bioinfo.pipeline.block.SRASAMDump
Description
An SRASAMDump
block enables you to download SAM files from SRA
(Sequence Read Archive) [1].
bioinfo.pipeline.block.SRASAMDump
requires the SRA Toolkit for Bioinformatics Toolbox™. If this support package is not installed, then the function provides a download
link. For details, see Bioinformatics Toolbox Software Support Packages.
Creation
Syntax
Description
creates an b
= bioinfo.pipeline.block.SRASAMDumpSRASAMDump
block.
uses additional options specified by b
= bioinfo.pipeline.block.SRASAMDump(options
)options
.
specifies additional options using one or more name-value arguments. For example, you can
specify to retrieve the FASTA-formatted file using the b
= bioinfo.pipeline.block.SRASAMDump(Name=Value
)FastaOutput
name-value argument. The name-value arguments sets the property names and values of an
SRASAMDumpOptions
object. These property values are assigned to the
Options
property of the block.
Input Arguments
options
— SRASAMDump
options
SRASAMDumpOptions
| string scalar | character vector
SRASAMDump
options, specified as an SRASAMDumpOptions
object, string scalar, or character vector.
If you are specifying a string scalar or character vector, it must be in the
sam-dump
original syntax (prefixed by a dash).
Data Types: char
| string
Specify optional pairs of arguments as
Name1=Value1,...,NameN=ValueN
, where Name
is
the argument name and Value
is the corresponding value.
Name-value arguments must appear after other arguments, but the order of the
pairs does not matter.
Example: b = bioinfo.pipeline.block.SRASAMDump(BZip2=true)
specifies
to compress the downloaded file using bzip2.
BZip2
— Flag to compress output files using bzip2
false
or 0 (default) | true
or 1
Flag to compress the output files using bzip2, specified as a numeric or logical 1
(true
) or 0 (false
).
Data Types: double
| logical
ExtraCommand
— Additional commands
""
(default) | character vector | string scalar
Additional commands, specified as a character vector or string scalar.
The commands must be in the native syntax (prefixed by one or two dashes). Use this option to apply undocumented flags and flags without corresponding MATLAB® properties.
Example: ExtraCommand="--aligned-region
chr20:2500000-2600000"
Data Types: char
| string
FastaOutput
— Flag to produce FASTA-formatted output files
false
or 0 (default) | true
or 1
Flag to produce FASTA-formatted output files, specified as a numeric or logical 1 (true
) or 0 (false
).
Data Types: double
| logical
FastqOutput
— Flag to produce FASTQ-formatted output files
false
or 0 (default) | true
or 1
Flag to produce FASTQ-formatted output files, specified as a numeric or logical 1 (true
) or 0 (false
).
Data Types: double
| logical
GZip
— Flag to compress output files using gzip
false
or 0 (default) | true
or 1
Flag to compress the output files using gzip, specified as a numeric or logical 1
(true
) or 0 (false
).
Data Types: double
| logical
HideIdentical
— Flag to use '='
if base is identical to reference
false
or 0 (default) | true
or 1
Flag to use '='
in the output if a base is identical to the
reference, specified as a numeric or logical 1 (true
) or 0
(false
).
Data Types: double
| logical
IncludeAll
— Flag to include all object properties
false
or 0 (default) | true
or 1
Flag to include all object properties with
corresponding default values when converting properties to the original option syntax,
specified as a numeric or logical 1 (true
) or 0
(false
). You can convert properties to the original syntax
prefixed by one or two dashes (such as '--aligned-region
chr20:2500000-2600000'
) by using the getCommand
function.
When IncludeAll=false
and you call
getCommand(optionsObject)
, the software converts only the
specified properties. If the value is true
,
getCommand
converts all available properties, using default
values for unspecified properties, to the original syntax.
Note
If you set IncludeAll
to true
, the
software translates all available properties, with default values for
unspecified properties. The only exception is that when the default value of a
property is NaN
, Inf
,
[]
, ''
, or ""
, then
the software does not translate the corresponding property.
Data Types: logical
MinMapQuality
— Minimum mapping quality
0 (default) | nonnegative scalar
Minimum mapping quality required for an alignment to be included in the output, specified as a nonnegative scalar.
Data Types: double
OutputFileName
— Output filename
empty string array (default) | character vector | string scalar
Output filename, specified as a character vector or string scalar.
Data Types: char
| string
OutputPrimary
— Flag to output primary alignments only
false
or 0 (default) | true
or 1
Flag to output primary alignments only, specified as a numeric or logical 1 (true
) or 0 (false
).
Data Types: double
| logical
OutputUnaligned
— Flag to output unaligned reads with aligned reads
false
or 0 (default) | true
or 1
Flag to output the unaligned reads with the aligned reads, specified as a numeric or
logical 1 (true
) or 0 (false
).
