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  • cut reads befor N

    Hi,

    I have reads with final Ns. Let's say, how can I get from this :

    >R1
    GGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTNT
    >R2
    GGGGGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTNTTNT

    to this (basically I want to cut the reads before the first N):

    >R1
    GGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
    >R2
    GGGGGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTT

  • #2
    You could try:

    sed 's/^\([ATGC]*\)N\([ATGCN]*\)/\1/g' YOURFILE > NEWFILE

    at least if you have a *nix operating system.

    Comment


    • #3
      Thanks, that works only for the first hit of my fasta file. How can I do that for all the sequences?

      Comment


      • #4
        This command is cute and simple.
        If there any Ns in the sequence identifiers of your FASTA file, they will also be trimmed off, however.

        Code:
        cut -d N -f 1 test.fa
        Code:
        [blancha@lg-1r17-n04 ~]$ more test.fa 
        >R1
        GGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTNT
        >R2
        GGGGGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTNTTNT
        [blancha@lg-1r17-n04 ~]$ cut -d N -f 1 test.fa 
        >R1
        GGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
        >R2
        GGGGGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTT
        Last edited by blancha; 10-19-2015, 06:48 AM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Pol8 View Post
          Thanks, that works only for the first hit of my fasta file. How can I do that for all the sequences?
          Do you have a dos/OS X formatted file? You may need to pass it through dos2unix/mac2unix utility before using @dschika's code.

          @dschika's code works for me.

          Comment


          • #6
            Is GenoMax's assumption right? That may cause problems...

            Just in case:
            Code:
            sed 's/^\([ATGC]*\)N\([ATGCN]*\)/\1/g' test.fa
            >R1
            GGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
            >R2
            GGGGGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTT
            ... and this solution does not alter the sequence identifiers
            Last edited by dschika; 10-19-2015, 07:06 AM.

            Comment


            • #7
              I hadn't realised the sed command worked.
              @dscika, better than my cut example too.

              I'm posting my awk command anyway, since I spent a bit of time researching it.
              It will not trim the N in the sequence identifier, like my simpler cut command.

              Code:
              awk -F "N" '{if (NR % 2==0) {print $1} else {print}}' test2.fa
              Code:
              [blancha@lg-1r17-n04 ~]$ more test2.fa 
              >R1 N in the sequence identifier.
              GGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTNT
              >R2
              GGGGGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTNTTNT
              [blancha@lg-1r17-n04 ~]$ awk -F "N" '{if (NR % 2==0) {print $1} else {print}}' test2.fa 
              >R1 N in the sequence identifier.
              GGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
              >R2
              GGGGGGGGGGTTTTTTTTTT

              Comment


              • #8
                Also quite nice!

                Comment

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