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maskseq
Wiki
The master copies of EMBOSS documentation are available at
http://emboss.open-bio.org/wiki/Appdocs on the EMBOSS Wiki.
Please help by correcting and extending the Wiki pages.
Function
Write a sequence with masked regions
Description
maskseq reads a sequence and writes a masked version of it to file. The
sequence is masked in a specified set of regions such that characters
in that region are (optionally) converted to lower case and / or
(optionally) replaced with the specified mask character.
Usage
Here is a sample session with maskseq
Mask off bases 10 to 12 from a sequence 'prot.fasta' and write to the
new sequence file 'prot2.seq':
% maskseq prot.fasta prot2.seq -reg=10-12
Write a sequence with masked regions
Go to the input files for this example
Go to the output files for this example
Example 2
Mask off bases 20 to 30 from a sequence 'prot.fasta' using the
character 'x' and write to the new sequence file 'prot2.seq':
% maskseq prot.fasta prot2.seq -reg=20-30 -mask=x
Write a sequence with masked regions
Go to the output files for this example
Example 3
Mask off the regions 20 to 23, 34 to 45 and 88 to 90 in 'prot.fasta':
% maskseq prot.fasta prot2.seq -reg=20-23,34-45,88-90
Write a sequence with masked regions
Go to the output files for this example
Example 4
Change to lower-case the regions 20 to 23, 34 to 45 and 88 to 90 in
'prot.fasta':
% maskseq prot.fasta prot2.seq -reg=20-23,34-45,88-90 -tolower
Write a sequence with masked regions
Go to the output files for this example
Command line arguments
Write a sequence with masked regions
Version: EMBOSS:6.6.0.0
Standard (Mandatory) qualifiers:
[-sequence] sequence Sequence filename and optional format, or
reference (input USA)
-regions range [None] Regions to mask.
A set of regions is specified by a set of
pairs of positions.
The positions are integers.
They are separated by any non-digit,
non-alpha character.
Examples of region specifications are:
24-45, 56-78
1:45, 67=99;765..888
1,5,8,10,23,45,57,99
[-outseq] seqout [.] Sequence filename and
optional format (output USA)
Additional (Optional) qualifiers (* if not always prompted):
-tolower toggle [N] The region can be 'masked' by converting
the sequence characters to lower-case, some
non-EMBOSS programs e.g. fasta can
interpret this as a masked region. The
sequence is unchanged apart from the case
change. You might like to ensure that the
whole sequence is in upper-case before
masking the specified regions to lower-case
by using the '-supper' flag.
* -maskchar string ['X' for protein, 'N' for nucleic] Character
to use when masking.
Default is 'X' for protein sequences, 'N'
for nucleic sequences.
If the mask character is set to be the SPACE
character or a null character, then the
sequence is 'masked' by changing it to
lower-case, just as with the '-lowercase'
flag. (Any string from 1 to 1 characters)
Advanced (Unprompted) qualifiers: (none)
Associated qualifiers:
"-sequence" associated qualifiers
-sbegin1 integer Start of the sequence to be used
-send1 integer End of the sequence to be used
-sreverse1 boolean Reverse (if DNA)
-sask1 boolean Ask for begin/end/reverse
-snucleotide1 boolean Sequence is nucleotide
-sprotein1 boolean Sequence is protein
-slower1 boolean Make lower case
-supper1 boolean Make upper case
-scircular1 boolean Sequence is circular
-squick1 boolean Read id and sequence only
-sformat1 string Input sequence format
-iquery1 string Input query fields or ID list
-ioffset1 integer Input start position offset
-sdbname1 string Database name
-sid1 string Entryname
-ufo1 string UFO features
-fformat1 string Features format
-fopenfile1 string Features file name
"-outseq" associated qualifiers
-osformat2 string Output seq format
-osextension2 string File name extension
-osname2 string Base file name
-osdirectory2 string Output directory
-osdbname2 string Database name to add
-ossingle2 boolean Separate file for each entry
-oufo2 string UFO features
-offormat2 string Features format
-ofname2 string Features file name
-ofdirectory2 string Output directory
General qualifiers:
-auto boolean Turn off prompts
-stdout boolean Write first file to standard output
-filter boolean Read first file from standard input, write
first file to standard output
-options boolean Prompt for standard and additional values
-debug boolean Write debug output to program.dbg
-verbose boolean Report some/full command line options
-help boolean Report command line options and exit. More
information on associated and general
qualifiers can be found with -help -verbose
-warning boolean Report warnings
-error boolean Report errors
-fatal boolean Report fatal errors
-die boolean Report dying program messages
-version boolean Report version number and exit
Input file format
maskseq reads in a single nucleotide or protein sequence.
Input files for usage example
File: prot.fasta
>FASTA F00001 FASTA FORMAT PROTEIN SEQUENCE
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
You can specify a file of ranges to mask out by giving the '-regions'
qualifier the value '@' followed by the name of the file containing the
ranges. (eg: '-regions @myfile').
The format of the range file is:
* Comment lines start with '#' in the first column.
* Comment lines and blank lines are ignored.
* The line may start with white-space.
* There are two positive (integer) numbers per line separated by one
or more space or TAB characters.
* The second number must be greater or equal to the first number.
* There can be optional text after the two numbers to annotate the
line.
