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Bio::Tools::Run::AlignUser:Contributed)Bio::Tools::Run::Alignment::Clustalw(3)

NAME
       Bio::Tools::Run::Alignment::Clustalw - Object for the calculation of a
       multiple sequence alignment from a set of unaligned sequences or
       alignments using the Clustalw program

SYNOPSIS
	 #  Build a clustalw alignment factory
	 @params = ('ktuple' => 2, 'matrix' => 'BLOSUM');
	 $factory = Bio::Tools::Run::Alignment::Clustalw->new(@params);

	 #  Pass the factory a list of sequences to be aligned.
	 $inputfilename = 't/data/cysprot.fa';
	 $aln = $factory->align($inputfilename); # $aln is a SimpleAlign object.
	 # or
	 $seq_array_ref = \@seq_array;
	 # where @seq_array is an array of Bio::Seq objects
	 $aln = $factory->align($seq_array_ref);

	 # Or one can pass the factory a pair of (sub)alignments
	 #to be aligned against each other, e.g.:
	 $aln = $factory->profile_align($aln1,$aln2);
	 # where $aln1 and $aln2 are Bio::SimpleAlign objects.

	 # Or one can pass the factory an alignment and one or more unaligned
	 # sequences to be added to the alignment. For example:
	 $aln = $factory->profile_align($aln1,$seq); # $seq is a Bio::Seq object.

	 # Get a tree of the sequences
	 $tree = $factory->tree(\@seq_array);

	 # Get both an alignment and a tree
	 ($aln, $tree) = $factory->run(\@seq_array);

	 # Do a footprinting analysis on the supplied sequences, getting back the
	 # most conserved sub-alignments
	 my @results = $factory->footprint(\@seq_array);
	 foreach my $result (@results) {
	   print $result->consensus_string, "\n";
	 }

	 # There are various additional options and input formats available.
	 # See the DESCRIPTION section that follows for additional details.

DESCRIPTION
       Note: this DESCRIPTION only documents the Bioperl interface to
       Clustalw.  Clustalw, itself, is a large & complex program - for more
       information regarding clustalw, please see the clustalw documentation
       which accompanies the clustalw distribution. Clustalw is available from
       (among others) ftp://ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/software/. Clustalw.pm has only
       been tested using version 1.8 of clustalw.  Compatibility with earlier
       versions of the clustalw program is currently unknown. Before running
       Clustalw successfully it will be necessary: to install clustalw on your
       system, and to ensure that users have execute privileges for the
       clustalw program.

   Helping the module find your executable
       You will need to enable Clustalw to find the clustalw program. This can
       be done in (at least) three ways:

	1. Make sure the clustalw executable is in your path so that
	   which clustalw
	   returns a clustalw executable on your system.

	2. Define an environmental variable CLUSTALDIR which is a
	   directory which contains the 'clustalw' application:
	   In bash:

	   export CLUSTALDIR=/home/username/clustalw1.8

	   In csh/tcsh:

	   setenv CLUSTALDIR /home/username/clustalw1.8

	3. Include a definition of an environmental variable CLUSTALDIR in
	   every script that will use this Clustalw wrapper module, e.g.:

	   BEGIN { $ENV{CLUSTALDIR} = '/home/username/clustalw1.8/' }
	   use Bio::Tools::Run::Alignment::Clustalw;

       If you are running an application on a webserver make sure the
       webserver environment has the proper PATH set or use the options 2 or 3
       to set the variables.

   How it works
       Bio::Tools::Run::Alignment::Clustalw is an object for performing a
       multiple sequence alignment from a set of unaligned sequences and/or
       sub-alignments by means of the clustalw program.

       Initially, a clustalw "factory object" is created. Optionally, the
       factory may be passed most of the parameters or switches of the
       clustalw program, e.g.:

	       @params = ('ktuple' => 2, 'matrix' => 'BLOSUM');
	       $factory = Bio::Tools::Run::Alignment::Clustalw->new(@params);

       Any parameters not explicitly set will remain as the defaults of the
       clustalw program.  Additional parameters and switches (not available in
       clustalw) may also be set.  Currently, the only such parameter is
       "quiet", which when set to a non-zero value, suppresses clustalw
       terminal output. Not all clustalw parameters are supported at this
       stage.