Data Types: double
| logical
Properties
ErrorHandler
— Function to handle errors from run
method
[]
(default) | function handle
Function to handle errors from the run
method of the block, specified as a function handle. The handle specifies the function to call
if the run method encounters an error within a pipeline. For the pipeline to continue after a
block fails, ErrorHandler
must return a structure that is compatible with
the output ports of the block. The error handling function is called with the following two inputs:
Structure with these fields:
Field Description identifier Identifier of the error that occurred message Text of the error message index Linear index indicating which block process failed in the parallel run. By default, the index is 1 because there is only one run per block. For details on how block inputs can be split across different dimensions for multiple run calls, see Bioinformatics Pipeline SplitDimension. Input structure passed to the
run
method when it fails
Data Types: function_handle
Inputs
— Input ports
structure
This property is read-only.
Input ports of the block, specified as a structure. The field
names of the structure are the names of the block input ports, and the field values are bioinfo.pipeline.Input
objects. These objects describe the input port behaviors.
The input port names are the expected field names of the input structure that you pass to the
block run
method.
The SRASAMDump
block Inputs
structure has the
following field:
SRRID
— Accession numbers. This input is a required input that must be satisfied.
Data Types: struct
Outputs
— Output ports
structure
This property is read-only.
Output ports of the block, specified as a structure. The field
names of the structure are the names of the block output ports, and the field values are bioinfo.pipeline.Output
objects. These objects describe the output port behaviors.
The field names of the output structure returned by the block run
method
are the same as the output port names.
The SRASAMDump
block Outputs
structure has a
field named OutputFiles
.
Tip
To see the actual location of the output file, first get the results of the block.
Then use the unwrap
method as shown in this example.
Data Types: struct
Options
— SRASAMDump
options
SRASAMDumpOptions
object (default)
SRASAMDump
options, specified as an SRASAMDumpOptions
object. The default value is a default
SRASAMDumpOptions
object.
Object Functions
compile | Perform block-specific additional checks and validations |
copy | Copy array of handle objects |
emptyInputs | Create input structure for use with run method |
eval | Evaluate block object |
run | Run block object |
Examples
Download NGS Data from SRA Using Bioinformatics Pipeline
Import the pipeline and block objects needed for the example so that you can create these objects without specifying the entire namespace.
import bioinfo.pipeline.Pipeline import bioinfo.pipeline.block.*
Create a pipeline.
P = Pipeline;
Create an SRAFasterqDump
block and specify the accession number SRR11846824
as the block input. SRR11846824
has two reads per spot and no unaligned reads.
SRAFQDump = SRAFasterqDump;
SRAFQDump.Inputs.SRRID.Value = "SRR11846824";
addBlock(P,SRAFQDump);
Run the pipeline to download the corresponding FASTQ files from SRA for the specified accession number.
run(P);
Get the results of the SRAFQDump
block.
R = results(P,SRAFQDump)
R = struct with fields:
Reads: [1×1 bioinfo.pipeline.datatype.Incomplete]
Reads_1: [1×1 bioinfo.pipeline.datatype.File]
Reads_2: [1×1 bioinfo.pipeline.datatype.File]
Reads_3: [1×1 bioinfo.pipeline.datatype.Incomplete]
Reads_4: [1×1 bioinfo.pipeline.datatype.Incomplete]
Reads_5: [1×1 bioinfo.pipeline.datatype.Incomplete]
View the names of the downloaded files by using the unwrap
function.
unwrap(R.Reads_1) unwrap(R.Reads_2)
By default, the block uses the SplitType="SplitThree
" option and downloads only biological reads. Specifically, the block splits spots into reads. For spots with two reads, the block produces *_1.fastq
and *_2.fastq
and displays them in the Reads_
1 and Reads_2
fields, respectively. The block saves any unaligned reads in a *.fastq
file and displays it in the Reads
field. Because this accession has no unaligned reads, the block did not produce a *.fastq
file, and the Reads
field is returned as Incomplete
. Reads_3
, Reads_4
, and Reads_5
are also Incomplete
because of the usage of SplitType="SplitThree"
. For more details on the block output behavior, see Outputs.
You can specify other download options using the SRAFasterqDumpOptions
. For instance, to download the FASTA-formatted file, specify FastaOutput=true
and rerun the block.
opt = SRAFasterqDumpOptions; opt.FastaOutput = true; SRAFQDump.Options = opt;
You can also download SAM files from SRA using the SRASAMDump
block.
SRASDump = SRASAMDump;
Specify the accession number to download.
