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  • Scripting help to identify adaptors in reads

    Hi everybody,

    i have some reads (454) where there are adaptors (NNNN...), one,two or three adaptors for each reads depending on the reads. Is there any way to establish for exemple how many reads have 1 adaptors, how many 2 and how many 3 adaptors over the total ???

    >271-88
    GCCTTGCCAGCCGCTCAGATTGATNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNATCAGGTGCCTACG
    >272-88
    GCCTTGCCAGCCGCTCAGATTGATNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNATCANNNNNNNNNNNNNNNCTGATGGCGCGAGGGAGGCGCCTTGCCAGCCCGCTCAGATTGATNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNCTGATGGCGCGAGGGAGGC
    >273-88
    GCCTCCCTCGCGCATCAGATCGTAGGCACCATCAATCTGAGCGGGCTGGCAAGGCGCCTCCCTCGCGCCA
    >274-88
    GCCTTGCCAGCCGCTCAGATTGATNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNCTGATGGCGCGAGGGAGGCGCCTCCCTCGCGCCATCAGATCGTNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNTCGTAGGCACCATCAATCTGAGCGGGCTGGCAAGGCGCCTCCCTCGCGCCATCAGATCGTAGGCACCATCAA

    Can anyone suggests me a script to fix this ???

    Thank you very much

  • #2
    You could run a couple of rounds of find_adaptor - which is pretty clever - from Biopieces (www.biopieces.org).

    Comment


    • #3
      Thank you it's a very good tool. But the problem is that some adpators occur in the middle of the sequences because they coming out from a concameration experimental design (they are miRNAs between NNNNNN...). So i want to know a script or tool that may say how many reads have 1 adapt, how many 2, (max are 4) in respect to the total number of reads. Do you know any tool/script that may help ? Tnx

      Comment


      • #4
        Hm, perhaps patscan_seq then:

        Code:
        read_fasta -i data.fna | patscan_seq -ip "p1=<adaptor sequence> 0...50 p1 0...50 p1 0...50 p1" | write_fasta -xo got4_adaptors.fna
        Code:
        read_fasta -i data.fna | patscan_seq -ip "p1=<adaptor sequence> 0...50 p1 0...50 p1" | write_fasta -xo got3_adaptors.fna
        etc

        of cause you need to separate the sequences in piles. Clever use of grab should do that.

        Martin
        Last edited by maasha; 11-10-2011, 04:17 AM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Wonderful Thanks !!!

          Comment


          • #6
            of cause you could perhaps also use REGEX of some sort. egrep, agrep or nrgrep springs to mind. you could also use grab --regex in Biopieces.

            Comment


            • #7
              Thanks maasha,

              another rapid way:

              nawk -F'[N]+' '/^[^>]/{a[NF-1]++}END{for(i in a) print a[i] " have " i " ADAPTOR"}' myFile.fasta > result.txt

              Comment


              • #8
                Also in perl with the same result:

                perl -ne '$count{s/N+//g}++ if /^[^>]/;END{for $i (keys %count){print "$count{$i} have $i ADAPTOR\n";}}' myFile.fasta > result.txt

                Comment

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