       By default, Clustalw output is returned solely in a the form of a
       Bio::SimpleAlign object which can then be printed and/or saved in
       multiple formats using the AlignIO.pm module. Optionally the raw
       clustalw output file can be saved if the calling script specifies an
       output file (with the clustalw parameter OUTFILE).  Currently only the
       GCG-MSF output file formats is supported.

       Not all parameters and features have been implemented yet in Perl
       format.

       Alignment parameters can be changed and/or examined at any time after
       the factory has been created.  The program checks that any
       parameter/switch being set/read is valid.  However, currently no
       additional checks are included to check that parameters are of the
       proper type (eg string or numeric) or that their values are within the
       proper range.  As an example, to change the value of the clustalw
       parameter ktuple to 3 and subsequently to check its value one would
       write:

	       $ktuple = 3;
	       $factory->ktuple($ktuple);
	       $get_ktuple = $factory->ktuple();

       Once the factory has been created and the appropriate parameters set,
       one can call the method align() to align a set of unaligned sequences,
       or call profile_align() to add one or more sequences or a second
       alignment to an initial alignment.

       Input to align() may consist of a set of unaligned sequences in the
       form of the name of file containing the sequences. For example,

	 $inputfilename = 't/data/cysprot.fa';
	 $aln = $factory-E<gt>align($inputfilename);

       Alternately one can create an array of Bio::Seq objects somehow

	       $str = Bio::SeqIO->new(-file=> 't/data/cysprot.fa', -format => 'Fasta');
	       @seq_array =();
	       while ( my $seq = $str->next_seq() ) {push (@seq_array, $seq) ;}

       and pass the factory a reference to that array

	       $seq_array_ref = \@seq_array;
	       $aln = $factory->align($seq_array_ref);

       In either case, align() returns a reference to a SimpleAlign object
       which can then used (see Bio::SimpleAlign).

       Once an initial alignment exists, one can pass the factory additional
       sequence(s) to be added (ie aligned) to the original alignment.	The
       alignment can be passed as either an alignment file or a
       Bio:SimpleAlign object.	The unaligned sequence(s) can be passed as a
       filename or as an array of BioPerl sequence objects or as a single
       BioPerl Seq object.  For example (to add a single sequence to an
       alignment),

	       $str = Bio::AlignIO->new(-file=> 't/data/cysprot1a.msf');
	       $aln = $str->next_aln();
	       $str1 = Bio::SeqIO->new(-file=> 't/data/cysprot1b.fa');
	       $seq = $str1->next_seq();
	       $aln = $factory->profile_align($aln,$seq);

       In either case, profile_align() returns a reference to a SimpleAlign
       object containing a new SimpleAlign object of the alignment with the
       additional sequence(s) added in.

       Finally one can pass the factory a pair of (sub)alignments to be
       aligned against each other.  The alignments can be passed in the form
       of either a pair of alignment files or a pair of Bio:SimpleAlign
       objects. For example,

	       $profile1 = 't/data/cysprot1a.msf';
	       $profile2 = 't/data/cysprot1b.msf';
	       $aln = $factory->profile_align($profile1,$profile2);

       or

	       $str1 = Bio::AlignIO->new(-file=> 't/data/cysprot1a.msf');
	       $aln1 = $str1->next_aln();
	       $str2 = Bio::AlignIO->new(-file=> 't/data/cysprot1b.msf');
	       $aln2 = $str2->next_aln();
	       $aln = $factory->profile_align($aln1,$aln2);

       In either case, profile_align() returns a reference to a SimpleAlign
       object containing an (super)alignment of the two input alignments.

       For more examples of syntax and use of Clustalw, the user is encouraged
       to look at the script Clustalw.t in the t/ directory.

