——# $Id: GOR4.pm,v 1.0 2003/07/ 11
#
# BioPerl module for Bio::Tools::Analysis::Protein::GOR4
#
# Copyright Richard Adams
#
# You may distribute this module under the same terms as perl itself
# POD documentation - main docs before the code
=head1 NAME
Bio::Tools::Analysis::Protein::GOR4 - a wrapper around GOR4 protein
secondary structure prediction server
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Bio::Tools::Analysis::Protein::GOR4;
#get a Bio::Seq or Bio::PrimarySeq
use Bio::PrimarySeq;
$seq = new Bio::PrimarySeq
(-seq=>'IKLCVHHJHJHJHJHJHJHNLAILAKAHLIELALAL',
-primary_id=>'test'); # a Bio::PrimarySeqI object
my $gor4 = Bio::Tools::Analysis::Protein::GOR4->new (-seq=>$seq);
$gor4->run;
print $gor4->result;# #raw text to standard error
=head1 DESCRIPTION
A module to remotely retrieve predictions of protein secondary
structure. Each residue in the protein receives a score representing
the likelihood of existing in each of three different states (helix,
coil or sheet), e.g.,
my $analysis_object = Bio::Tools::SimpleAnalysis::Protein::GOR4->
new(-seq => $seq);
creates a new object
$analysis_object->run;
submits the query to the server and obtains raw text output
Given an amino acid sequence the results can be obtained in 4 formats,
determined by the argument to the result method
=over 4
=item 1
The raw text of the program output
my $rawdata = $analysis_object->result;
=item 2
An reference to an array of hashes of scores for each state and the
assigned state.
my $data_ref = $analysis_object->result('parsed');
print "score for helix at residue 2 is $data_ref->[1]{'helix'}\n";
print "predicted struc at residue 2 is $data_ref->[1]{'struc}\n";
=item 3
An array of Bio::SeqFeature::Generic objects where each feature is a
predicted unit of secondary structure. Only stretches of helix/sheet
predictions for longer than 4 residues are defined as helices. See
Bio::Tools::Analysis::Domcut.pm for examples of how to add sequence
features.
my @fts = $analysis_object->result(Bio::SeqFeatureI);
for my $ft (@fts) {
print " From ", $ft->start, " to ",$ft->end, " struc: " ,
($ft->each_tag_value('type'))[0] ,"\n";
}
=item 4
A Bio::Seq::Meta::Array implementing sequence.
This is a Bio::Seq object that can also hold data about each residue
in the sequence In this case, the sequence can be associated with a
single array of GOR4 prediction scores. e.g.,
my $meta_sequence = $analysis_object->result('all');
print "helix scores from residues 10-20 are ",
$meta_sequence->named_submeta_text("GOR4_helix",10,20), "\n";
Meta sequence names are : GOR4_helix, GOR4_sheet, GOR4_coil,
GOR4_struc, representing the scores for each residue.
Many methods common to all analyses are inherited from
Bio::Tools::Analysis::SimpleAnalysisBase.
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Bio::SimpleAnalysisI>,
L<Bio::Tools::Analysis::SimpleAnalysisBase>,
L<Bio::Seq::Meta::Array>,
L<Bio::WebAgent>
=head1 FEEDBACK
=head2 Mailing Lists
User feedback is an integral part of the evolution of this and other
Bioperl modules. Send your comments and suggestions preferably to one
of the Bioperl mailing lists. Your participation is much appreciated.
