————# $Id: gbdriver.pm 15212 2008-12-19 05:47:58Z cjfields $
#
# BioPerl module for Bio::SeqIO::gbdriver
#
# Cared for by Bioperl project bioperl-l(at)bioperl.org
#
# Copyright Chris Fields and contributors see AUTHORS section
#
# You may distribute this module under the same terms as perl itself
# POD documentation - main docs before the code
=head1 NAME
Bio::SeqIO::gbdriver - GenBank handler-based push parser
=head1 SYNOPSIS
#It is probably best not to use this object directly, but
#rather go through the SeqIO handler:
$stream = Bio::SeqIO->new(-file => $filename,
-format => 'gbdriver');
while ( my $seq = $stream->next_seq() ) {
# do something with $seq
}
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This object can transform Bio::Seq objects to and from GenBank flat file
databases. The key difference between this parser and the tried-and-true
Bio::SeqIO::genbank parser is this version separates the parsing and data
manipulation into a 'driver' method (next_seq) and separate object handlers
which deal with the data passed to it.
=head2 The Driver
The main purpose of the driver routine, in this case next_seq(), is to carve out
the data into meaningful chunks which are passed along to relevant handlers (see
below).
Each chunk of data in the has a NAME tag attached to it, similar to that for XML
parsing. This designates the type of data passed (annotation type or seqfeature)
and the handler to be called for processing the data.
For GenBank annotations, the data is divided up and passed along to handlers
according to whether the data is tagged with a field name (i.e. LOCUS) and
whether the field name represents 'primary' annotation (in this case, is present
at the beginning of the line, such as REFERENCE). If the field is primary, it is
assigned to the NAME tag. Field names which aren't primary (have at least 2
spaces before the name, like ORGANISM) are appended to the preceding primary
field name as additional tags.
For feature table data each new feature name signals the beginning of a new
chunk of data. 'FEATURES' is attached to NAME, the feature key ('CDS', 'gene',
etc) is attached as the PRIMARY_ID, and the location is assigned to it's own tag
name (LOCATION). Feature qualifiers are added as additional keys, with multiple
keys included in an array.
Once a particular event occurs (new primary tag, sequence, end of record), the
data is passed along to be processed by a handler or (if no handler is defined)
tossed away.
Internally, the hash ref for a representative annotation (here a REFERENCE)
looks like this:
$VAR1 = {
'JOURNAL' => 'Unpublished (2003)',
'TITLE' => 'The DNA sequence of Homo sapiens',
'NAME' => 'REFERENCE',
'REFERENCE' => '1 (bases 1 to 10001)',
'AUTHORS' => 'International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium.'
};
and a SeqFeature as this:
$VAR1 = {
'db_xref' => [
'GeneID:127086',
'InterimID:127086'
],
'LOCATION' => 'complement(3024..6641)',
'NAME' => 'FEATURES',
'FEATURE_KEY' => 'gene',
'gene' => 'LOC127086',
'note' => 'Derived by automated computational analysis using
gene prediction method: GNOMON.'
};
Note that any driver implementation would suffice as long as it fulfilled the
requirements above.