* White-space before or after the text is removed.
An example range file is:
__________________________________________________________________
# this is my set of ranges
12 23
4 5 this is like 12-23, but smaller
67 10348 interesting region
__________________________________________________________________
Output file format
The output is a standard EMBOSS sequence file.
The results can be output in one of several styles by using the
command-line qualifier -osformat xxx, where 'xxx' is replaced by the
name of the required format. The available format names are: embl,
genbank, gff, pir, swiss, dasgff, debug, listfile, dbmotif, diffseq,
excel, feattable, motif, nametable, regions, seqtable, simple, srs,
table, tagseq.
See: http://emboss.sf.net/docs/themes/SequenceFormats.html for further
information on sequence formats.
The sequence file has the selected range masked with the specified
character.
Output files for usage example
File: prot2.seq
>FASTA F00001 FASTA FORMAT PROTEIN SEQUENCE
ACDEFGHIKXXXPQRSTVWYACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWYACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWYACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
Output files for usage example 2
File: prot2.seq
>FASTA F00001 FASTA FORMAT PROTEIN SEQUENCE
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWxxxxxxxxxxxMNPQRSTVWYACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWYACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
Output files for usage example 3
File: prot2.seq
>FASTA F00001 FASTA FORMAT PROTEIN SEQUENCE
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWXXXXEFGHIKLMNPXXXXXXXXXXXXGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWYACDEFGHXXXMNPQRSTVWY
Output files for usage example 4
File: prot2.seq
>FASTA F00001 FASTA FORMAT PROTEIN SEQUENCE
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWyacdEFGHIKLMNPqrstvwyacdefGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY
ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWYACDEFGHiklMNPQRSTVWY
Data files
None.
Notes
It is common for database searches to mask out low-complexity or biased
composition regions of a sequence so that spurious matches do not
occur. It is possible that you have a program that has reported such
biased regions but which has not masked the sequence itself. In that
case, you can use this program to do the masking.
There are other uses for it. For example, some non-EMBOSS programs (for
example FASTA) are capable of treating lower-case regions as if they
are masked. maskseq can mask a region to lower-case instead of
replacing the sequence with N's or X's if you use the qualifier
-tolower or use a space character as the masking character.
References
None.
Warnings
You can mask out a complete sequence.
Diagnostic Error Messages
Several warning messages about malformed region specifications:
* Non-digit found in region ...
* Unpaired start of a region found in ...
* Non-digit found in region ...
* The start of a pair of region positions must be smaller than the
end in ...
Exit status
It exits with status 0, unless a region is badly constructed.
Known bugs
None.
See also
Program name Description
aligncopy Read and write alignments
aligncopypair Read and write pairs from alignments
biosed Replace or delete sequence sections
codcopy Copy and reformat a codon usage table
cutseq Remove a section from a sequence
degapseq Remove non-alphabetic (e.g. gap) characters from sequences
descseq Alter the name or description of a sequence
entret Retrieve sequence entries from flatfile databases and files
extractalign Extract regions from a sequence alignment
extractfeat Extract features from sequence(s)
extractseq Extract regions from a sequence
featcopy Read and write a feature table
featmerge Merge two overlapping feature tables
featreport Read and write a feature table
feattext Return a feature table original text
listor Write a list file of the logical OR of two sets of sequences
makenucseq Create random nucleotide sequences
makeprotseq Create random protein sequences
maskambignuc Mask all ambiguity characters in nucleotide sequences with
N
maskambigprot Mask all ambiguity characters in protein sequences with X
maskfeat Write a sequence with masked features
newseq Create a sequence file from a typed-in sequence
nohtml Remove mark-up (e.g. HTML tags) from an ASCII text file
noreturn Remove carriage return from ASCII files
nospace Remove whitespace from an ASCII text file
notab Replace tabs with spaces in an ASCII text file
notseq Write to file a subset of an input stream of sequences
nthseq Write to file a single sequence from an input stream of
sequences
nthseqset Read and write (return) one set of sequences from many
pasteseq Insert one sequence into another
revseq Reverse and complement a nucleotide sequence
seqcount Read and count sequences
seqret Read and write (return) sequences
seqretsetall Read and write (return) many sets of sequences
seqretsplit Read sequences and write them to individual files
sizeseq Sort sequences by size
skipredundant Remove redundant sequences from an input set
skipseq Read and write (return) sequences, skipping first few
splitsource Split sequence(s) into original source sequences
splitter Split sequence(s) into smaller sequences
trimest Remove poly-A tails from nucleotide sequences
trimseq Remove unwanted characters from start and end of sequence(s)
trimspace Remove extra whitespace from an ASCII text file
union Concatenate multiple sequences into a single sequence
vectorstrip Remove vectors from the ends of nucleotide sequence(s)
yank Add a sequence reference (a full USA) to a list file
Author(s)
Gary Williams formerly at:
MRC Rosalind Franklin Centre for Genomics Research Wellcome Trust
Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge, CB10 1SB, UK
Please report all bugs to the EMBOSS bug team
(emboss-bug (c) emboss.open-bio.org) not to the original author.
History
Completed 3 March 1999
Target users
This program is intended to be used by everyone and everything, from
naive users to embedded scripts.
Comments
None
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