bioperl-l@bioperl.org - General discussion
http://bioperl.org/wiki/Mailing_lists - About the mailing lists
=head2 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:
=head1 AUTHORS
Richard Adams, Richard.Adams@ed.ac.uk,
=head1 APPENDIX
The rest of the documentation details each of the object
methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _
=cut
use
strict;
package
Bio::Tools::Analysis::Protein::GOR4;
use
IO::String;
use
Bio::SeqIO;
my
$ANALYSIS_NAME
=
'GOR4'
;
my
$ANALYSIS_SPEC
= {
name
=>
'Gor4'
,
type
=>
'Protein'
};
my
$INPUT_SPEC
= [
{
mandatory
=>
'true'
,
type
=>
'Bio::PrimarySeqI'
,
'name'
=>
'seq'
,
},
];
my
$RESULT_SPEC
=
{
''
=>
'bulk'
,
# same as undef
'Bio::SeqFeatureI'
=>
'ARRAY of Bio::SeqFeature::Generic'
,
raw
=>
'[ {struc =>, helix=> ,sheet=>, coil=>}]'
,
meta
=>
'Bio::Seq::Meta::Array object'
,
};
=head2 result
Name : result
Usage : $job->result (...)
Returns : a result created by running an analysis
Args : see keys of $RESULT_SPEC
The method returns a result of an executed job. If the job was
terminated by an error the result may contain an error message instead
of the real data.
This implementation returns differently processed data depending on
argument:
=over 3
=item undef
Returns the raw ASCII data stream but without HTML tags
=item 'Bio::SeqFeatureI'
The argument string defines the type of bioperl objects returned in an
array. The objects are L<Bio::SeqFeature::Generic>. Feature primary
tag is "2ary". Feature tags are "type" (which can be helix, sheet or
coil) "method" (GOR4).
=item 'parsed'
Array of hash references of { helix =E<gt>, sheet =E<gt> , coil =E<gt> , struc=E<gt>}.
=item 'meta'
A Bio::Seq::Meta::Array object. Scores can be accessed using methods
from this class. Meta sequence names are GOR4_helix, GOR4_sheet,
GOR4_coil, GOR4_struc.
=back
=cut
sub
result {
my
(
$self
,
$value
) =
@_
;
my
@scores
;
my
@fts
;
if
(
$value
) {
#parse into basic raw form, store this as well as '_result'
if
(!
exists
(
$self
->{
'_parsed'
}) ) {
my
$result
= IO::String->new(
$self
->{
'_result'
});
while
(
my
$line
= <
$result
>) {
next
unless
$line
=~ /^\w\s/;
# or for sopma/hnn /^[A-Z]\s/
$line
=~/(\w)\s+(\d+)\s+(\d+)\s+(\d+)/;
# or for so
push
@scores
, {
struc
=> $1,
helix
=> $2,
sheet
=> $3,
coil
=> $4,
};
}
$self
->{
'_parsed'
} = \
@scores
;
}
if
(
$value
eq
'Bio::SeqFeatureI'
) {
$self
->_get_2ary_coords();
for
my
$type
(
keys
%{
$self
->{
'_parsed_coords'
}} ) {
next
if
$type
=~ /\w{2,}/;
#if not H,C,E or T
for
my
$loc
(@{
$self
->{
'_parsed_coords'
}{
$type
}} ) {
push
@fts
, Bio::SeqFeature::Generic->new
(
-start
=>
$loc
->{
'start'
},
-end
=>
$loc
->{
'end'
},
-source
=>
'GOR4'
,
-primary
=>
'Region'
,
-tag
=> {
type
=>
$type
,
method
=>
$self
->analysis_name,
});
}
#end of array of strucs of type
}
# end of all 2nd struc elements
delete
$self
->{
'_parsed_coords'
};
#remove temp data
return
@fts
;
}
#endif BioSeqFeature
elsif
(
$value
eq
'meta'
) {
#1st of all make 3 or 4 arrays of scores for each type from column data
my
%type_scores
;
for
my
$aa
(@{
$self
->{
'_parsed'
}}) {
push
@{
$type_scores
{
'struc'
}},
$aa
->{
'struc'
};
push
@{
$type_scores
{
'helix'
}},
$aa
->{
'helix'
};
push
@{
$type_scores
{
'sheet'
}},
$aa
->{
'sheet'
};
push
@{
$type_scores
{
'coil'
}},
$aa
->{
'coil'
};
}
## bless if necessary ##
if
(!