=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 AUTHOR - Bioperl Project
bioperl-l at bioperl.org
Original author Elia Stupka, elia -at- tigem.it
=head1 CONTRIBUTORS
Ewan Birney birney at ebi.ac.uk
Jason Stajich jason at bioperl.org
Chris Mungall cjm at fruitfly.bdgp.berkeley.edu
Lincoln Stein lstein at cshl.org
Heikki Lehvaslaiho, heikki at ebi.ac.uk
Hilmar Lapp, hlapp at gmx.net
Donald G. Jackson, donald.jackson at bms.com
James Wasmuth, james.wasmuth at ed.ac.uk
Brian Osborne, bosborne at alum.mit.edu
=head1 APPENDIX
The rest of the documentation details each of the object
methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _
=cut
# POD is at the end of the module
# Let the code begin...
package
Bio::SeqIO::gbdriver;
use
strict;
use
warnings;
use
Data::Dumper;
use
Bio::Seq::SeqFactory;
# map all annotation keys to consistent INSDC-based tags for all handlers
my
%FTQUAL_NO_QUOTE
=
map
{
$_
=> 1}
qw(
anticodon citation
codon codon_start
cons_splice direction
evidence label
mod_base number
rpt_type rpt_unit
transl_except transl_table
usedin
)
;
# 1) change this to indicate what should be secondary, not primary, which allows
# unknown or new stuff to be passed to handler automatically; current behavior
# appends unknowns to previous data, which isn't good since it's subtly passing
# by important data
# 2) add mapping details about how to separate data using specific delimiters
# Features are the only ones postprocessed for now
# Uncomment relevant code in next_seq and add keys as needed...
my
%POSTPROCESS_DATA
=
map
{
$_
=> 1}
qw (FEATURES);
sub
_initialize {
my
(
$self
,
@args
) =
@_
;
$self
->SUPER::_initialize(
@args
);
my
$handler
=
$self
->_rearrange([
qw(HANDLER)
],
@args
);
# hash for functions for decoding keys.
$handler
?
$self
->seqhandler(
$handler
) :
$self
->seqhandler(Bio::SeqIO::Handler::GenericRichSeqHandler->new(
-format
=>
'genbank'
,
-verbose
=>
$self
->verbose,
-builder
=>
$self
->sequence_builder
));
if
( !
defined
$self
->sequence_factory ) {
$self
->sequence_factory(Bio::Seq::SeqFactory->new
(
-verbose
=>
$self
->verbose(),
-type
=>
'Bio::Seq::RichSeq'
));
}
}
=head2 next_seq
Title : next_seq
Usage : $seq = $stream->next_seq()
Function: returns the next sequence in the stream
Returns : Bio::Seq object
Args :
=cut
# at this point there is minimal sequence validation,
# but the parser seems to hold up nicely so far...
sub
next_seq {
my
$self
=
shift
;
local
($/) =
"\n"
;
my
(
$ann
,
$data
,
$annkey
);
my
$endrec
=
my
$seenfeat
= 0;
my
$seqdata
;
my
$seenlocus
;
my
$hobj
=
$self
->seqhandler;
my
$handlers
=
$self
->seqhandler->handler_methods;
#$self->debug(Dumper($handlers));
PARSER:
while
(
defined
(
my
$line
=
$self
->_readline)) {
next
if
$line
=~ m{^\s*$};
# have to catch this at the top of the loop, then exit SEQ loop on //
# The reason? The regex match for ann/feat keys also matches some lines
# in the sequence; no easy way around it since some feature keys may
# start with a number as well
if
(
$ann
&&
$ann
eq
'ORIGIN'
) {
SEQ:
while
(
defined
(
$line
)) {
last
SEQ
if
index
(
$line
,
'//'
) == 0;
$seqdata
->{DATA} .=
uc
$line
;
$line
=
$self
->_readline;
}
$seqdata
->{DATA} =~
tr
{0-9 \n}{}d;
}
$endrec
= 1
if
(
index
(
$line
,
'//'
)==0);
if
(
$line
=~ m{^(\s{0,5})(\w+)\s+(.*)$}ox ||
$endrec
) {
(
$ann
,
$data
) = ($2, $3);
unless
(
$seenlocus
) {
$self
->throw(
"No LOCUS found. Not GenBank in my book!"
)
if
(
$ann
ne
'LOCUS'
);
$seenlocus
= 1;
}
# use the spacer to determine the annotation type
my
$len
=
length
($1 ||
''
);
$annkey
= (
$len
== 0 ||
$len
> 4) ?
'DATA'
:
$ann
;
# Push off the previously cached data to the handler
# whenever a new primary annotation or seqfeature is found
# Note use of $endrec for catching end of record
if
((
$annkey
eq
'DATA'
) &&
$seqdata
) {
chomp
$seqdata
->{DATA};
# postprocessing for some data
if
(
$seqdata
->{NAME} eq
'FEATURES'
) {
$self
->_process_features(
$seqdata
)
}
# using handlers directly, slightly faster
#my $method = (exists $handlers->{ $seqdata->{NAME} }) ?
