Author: | Tamás Nepusz, Rajkumar Sasidharan, Alberto Paccanaro |
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gfam
is now archived and has been superseded by ConSAT. If you are new
to gfam
, please consider using ConSAT instead.
The original documentation of gfam
follows from here for historical
purposes.
This is the documentation of gfam
, a Python module to aid the automatic
annotation of gene families based on consensus domain architecture. gfam
started out as a collection of loosely coupled Python scripts that process the
output of iprscan
(a tool to obtain domain assignments of individual genes
from InterPro) and conduct some analyses using BLAST to detect novel,
previously uncharacterised domains. The original domains and the detected novel
domain candidates are then used to create a consensus domain assignment for
each gene sequence. Genes are then finally assigned to families based on their
domain architectures, and a Gene Ontology overrepresentation analysis is
conducted on the GO annotations of individual domains in the same sequence to
come up with a set of functional labels for each sequence.
You will need the following tools to run gfam
:
- Python 2.5 or later. Python 3 is not supported yet.
gfam
also seems to work with Jython, but this was not tested thoroughly. - NCBI BLAST; in particular, the
formatdb
andblastall
tools from the legacy C-based BLAST distribution.
The latest release of SciPy is recommended, but not necessary.
gfam
uses SciPy for calculating the logarithm of the gamma
function in the overrepresentation analysis routines, but it falls
back to a (somewhat slower) Python implementation if SciPy is
not installed.
gfam
is driven by a master configuration file named gfam.cfg
.
A sample configuration file is given in the distribution. The sample
file works fine for the gene sequences of Arabidopsis thaliana; for
other species, you might have to tweak some of the parameters, and you
will surely have to modify the paths to the data files. The configuration
file is documented and mostly self-explanatory.
You can launch gfam
by typing:
$ bin/gfam
This will run the whole gfam
analysis pipeline using the configuration
specified in gfam.cfg
. If your configuration file is named otherwise,
you can run it by typing:
$ bin/gfam -c my_config.cfg
If you have a question or a comment about gfam
or you think you have
found a bug, feel free to contact me.