Skip to main content

A simple library for executing BLAST searches with ncbi-blast+

Project description

simple_blast

This is a library that provides a very basic wrapper around ncbi-blast+. Currently, the library supports searches with blastn only, but I may expand the library to include wrappers for other BLAST executables if I need them.

Requirements

This library depends on Pandas for parsing BLAST output. The library has been tested with Pandas 1.5.3, but it likely works with other versions.

Of course, this library assumes that ncbi-blast+ is installed. The library has been tested with ncbi-blast 2.12.0+, and it likely works with newer versions of the software as well.

Basic usage

You can define a blastn search to be carried out using the BlastnSearch class. BlastnSearchobjects are constructed with two required arguments—the subject sequence and the query sequence files, in that order. For example, to set up a balstn search for sequences in seqs1.fasta against those in seqs2.fasta using output format 11 (BLAST Archive ASN.1), you could construct a BlastnSearch object like this:

from simple_blast import BlastnSearch

search = BlastnSearch("seqs2.fasta", "seqs1.fasta", 11)

The BLAST search is not carried out until you ask for the results by running the get_output() function.

results = search.get_output()

blastn can output binary data, so the get_output() function appropriately returns bytes.

Often, it's convenient to use output format 6, a tabular representation of the HSPs. For that purpose, you can use TabularBlastnSearch.

from simple_blast import TabularBlastnSearch

search = TabularBlastnSearch("seqs2.fasta", "seqs1.fasta", 11)

The hits property of the search returns a Pandas dataframe containing the HSPs identified in the BLAST search.

results = search.hits

The columns in the output may be configured by passing either the out_columns or additional_columns arguments when constructing the TabularBlastnSearch. The former argument overrides the set of output columns; the latter argument is added to the list of default output columns.

Sequences from memory

simple_blast can handle BLAST searches with sequences stored in memory (i.e., not in a file). It works with sequences stored as strings or in BioPython SeqRecord objects.

from Bio.SeqRecord import SeqRecord, Seq
from simple_blast import TabularBlastnSearch

# Define some data.
subjects = [
    SeqRecord(
	    Seq(
		"AAGGCGTACGGGCCTTTCGCTTCCGAAAACTTCCTCTTAGGTCGCTGTTACTGGATGTCGAGTCAGCACA"
		"TGGGAAACTCCACGCATCGGCGGGATTTCACAACGCCTAGAACACCGGTAATGCGAGTATCCGTATCGGT"
		"AACAAATATCTTTGGGATACTACAGGAATATCCGTAGGAGTTCGCCGCGATTAGGTGCCTCGATGATATG"
		"CAGCTGTCACTGGAGATAACACACTATGCAGCAGTAATGGATGTTATTGCTACTAAGGTTCCCTGTCACC"
	    ),
		id="My Sequence 1"
	),
    SeqRecord(
	    Seq(
		"TTCATTGGTGGGCTTTCTGGTTCACGCCCATCTCAATGTACATTTTCCGTGACGTGATGATAATCATAAC"
		"TCGTTGGTAGTAATAGGGTAAGGGAATTTGGCAGGTAGTCGGGGCAAGACTGCCGTTACAAGCTAATCAT"
		"CTGCCAACTAACTTTAGCCGTAATTGGCACTAACAGTTAACCTTCGCGCGTTTCTCAGTGTAGAGTGAGA"
		"CTATGTGATTACTTTCAGCGCCCAGCGGTGGTAGGTAGTAAAAAGTGGCCACCGAACCGAATGCT"
	    ),
		id="My Sequence 2"
	)
]
queries = [
    SeqRecord(
        Seq("TGGGAAACTCCACGCATCGGCGGGATTTCACAACGCCTAGAACACCGGTAATGCGAGTATCCGT"),
        id="Query 1"
    )
]

with TabularBlastnSearch.from_sequences(subjects, queries) as search:
    results = search.hits

or, using a list of strings:

from simple_blast import TabularBlastnSearch

# Define some data.
subjects = [
    (
        "AAGGCGTACGGGCCTTTCGCTTCCGAAAACTTCCTCTTAGGTCGCTGTTACTGGATGTCGAGTCAGCACA"
        "TGGGAAACTCCACGCATCGGCGGGATTTCACAACGCCTAGAACACCGGTAATGCGAGTATCCGTATCGGT"
        "AACAAATATCTTTGGGATACTACAGGAATATCCGTAGGAGTTCGCCGCGATTAGGTGCCTCGATGATATG"
        "CAGCTGTCACTGGAGATAACACACTATGCAGCAGTAATGGATGTTATTGCTACTAAGGTTCCCTGTCACC"
    ),
    (
        "TTCATTGGTGGGCTTTCTGGTTCACGCCCATCTCAATGTACATTTTCCGTGACGTGATGATAATCATAAC"
        "TCGTTGGTAGTAATAGGGTAAGGGAATTTGGCAGGTAGTCGGGGCAAGACTGCCGTTACAAGCTAATCAT"
        "CTGCCAACTAACTTTAGCCGTAATTGGCACTAACAGTTAACCTTCGCGCGTTTCTCAGTGTAGAGTGAGA"
        "CTATGTGATTACTTTCAGCGCCCAGCGGTGGTAGGTAGTAAAAAGTGGCCACCGAACCGAATGCT"
    )
]
queries = ["TGGGAAACTCCACGCATCGGCGGGATTTCACAACGCCTAGAACACCGGTAATGCGAGTATCCGT"]