# ($handlers->{$seqdata->{NAME}}) :
# (exists $handlers->{'_DEFAULT_'}) ?
# ($handlers->{'_DEFAULT_'}) :
# undef;
#($method) ? ($hobj->$method($seqdata) ) :
# $self->debug("No handler defined for ",$seqdata->{NAME},"\n");
# using handler methods in the Handler object, more centralized
#$self->debug(Dumper($seqdata));
$hobj
->data_handler(
$seqdata
);
# bail here on //
last
PARSER
if
$endrec
;
# reset for next round
$seqdata
=
undef
;
}
$seqdata
->{NAME} = (
$len
== 0) ?
$ann
:
# primary ann
(
$len
> 4 ) ?
'FEATURES'
:
# sf feature key
$seqdata
->{NAME};
# all rest are sec. ann
if
(
$seqdata
->{NAME} eq
'FEATURES'
) {
$seqdata
->{FEATURE_KEY} =
$ann
;
}
# throw back to top if seq is found to avoid regex
next
PARSER
if
$ann
eq
'ORIGIN'
;
}
else
{
(
$data
=
$line
) =~ s{^\s+}{};
chomp
$data
;
}
my
$delim
= (
$seqdata
&&
$seqdata
->{NAME} eq
'FEATURES'
) ?
"\n"
:
' '
;
$seqdata
->{
$annkey
} .= (
$seqdata
->{
$annkey
}) ?
$delim
.
$data
:
$data
;
}
return
$hobj
->build_sequence;
}
sub
next_chunk {
my
$self
=
shift
;
local
($/) =
"\n"
;
my
(
$ann
,
$data
,
$annkey
);
my
$endrec
=
my
$seenfeat
= 0;
my
$seqdata
;
my
$seenlocus
;
my
$hobj
=
$self
->seqhandler;
PARSER:
while
(
defined
(
my
$line
=
$self
->_readline)) {
next
if
$line
=~ m{^\s*$};
# have to catch this at the top of the loop, then exit SEQ loop on //
# The reason? The regex match for ann/feat keys also matches some lines
# in the sequence; no easy way around it since some feature keys may
# start with a number as well
if
(
$ann
&&
$ann
eq
'ORIGIN'
) {
SEQ:
while
(
defined
(
$line
)) {
last
SEQ
if
index
(
$line
,
'//'
) == 0;
$seqdata
->{DATA} .=
uc
$line
;
$line
=
$self
->_readline;
}
$seqdata
->{DATA} =~
tr
{0-9 \n}{}d;
}
$endrec
= 1
if
(
index
(
$line
,
'//'
)==0);
if
(
$line
=~ m{^(\s{0,5})(\w+)\s+(.*)$}ox ||
$endrec
) {
(
$ann
,
$data
) = ($2, $3);
unless
(
$seenlocus
) {
$self
->throw(
"No LOCUS found. Not GenBank in my book!"
)
if
(
$ann
ne
'LOCUS'
);
$seenlocus
= 1;
}
# use the spacer to determine the annotation type
my
$len
=
length
($1 ||
''
);
$annkey
= (
$len
== 0 ||
$len
> 4) ?
'DATA'
:
$ann
;
# Push off the previously cached data to the handler
# whenever a new primary annotation or seqfeature is found
# Note use of $endrec for catching end of record
if
((
$annkey
eq
'DATA'
) &&
$seqdata
) {
chomp
$seqdata
->{DATA};
# postprocessing for some data
if
(
$seqdata
->{NAME} eq
'FEATURES'
) {
$self
->_process_features(
$seqdata
)
}
# using handler methods in the Handler object, more centralized
$hobj
->data_handler(
$seqdata
);
# bail here on //
last
PARSER
if
$endrec
;
# reset for next round
$seqdata
=
undef
;
}
$seqdata
->{NAME} = (
$len
== 0) ?
