Bio::Tools::OddCodes(3) Object holding alternative alphabet coding for

SYNOPSIS


# Take a sequence object from eg, an inputstream, and creates an
# object for the purposes of rewriting that sequence in another
# alphabet. These are abbreviated amino acid sequence alphabets,
# designed to simplify the statistical aspects of analysing protein
# sequences, by reducing the combinatorial explosion of the
# 20-letter alphabet. These abbreviated alphabets range in size
# from 2 to 8.
# Creating the OddCodes object, eg:
my $inputstream = Bio::SeqIO->new( '-file' => "seqfile",
'-format' => 'Fasta');
my $seqobj = $inputstream->next_seq();
my $oddcode_obj = Bio::Tools::Oddcodes->new(-seq => $seqobj);
# or:
my $seqobj = Bio::PrimarySeq->new
(-seq=>'[cut and paste a sequence here]',
-alphabet => 'protein',
-id => 'test');
my $oddcode_obj = Bio::Tools::OddCodes->new(-seq => $seqobj);
# do the alternative coding, returning the answer as a reference to
# a string
my $output = $oddcode_obj->structural();
my $output = $oddcode_obj->chemical();
my $output = $oddcode_obj->functional();
my $output = $oddcode_obj->charge();
my $output = $oddcode_obj->hydrophobic();
my $output = $oddcode_obj->Dayhoff();
my $output = $oddcode_obj->Sneath();
my $output = $oddcode_obj->Stanfel();
# display sequence in new form, eg:
my $new_coding = $$output;
print "\n$new_coding";

DESCRIPTION

Bio::Tools::Oddcodes is a welterweight object for rewriting a protein sequence in an alternative alphabet. Eight of these are provided, ranging from the the 2-letter hydrophobic alphabet, to the 8-letter chemical alphabet. These are useful for the statistical analysis of protein sequences since they can partially avoid the combinatorial explosion produced by the full 20-letter alphabet (eg. 400 dimers, 8000 trimers etc.)

The objects will print out a warning if the input sequence is not a protein. If you know what you are doing, you can silence the warning by setting verbose() to a negative value.

See SYNOPSIS above for object creation code.

REFERENCES

Stanfel LE (1996) A new approach to clustering the amino acids. J. theor. Biol. 183, 195-205.

Karlin S, Ost F and Blaisdell BE (1989) Patterns in DNA and amino acid sequences and their statistical significance. Chapter 6 of: Mathematical Methods for DNA Sequences. Waterman MS (ed.) CRC Press, Boca Raton , FL.

FEEDBACK

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  [email protected]                  - General discussion
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Support

Please direct usage questions or support issues to the mailing list:

[email protected]

rather than to the module maintainer directly. Many experienced and reponsive experts will be able look at the problem and quickly address it. Please include a thorough description of the problem with code and data examples if at all possible.

Reporting Bugs

Report bugs to the Bioperl bug tracking system to help us keep track the bugs and their resolution. Bug reports can be submitted via the web:

  https://github.com/bioperl/bioperl-live/issues

AUTHOR

Derek Gatherer

APPENDIX

The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _

structural

 Title   : structural
 Usage   : $output = $oddcode_obj->structural();
 Function: turns amino acid sequence into 3-letter structural alphabet
         : A (ambivalent), E (external), I (internal)
 Example : a sequence ACDEFGH will become AAEEIAE
 Returns : Reference to the new sequence string
 Args    : none

functional

 Title   : functional
 Usage   : $output = $oddcode_obj->functional();
 Function: turns amino acid sequence into 4-letter functional alphabet
         : A (acidic), C (basic), H (hydrophobic), P (polar)
 Example : a sequence ACDEFGH will become HPAAHHC
 Returns : Reference to the new sequence string
 Args    : none

hydrophobic

 Title   : hydrophobic
 Usage   : $output = $oddcode_obj->hydrophobic();
 Function: turns amino acid sequence into 2-letter hydrophobicity alphabet
         : O (hydrophobic), I (hydrophilic)
 Example : a sequence ACDEFGH will become OIIIOII
 Returns : Reference to the new sequence string
 Args    : none

Dayhoff

 Title   : Dayhoff
 Usage   : $output = $oddcode_obj->Dayhoff();
 Function: turns amino acid sequence into 6-letter Dayhoff alphabet
 Example : a sequence ACDEFGH will become CADDGCE
         : A (=C),   C (=AGPST), D (=DENQ),
         : E (=HKR), F (=ILMV),  G (=FWY)
 Returns : Reference to the new sequence string
 Args    : none

Sneath

 Title   : Sneath
 Usage   : $output = $oddcode_obj->Sneath();
 Function: turns amino acid sequence into 7-letter Sneath alphabet
 Example : a sequence ACDEFGH will become CEFFHCF
         : A (=ILV), C (=AGP), D (=MNQ), E (=CST),
         : F (=DE),  G (=KR),  H (=FHWY)
 Returns : Reference to the new sequence string
 Args    : none

Stanfel

 Title   : Stanfel
 Usage   : $output = $oddcode_obj->Stanfel();
 Function: turns amino acid sequence into 4-letter Stanfel alphabet
 Example : a sequence ACDEFGH will become AACCDAE
         : A (=ACGILMPSTV), C (=DENQ), D (=FWY), E (=HKR)
 Returns : Reference to the new sequence string
 Args    : none

chemical

 Title   : chemical
 Usage   : $output = $oddcode_obj->chemical();
 Function: turns amino acid sequence into 8-letter chemical alphabet
         : A (acidic), L (aliphatic), M (amide), R (aromatic)
         : C (basic),  H (hydroxyl),  I (imino), S (sulphur)
 Example : a sequence ACDEFGH will become LSAARAC
 Returns : Reference to the new sequence string
 Args    : none

charge

 Title   : charge
 Usage   : $output = $oddcode_obj->charge();
 Function: turns amino acid sequence into 3-letter charge alphabet
 Example : a sequence ACDEFGH will become NNAANNC
         : A (negative; NOT anode), C (positive; NOT cathode), N (neutral)
 Returns : Reference to the new sequence string
 Args    : none