvet works mainly with fasta and fastq formats. For paired-end reads, the assumption is that each read is next to its mate
107 read. In other words, if the reads are indexed from 0, then reads 0 and 1 are paired, 2 and 3, 4 and 5, etc.
108
109 Supported file formats are::
110
111 fasta
112 fastq
113 fasta.gz
114 fastq.gz
115 eland
116 gerald
117
118 Read categories are::
119
120 short (default)
121 shortPaired
122 short2 (same as short, but for a separate insert-size library)
123 shortPaired2 (see above)
124 long (for Sanger, 454 or even reference sequences)
125 longPaired
126
127 </help>
128 </tool>