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view tools/fastx_toolkit/fasta_clipping_histogram.xml @ 2:c2a356708570
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author | xuebing |
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date | Fri, 09 Mar 2012 19:45:42 -0500 |
parents | 9071e359b9a3 |
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<tool id="cshl_fasta_clipping_histogram" name="Length Distribution"> <description>chart</description> <requirements><requirement type="package">fastx_toolkit</requirement></requirements> <command>fasta_clipping_histogram.pl $input $outfile</command> <inputs> <param format="fasta" name="input" type="data" label="Library to analyze" /> </inputs> <outputs> <data format="png" name="outfile" metadata_source="input" /> </outputs> <help> **What it does** This tool creates a histogram image of sequence lengths distribution in a given fasta dataset file. **TIP:** Use this tool after clipping your library (with **FASTX Clipper tool**), to visualize the clipping results. ----- **Output Examples** In the following library, most sequences are 24-mers to 27-mers. This could indicate an abundance of endo-siRNAs (depending of course of what you've tried to sequence in the first place). .. image:: ./static/fastx_icons/fasta_clipping_histogram_1.png In the following library, most sequences are 19,22 or 23-mers. This could indicate an abundance of miRNAs (depending of course of what you've tried to sequence in the first place). .. image:: ./static/fastx_icons/fasta_clipping_histogram_2.png ----- **Input Formats** This tool accepts short-reads FASTA files. The reads don't have to be short, but they do have to be on a single line, like so:: >sequence1 AGTAGTAGGTGATGTAGAGAGAGAGAGAGTAG >sequence2 GTGTGTGTGGGAAGTTGACACAGTA >sequence3 CCTTGAGATTAACGCTAATCAAGTAAAC If the sequences span over multiple lines:: >sequence1 CAGCATCTACATAATATGATCGCTATTAAACTTAAATCTCCTTGACGGAG TCTTCGGTCATAACACAAACCCAGACCTACGTATATGACAAAGCTAATAG aactggtctttacctTTAAGTTG Use the **FASTA Width Formatter** tool to re-format the FASTA into a single-lined sequences:: >sequence1 CAGCATCTACATAATATGATCGCTATTAAACTTAAATCTCCTTGACGGAGTCTTCGGTCATAACACAAACCCAGACCTACGTATATGACAAAGCTAATAGaactggtctttacctTTAAGTTG ----- **Multiplicity counts (a.k.a reads-count)** If the sequence identifier (the text after the '>') contains a dash and a number, it is treated as a multiplicity count value (i.e. how many times that individual sequence repeated in the original FASTA file, before collapsing). Example 1 - The following FASTA file *does not* have multiplicity counts:: >seq1 GGATCC >seq2 GGTCATGGGTTTAAA >seq3 GGGATATATCCCCACACACACACAC Each sequence is counts as one, to produce the following chart: .. image:: ./static/fastx_icons/fasta_clipping_histogram_3.png Example 2 - The following FASTA file have multiplicity counts:: >seq1-2 GGATCC >seq2-10 GGTCATGGGTTTAAA >seq3-3 GGGATATATCCCCACACACACACAC The first sequence counts as 2, the second as 10, the third as 3, to produce the following chart: .. image:: ./static/fastx_icons/fasta_clipping_histogram_4.png Use the **FASTA Collapser** tool to create FASTA files with multiplicity counts. </help> </tool> <!-- FASTA-Clipping-Histogram is part of the FASTX-toolkit, by A.Gordon (gordon@cshl.edu) -->