with TabularBlastnSearch.from_sequences(subjects, queries) as search:
    results = search.hits

When using a list of strings, sequences are automatically named seq_i, where i is the position of the sequence in the list.

You can use SeqRecords together with lists of strings, and you can also use in-memory sequences together with files by providing the subject or query keyword arguments to from_sequences.

BlastnSearch.from_sequences(["CATGAACTA"], query="seqs1.fasta")

Since using a context manager is slightly cumbersome, you can also use the blastn_from_sequences convenience function to get the hits for a search.

from simple_blast import blastn_from_sequences

# Define some data.
subjects = [
    (
        "AAGGCGTACGGGCCTTTCGCTTCCGAAAACTTCCTCTTAGGTCGCTGTTACTGGATGTCGAGTCAGCACA"
        "TGGGAAACTCCACGCATCGGCGGGATTTCACAACGCCTAGAACACCGGTAATGCGAGTATCCGTATCGGT"
        "AACAAATATCTTTGGGATACTACAGGAATATCCGTAGGAGTTCGCCGCGATTAGGTGCCTCGATGATATG"
        "CAGCTGTCACTGGAGATAACACACTATGCAGCAGTAATGGATGTTATTGCTACTAAGGTTCCCTGTCACC"
    ),
    (
        "TTCATTGGTGGGCTTTCTGGTTCACGCCCATCTCAATGTACATTTTCCGTGACGTGATGATAATCATAAC"
        "TCGTTGGTAGTAATAGGGTAAGGGAATTTGGCAGGTAGTCGGGGCAAGACTGCCGTTACAAGCTAATCAT"
        "CTGCCAACTAACTTTAGCCGTAATTGGCACTAACAGTTAACCTTCGCGCGTTTCTCAGTGTAGAGTGAGA"
        "CTATGTGATTACTTTCAGCGCCCAGCGGTGGTAGGTAGTAAAAAGTGGCCACCGAACCGAATGCT"
    )
]
queries = ["TGGGAAACTCCACGCATCGGCGGGATTTCACAACGCCTAGAACACCGGTAATGCGAGTATCCGT"]

results = blastn_from_sequences(subjects, queries)

Note: Searching from in-memory sequences is implemented using Unix FIFOs, so this feature currently will not work on Windows.

DB caches

When the same sequence file is used as a subject in multiple searches, it can be efficient to build a BLAST database up front. The BlastDBCache class can be used to handle this mostly automatically. To make a BlastDBCache, you need to specify the location of the on the file system.

from simple_blast import BlastDBCache

cache = BlastDBCache("cache_dir")

To add a file to the cache, use the makedb method.

cache.makedb("seqs2.fasta")

When constructing a BlastnSearch object, give it the BlastDBCache as the db_cache parameter to make the BlastnSearch object use the cache for searches.

search = BlastnSearch("seqs2.fasta", "seqs1.fasta", db_cache=cache)

Now search will use the database we created for seqs2.fasta.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

simple_blast-0.4.0.tar.gz (59.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

simple_blast-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl (12.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file simple_blast-0.4.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: simple_blast-0.4.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 59.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.0.1 CPython/3.12.8

File hashes

Hashes for simple_blast-0.4.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 2443da2644e643f7d1fd41ec4329fea6ee4e9e87e1caea5f88fcee88249dac32
MD5 269a6732991f3f9d4864ad7711f91419
BLAKE2b-256 3f551cbcb6d9136b6f8226ace41a8d4787e8d78cbdfca6a322e39d33c1a01001

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for simple_blast-0.4.0.tar.gz:

Publisher: package.yml on actapia/simple_blast

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file simple_blast-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: simple_blast-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 12.1 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.0.1 CPython/3.12.8

File hashes

Hashes for simple_blast-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ad56adee7b6a3f29292e99d040e50d332a5551d0da1069a65889f83438288e56
MD5 77f7c303cab447bf460f7d3111ac5ec3
BLAKE2b-256 26625f18277c67ab9375473770317ccaaeeef099a4342650c9812f247cba1a8e

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for simple_blast-0.4.0-py3-none-any.whl:

Publisher: package.yml on actapia/simple_blast

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page