$ann
:
# primary ann
(
$len
> 4 ) ?
'FEATURES'
:
# sf feature key
$seqdata
->{NAME};
# all rest are sec. ann
if
(
$seqdata
->{NAME} eq
'FEATURES'
) {
$seqdata
->{FEATURE_KEY} =
$ann
;
}
# throw back to top if seq is found to avoid regex
next
PARSER
if
$ann
eq
'ORIGIN'
;
}
else
{
(
$data
=
$line
) =~ s{^\s+}{};
chomp
$data
;
}
my
$delim
= (
$seqdata
&&
$seqdata
->{NAME} eq
'FEATURES'
) ?
"\n"
:
' '
;
$seqdata
->{
$annkey
} .= (
$seqdata
->{
$annkey
}) ?
$delim
.
$data
:
$data
;
}
}
=head2 write_seq
Title : write_seq
Usage : $stream->write_seq($seq)
Function: writes the $seq object (must be seq) to the stream
Returns : 1 for success and 0 for error
Args : array of 1 to n Bio::SeqI objects
=cut
sub
write_seq {
shift
->throw(
"Use Bio::SeqIO::genbank for output"
);
# maybe make a Writer class as well????
}
=head2 seqhandler
Title : seqhandler
Usage : $stream->seqhandler($handler)
Function: Get/Set teh Bio::Seq::HandlerBaseI object
Returns : Bio::Seq::HandlerBaseI
Args : Bio::Seq::HandlerBaseI
=cut
sub
seqhandler {
my
(
$self
,
$handler
) =
@_
;
if
(
$handler
) {
$self
->throw(
"Not a Bio::HandlerBaseI"
)
unless
ref
(
$handler
) &&
$handler
->isa(
"Bio::HandlerBaseI"
);
$self
->{
'_seqhandler'
} =
$handler
;
}
return
$self
->{
'_seqhandler'
};
}
#=head2 _process_features
#
# Title : _process_features
# Usage : $self->_process_features($seqdata)
# Function: Process feature data chunk into usable bits
# Returns :
# Args : data chunk
#
#=cut
sub
_process_features {
my
(
$self
,
$seqdata
) =
@_
;
my
@ftlines
=
split
m{\n},
$seqdata
->{DATA};
delete
$seqdata
->{DATA};
# don't deal with balancing quotes for now; just get rid of them...
# Should we worry about checking whether these are balanced
# for round-tripping tests?
map
{ s{"}{}g }
@ftlines
;
# all sfs start with the location...
my
$qual
=
'LOCATION'
;
my
$ct
= 0;
for
my
$qualdata
(
@ftlines
) {
if
(
$qualdata
=~ m{^/([^=]+)=?(.+)?}) {
(
$qual
,
$qualdata
) = ($1, $2);
$qualdata
||=
''
;
# for those qualifiers that have no data, like 'pseudo'
$ct
= (
exists
$seqdata
->{
$qual
}) ?
((
ref
(
$seqdata
->{
$qual
})) ?
scalar
(@{
$seqdata
->{
$qual
} }) : 1)
: 0 ;
}
my
$delim
= (
$qual
eq
'translation'
||
exists
$FTQUAL_NO_QUOTE
{
$qual
}) ?
''
:
' '
;
# if more than one, turn into an array ref and append
if
(
$ct
== 0) {
(
exists
$seqdata
->{
$qual
}) ? (
$seqdata
->{
$qual
}.=
$delim
.
$qualdata
||
''
) :
(
$seqdata
->{
$qual
} .=
$qualdata
||
''
);
}
else
{
if
(!
ref
(
$seqdata
->{
$qual
})) {
$seqdata
->{
$qual
} = [
$seqdata
->{
$qual
}];
}
(
exists
$seqdata
->{
$qual
}->[
$ct
]) ? ((
$seqdata
->{
$qual
}->[
$ct
]) .=
$delim
.
$qualdata
) :
((
$seqdata
->{
$qual
}->[
$ct
]) .=
$qualdata
);
}
}
}
1;
__END__