SYNOPSIS
hmmpfam [options] hmmfile seqfile
DESCRIPTION
hmmpfam reads a sequence file seqfile and compares each sequence in it, one at a time, against all the HMMs in hmmfile looking for significantly similar sequence matches.
hmmfile will be looked for first in the current working directory, then in a directory named by the environment variable HMMERDB. This lets administrators install HMM library(s) such as Pfam in a common location.
There is a separate output report for each sequence in seqfile. This report consists of three sections: a ranked list of the best scoring HMMs, a list of the best scoring domains in order of their occurrence in the sequence, and alignments for all the best scoring domains. A sequence score may be higher than a domain score for the same sequence if there is more than one domain in the sequence; the sequence score takes into account all the domains. All sequences scoring above the -E and -T cutoffs are shown in the first list, then every domain found in this list is shown in the second list of domain hits. If desired, E-value and bit score thresholds may also be applied to the domain list using the --domE and --domT options.
OPTIONS
- -h
-
Print brief help; includes version number and summary of
all options, including expert options.
- -n
-
Specify that models and sequence are nucleic acid, not protein.
Other HMMER programs autodetect this; but because of the order in
which
hmmpfam
accesses data, it can't reliably determine the correct "alphabet"
by itself.
- -A <n>
-
Limits the alignment output to the
<n>
best scoring domains.
-A0
shuts off the alignment output and can be used to reduce
the size of output files.
- -E <x>
-
Set the E-value cutoff for the per-sequence ranked hit list to
<x>,
where
<x>
is a positive real number. The default is 10.0. Hits with E-values
better than (less than) this threshold will be shown.
- -T <x>
-
Set the bit score cutoff for the per-sequence ranked hit list to
<x>,
where
<x>
is a real number.
The default is negative infinity; by default, the threshold
is controlled by E-value and not by bit score.
Hits with bit scores better than (greater than) this threshold
will be shown.
- -Z <n>
-
Calculate the E-value scores as if we had seen a sequence database of
<n>
sequences. The default is arbitrarily set to 59021, the size of
Swissprot 34.
EXPERT OPTIONS
- --acc
-
Report HMM accessions instead of names in the output reports.
Useful for high-throughput annotation, where the data are being
parsed for storage in a relational database.
- --compat
-
Use the output format of HMMER 2.1.1, the 1998-2001 public
release; provided so 2.1.1 parsers don't have to be rewritten.
- --cpu <n>
-
Sets the maximum number of CPUs that the program
will run on. The default is to use all CPUs
in the machine. Overrides the HMMER_NCPU
environment variable. Only affects threaded
versions of HMMER (the default on most systems).
- --cut_ga
-
Use Pfam GA (gathering threshold) score cutoffs.
Equivalent
to --globT <GA1> --domT <GA2>, but the GA1 and GA2 cutoffs
are read from each HMM in
hmmfile
individually. hmmbuild puts these cutoffs there
if the alignment file was annotated in a Pfam-friendly
alignment format (extended SELEX or Stockholm format) and
the optional GA annotation line was present. If these
cutoffs are not set in the HMM file,
--cut_ga
doesn't work.
- --cut_tc
-
Use Pfam TC (trusted cutoff) score cutoffs. Equivalent
to --globT <TC1> --domT <TC2>, but the TC1 and TC2 cutoffs
are read from each HMM in
hmmfile
individually. hmmbuild puts these cutoffs there
if the alignment file was annotated in a Pfam-friendly
alignment format (extended SELEX or Stockholm format) and
the optional TC annotation line was present. If these
cutoffs are not set in the HMM file,
--cut_tc
doesn't work.
- --cut_nc
-
Use Pfam NC (noise cutoff) score cutoffs. Equivalent
to --globT <NC1> --domT <NC2>, but the NC1 and NC2 cutoffs
are read from each HMM in
hmmfile
individually. hmmbuild puts these cutoffs there
if the alignment file was annotated in a Pfam-friendly
alignment format (extended SELEX or Stockholm format) and
the optional NC annotation line was present. If these
cutoffs are not set in the HMM file,
--cut_nc
doesn't work.
- --domE <x>
-
Set the E-value cutoff for the per-domain ranked hit list to
<x>,
where
<x>
is a positive real number.
The default is infinity; by default, all domains in the sequences
that passed the first threshold will be reported in the second list,
so that the number of domains reported in the per-sequence list is
consistent with the number that appear in the per-domain list.
- --domT <x>
-
Set the bit score cutoff for the per-domain ranked hit list to
<x>,
where
<x>
is a real number. The default is negative infinity;
by default, all domains in the sequences
that passed the first threshold will be reported in the second list,
so that the number of domains reported in the per-sequence list is
consistent with the number that appear in the per-domain list.
Important note:
only one domain in a sequence is absolutely controlled by this
parameter, or by
--domT.
The second and subsequent domains in a sequence have a de facto
bit score threshold of 0 because of the details of how HMMER
works. HMMER requires at least one pass through the main model
per sequence; to do more than one pass (more than one domain)
the multidomain alignment must have a better score than the
single domain alignment, and hence the extra domains must contribute
positive score. See the Users' Guide for more detail.
- --forward
-
Use the Forward algorithm instead of the Viterbi algorithm
to determine the per-sequence scores. Per-domain scores are
still determined by the Viterbi algorithm. Some have argued that
Forward is a more sensitive algorithm for detecting remote
sequence homologues; my experiments with HMMER have not
confirmed this, however.
- --informat <s>
-
Assert that the input
seqfile
is in format
<s>;
do not run Babelfish format autodection. This increases
the reliability of the program somewhat, because
the Babelfish can make mistakes; particularly
recommended for unattended, high-throughput runs
of HMMER. Valid format strings include FASTA,
GENBANK, EMBL, GCG, PIR, STOCKHOLM, SELEX, MSF,
CLUSTAL, and PHYLIP. See the User's Guide for a complete
list.
- --null2
-
Turn off the post hoc second null model. By default, each alignment
is rescored by a postprocessing step that takes into account possible
biased composition in either the HMM or the target sequence.
This is almost essential in database searches, especially with
local alignment models. There is a very small chance that this
postprocessing might remove real matches, and
in these cases
--null2
may improve sensitivity at the expense of reducing
specificity by letting biased composition hits through.
- --pvm
-
Run on a Parallel Virtual Machine (PVM). The PVM must
already be running. The client program
hmmpfam-pvm
must be installed on all the PVM nodes.
The HMM database
hmmfile
and an associated GSI index file
hmmfile.gsi
must also be installed on all the PVM nodes.
(The GSI index is produced by the program
hmmindex.)
Because the PVM implementation is I/O bound,
it is highly recommended that each node have a
local copy of
hmmfile
rather than NFS mounting a shared copy.
Optional PVM support must have been compiled into
HMMER for
--pvm
to function.
- --xnu
-
Turn on XNU filtering of target protein sequences. Has no effect
on nucleic acid sequences. In trial experiments,
--xnu
appears to perform less well than the default
post hoc null2 model.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1992-2003 HHMI/Washington University School of Medicine. Freely distributed under the GNU General Public License (GPL).See the file COPYING in your distribution for details on redistribution conditions.
AUTHOR
Sean Eddy HHMI/Dept. of Genetics Washington Univ. School of Medicine 4566 Scott Ave. St Louis, MO 63110 USA http://www.genetics.wustl.edu/eddy/