SRASDump.Inputs.SRRID.Value = "SRR11846824";
Specify the options using an SRASAMDumpOptions
object. For instance, set the output filename and compress the output file using bzip2.
samdumpopt = SRASAMDumpOptions;
samdumpopt.BZip2 = 1;
samdumpopt.OutputFileName = "SRR11846824.sam.bz2"
samdumpopt = SRASAMDumpOptions with properties: Default properties: ExtraCommand: "" FastaOutput: 0 FastqOutput: 0 GZip: 0 HideIdentical: 0 IncludeAll: 0 MinMapQuality: 0 OutputPrimary: 0 OutputUnaligned: 0 Version: "3.0.6" Modified properties: BZip2: 1 OutputFileName: "SRR11846824.sam.bz2"
SRASDump.Options = samdumpopt;
Add the block to the pipeline and run the pipeline.
addBlock(P,SRASDump); run(P);
Get the block results.
R2 = results(P,SRASDump);
View the names of the output files by using the unwrap
function.
unwrap(R2.OutputFiles)
After downloading the files, you can use them for downstream analyses. For instance, you can run bowtie2
to map the reads to the reference sequence, and then visualize the mapped reads in the Genomics Viewer app.
First, download the C. elegans reference sequence.
celegans_refseq = fastaread("https://s3.amazonaws.com/igv.broadinstitute.org/genomes/seq/ce11/ce11.fa");
Save the Chromosome 3 reference data in a FASTA file.
celegans_chr3 = celegans_refseq(3).Sequence;
fastawrite("celegans_chr3.fa",celegans_chr3);
Create a FileChooser
block to select the Chromosome 3 reference file.
fcRef = FileChooser;
fcRef.Files = fullfile(pwd,"celegans_chr3.fa");
addBlock(P,fcRef);
Build a set of index files using the Bowtie2Build
block. Set the base name of the index files and the name of the reference FASTA file.
buildIndex = Bowtie2Build; buildIndex.Inputs.IndexBaseName.Value = "celegans_chr3_index"; addBlock(P,buildIndex); connect(P,fcRef,buildIndex,["Files","ReferenceFASTAFiles"]); run(P);
Align reads to the reference using the Bowtie2
block. Create the block and then connect it to buildIndex
and SRAFQDump
blocks.
alignReads = Bowtie2; alignReads.OutFilename = "SRR11846824_mapped.sam"; addBlock(P,alignReads); connect(P,buildIndex,alignReads,["IndexBaseName","IndexBaseName"]); connect(P,SRAFQDump,alignReads,["Reads_1","Reads1Files";"Reads_2","Reads2Files"]); run(P);
Bowtie2
produces a SAM file. To visualize the mapped reads in the Genomics Viewer app, convert the SAM file to a BAM file.
First, make a UserFunction
block to create a BioMap
object from the SAM file.
biomapObj = UserFunction; biomapObj.Function = "BioMap"; biomapObj.RequiredArguments = "inputSAM"; biomapObj.OutputArguments = "biomapObject"; addBlock(P,biomapObj);
Next, connect the biomapObj
block to the alignReads
block, which provides the SAM file needed. Suppress two informational warnings issued during the creation of a BioMap
object.
connect(P,alignReads,biomapObj,["SAMFile","inputSAM"]); w = warning; warning("off","bioinfo:BioMap:BioMap:UnsortedReadsInSAMFile"); warning("off","bioinfo:saminfo:InvalidTagField"); run(P); warning(w); % Restore warnings
Use the write
method of the BioMap
object to convert the SAM file to a BAM file.
sam2bam = UserFunction; sam2bam.Function = "write"; sam2bam.RequiredArguments = ["biomapObj","BAMFileName"]; sam2bam.NameValueArguments = "Format"; sam2bam.Inputs.BAMFileName.Value = "../../../SRR11846824_mapped.bam"; sam2bam.Inputs.Format.Value = "BAM"; addBlock(P,sam2bam); connect(P,biomapObj,sam2bam,["biomapObject","biomapObj"]); run(P);
Create a FileChooser
block to select the generated BAM file.
fcBAM = FileChooser;
fcBAM.Files = fullfile(pwd,"SRR11846824_mapped.bam");
addBlock(P,fcBAM);
Create a FileChooser
block to select the C. elegans cytoband file, which is provided with the toolbox.
fcCyto = FileChooser;
fcCyto.Files = fullfile(pwd,"celegans_cytoBandIdeo.txt.gz");
addBlock(P,fcCyto);
View the alignment data using the Genomics Viewer app.
gv = GenomicsViewer; addBlock(P,gv); connect(P,fcRef,gv,["Files","Reference"]); connect(P,fcCyto,gv,["Files","Cytoband"]); connect(P,fcBAM,gv,["Files","Tracks"]); run(P);
Use the zoom slider to zoom in and see the features. Or you can enter the following in the search text box: Generated:3,711,861-3,711,940
.
Delete the pipeline results and downloaded files.
deleteResults(P,IncludeFiles=true);
References
[1] SRA Toolkit Development Team https://github.com/ncbi/sra-tools/wiki/01.-Downloading-SRA-Toolkit
Version History
Introduced in R2024a
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