man mcxdeblast (Commandes) - parse BLAST files and stream output directly into mcl or write mcxassemble input.
NAME
mcxdeblast - parse BLAST files and stream output directly into mcl or write mcxassemble input.
SYNOPSIS
mcxdeblast file-name
mcxdeblast [--score=<b|e|r> (bit scores|e-values|normalize bit score)] [--m9 (expect BLAST column format)] [--abc-out (write ID1 ID2 score format)] [--abc (expect ID1 ID2 score format)] [--sort=<a|o> (alphabetic|occurrence sorting)] [--xi-dat=<suf> (strip <suf> from file-name)] [--xo-dat=<suf> (add <suf> to base name)] [--bcut=<val> (bit score cutoff)] [--ecut=<val> (E-value cutoff)] [--tab=<fname> (tab file)] <file-name>
The --abc option is likely to go the way of the dodo now that the input format it requires can be directly streamed into mcl.
DESCRIPTION
mcxdeblast parses BLAST files.
In stream mode mcxdeblast output can be directly streamed to mcl by using the mcxdeblast --abc-out option and equipping mcl with either --abc or --expect-abc. This can be considered the easy, lightweight and fast track. This functionality was recently acquired by mcl.
In the classic and slightly more heavy-handed assemble mode, mcxdeblast creates output files suitable for use by mcxassemble. The latter can in turn create input suitable for mcl. This is the mode in which mcxdeblast is employed by mclblastline.
STREAM MODE
Enter stream mode simply by specifiying --abc-out. Use --m9 if the input is in columnar output. Pipe the result to a file or directly to mcl. Example invocations can be found in the mcl manual.
ASSEMBLE MODE
If the input file is named iput, mcxdeblast will by default create files iput.hdr, iput.raw, iput.tab, iput.map, and iput.err. The hdr file contains information about the number of nodes found. It will be read by mcxassemble. The raw file contains the co-occurrence scores between different nodes (peptides), also to be read by mcxassemble. The co-occurrence scores are in terms of mcl indentiers, which are subjected to rearranging by mcxassemble in order to correctly align them with the tab file. The tab file contains bindings between mcl identifiers (after rearranging as specified in the map file) and the BLAST labels (peptide identifiers). Refer to the manual of mcxassemble for the syntax of a tab file. The err file contains a list of any errors encountered.
If the --tab=fname option is used mcxdeblast changes its behaviour. It will read the file fname, and use the bindings found therein. It will no longer output any of the hdr, map, or tab files. The hdr file should be provided by the same application that generated the specified tab file, and the map file should no longer be necessary (it might be convenient though and perhaps the future will bring a new --map option).
The --tab=fname option can be convenient e.g. if you split a BLAST job over multiple machines and want to apply mcxdeblast to each of the subresults. You do this by generating a single central tab file in advance. Then provide each instance of mcxdeblast with this tab file. Each instance will generate a raw file. The respective raw files can simply be concatenated and fed to mcxassemble using its -raw option. Additionally, a hdr file has to be specified for mcxassemble using its -hdr option. The syntax of hdr files is described in the mcxassemble manual. Currently there is usually only one variable in the hdr file, which is the number of bindings listed in the tab file. This number, in turn, should equal the total number of different peptides encountered in the BLAST input.
OPTIONS
Specify a tab file to use, rather than automatically generating one.
Specify whether to use bit scores, E-values, or bit scores
normalized by length of the HSP.
Specify how to sort labels.
Use this option to parse BLAST output formatted with the -m 9 option.
Use if each input line has the format ID1 ID2 SCORE.
However, you can also use mcl with the --abc option.
Use this to stream output directly into mcl.
If set, the suffix <suf> is stripped from file-name in order
to obtain the base name for output. If <file-name> does not
end with suffix, it is assumed to be the base name, and <suf> is
added in order to obtain the (real) file-name.
Attaches the suffix to the base name. Use this to distinguish
between different parses. One might for example
use --score=b --bcut=5 --xo-dat=b.
Scores below the cutoff value are ignored.
Scores below the cutoff value are ignored.
AUTHOR
Stijn van Dongen. Jason Stajich implemented the --m9 option. Abel Ureta-Vidal and Dinakarpandian Deendayal contributed helpful comments and fixes.
SEE ALSO
mclblastline, mcxassemble, mcl, clmformat.