$self
->seq->isa(
"Bio::Seq::Meta::Array"
)){
bless
(
$self
->seq,
"Bio::Seq::Meta::Array"
);
}
$self
->seq->isa(
"Bio::Seq::MetaI"
)
||
$self
->throw(
"$self is not a Bio::Seq::MetaI"
);
$Bio::Seq::Meta::Array::DEFAULT_NAME
=
'GOR4_struc'
;
## now make meta_Sequence
for
my
$struc_type
(
keys
%type_scores
) {
my
$meta_name
=
"GOR4"
.
"_"
.
"$struc_type"
;
my
@meta
=
map
{
$_
->{
$struc_type
}} @{
$self
->{
'_parsed'
}};
if
(
grep
{
$_
eq
$meta_name
}
$self
->seq->meta_names ) {
$self
->
warn
(
"$meta_name already exists , not overwriting!"
);
next
;
}
$self
->seq->named_meta(
$meta_name
,\
@meta
);
}
# return seq array object implementing meta sequence #
return
$self
->seq;
}
else
{
return
$self
->{
'_parsed'
};
}
}
#endif ($value)
#return raw result if no return fomrt stated
return
$self
->{
'_result'
};
}
sub
_get_2ary_coords {
#helper sub for result;
##extracts runs of structure > MIN_STRUC_LENresidues or less if Turn:
#i.e., helical prediction for 1 residue isn't very meaningful...
## and poulates array of hashes with start/end values.
##keys of $Result are 'H' 'T' 'C' 'E'.
#could be put into a secondary base class if need be
my
(
$self
) =
@_
;
my
@prot
= @{
$self
->{
'_parsed'
}};
my
%Result
;
for
(
my
$index
= 0;
$index
<=
$#prot
;
$index
++) {
my
$type
=
$prot
[
$index
]{
'struc'
};
next
unless
$type
=~ /[HTCE]/;
my
$length
= 1;
for
(
my
$j
=
$index
+ 1;
$j
<=
$#prot
;
$j
++) {
my
$test
=
$prot
[
$j
];
if
(
$test
->{
'struc'
} eq
$type
) {
$length
++;
}
elsif
(
$length
> MIN_STRUC_LEN ||
(
$length
<= MIN_STRUC_LEN &&
$type
eq
'T'
) ) {
push
@{
$Result
{
$type
}}, {
start
=>
$index
+ 1 ,
end
=>
$j
};
$index
+=
$length
-1;
last
;
}
else
{
$index
+=
$length
- 1;
last
;
}
}
}
$self
->{
'_parsed_coords'
} = \
%Result
;
#temp assignment
}
sub
_init {
my
$self
=
shift
;
$self
->url(
$URL
);
$self
->{
'_ANALYSIS_SPEC'
} =
$ANALYSIS_SPEC
;
$self
->{
'_INPUT_SPEC'
} =
$INPUT_SPEC
;
$self
->{
'_RESULT_SPEC'
} =
$RESULT_SPEC
;
$self
->{
'_ANALYSIS_NAME'
} =
$ANALYSIS_NAME
;
return
$self
;
}
sub
_run {
my
$self
=
shift
;
$self
->delay(1);
# delay repeated calls by default by 3 sec, set delay() to change
$self
->
sleep
;
$self
->status(
'TERMINATED_BY_ERROR'
);
my
$request
= POST
$self
->url,
Content_Type
=>
'form-data'
,
Content
=> [
title
=>
""
,
notice
=>
$self
->seq->seq,
ali_width
=> 70,
];
my
$content
=
$self
->request(
$request
);
my
$text
=
$content
->content;
return
unless
$text
;
my
(
$next
) =
$text
=~ /Prediction.*?=(.*?)>/;
return
unless
$next
;
my
$req2
= HTTP::Request->new(
GET
=>
$out
);
my
$resp2
=
$self
->request(
$req2
);
$self
->status(
'COMPLETED'
)
if
$resp2
ne
''
;
$self
->{
'_result'
} =
$resp2
->content;
}
1;