       Note: Clustalw is still under development. Various features of the
       clustalw program have not yet been implemented.	If you would like that
       a specific clustalw feature be added to this perl contact
       bioperl-l@bioperl.org.

       These can be specified as paramters when instantiating a new Clustalw
       object, or through get/set methods of the same name (lowercase).

PARAMETER FOR ALIGNMENT COMPUTATION
   KTUPLE
	Title	    : KTUPLE
	Description : (optional) set the word size to be used in the alignment
		      This is the size of exactly matching fragment that is used.
		      INCREASE for speed (max= 2 for proteins; 4 for DNA),
		      DECREASE for sensitivity.
		      For longer sequences (e.g. >1000 residues) you may
		      need to increase the default

   TOPDIAGS
	Title	    : TOPDIAGS
	Description : (optional) number of best diagonals to use
		      The number of k-tuple matches on each diagonal
		      (in an imaginary dot-matrix plot) is calculated.
		      Only the best ones (with most matches) are used in
		      the alignment.  This parameter specifies how many.
		      Decrease for speed; increase for sensitivity.

   WINDOW
	Title	    : WINDOW
	Description : (optional) window size
		      This is the number of diagonals around each of the 'best'
		      diagonals that will be used.  Decrease for speed;
		      increase for sensitivity.

   PAIRGAP
	Title	    : PAIRGAP
	Description : (optional) gap penalty for pairwise alignments
		      This is a penalty for each gap in the fast alignments.
		      It has little affect on the speed or sensitivity except
		      for extreme values.

   FIXEDGAP
	Title	    : FIXEDGAP
	Description : (optional) fixed length gap penalty

   FLOATGAP
	Title	    : FLOATGAP
	Description : (optional) variable length gap penalty

   MATRIX
	Title	    : MATRIX
	Default	    : PAM100 for DNA - PAM250 for protein alignment
	Description : (optional) substitution matrix used in the multiple
		      alignments. Depends on the version of clustalw as to
		      what default matrix will be used

		      PROTEIN WEIGHT MATRIX leads to a new menu where you are
		      offered a choice of weight matrices. The default for
		      proteins in version 1.8 is the PAM series derived by
		      Gonnet and colleagues. Note, a series is used! The
		      actual matrix that is used depends on how similar the
		      sequences to be aligned at this alignment step
		      are. Different matrices work differently at each
		      evolutionary distance.

		      DNA WEIGHT MATRIX leads to a new menu where a single
		      matrix (not a series) can be selected. The default is
		      the matrix used by BESTFIT for comparison of nucleic
		      acid sequences.

   TYPE
	Title	    : TYPE
	Description : (optional) sequence type: protein or DNA. This allows
			   you to explicitly overide the programs attempt at
			   guessing the type of the sequence.  It is only useful
			   if you are using sequences with a VERY strange
			   composition.

   OUTPUT
	Title	    : OUTPUT
	Description : (optional) clustalw supports GCG or PHYLIP or PIR or
		       Clustal format.	See the Bio::AlignIO modules for
		       which formats are supported by bioperl.

   OUTFILE
	Title	    : OUTFILE
	Description : (optional) Name of clustalw output file. If not set
			   module will erase output file.  In any case alignment will
			   be returned in the form of SimpleAlign objects

   TRANSMIT
	Title	    : TRANSMIT
	Description : (optional) transitions not weighted.  The default is to
			   weight transitions as more favourable than other
			   mismatches in DNA alignments.  This switch makes all
			   nucleotide mismatches equally weighted.

FEEDBACK
   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

   Support
       Please direct usage questions or support issues to the mailing list:

       bioperl-l@bioperl.org

       rather than to the module maintainer directly. Many experienced and
       reponsive experts will be able look at the problem and quickly address
       it. Please include a thorough description of the problem with code and
       data examples if at all possible.

   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:

	 http://bugzilla.open-bio.org/

AUTHOR -  Peter Schattner
       Email schattner@alum.mit.edu

CONTRIBUTORS
       Jason Stajich jason-AT-bioperl_DOT_org Sendu Bala    bix@sendu.me.uk

APPENDIX
       The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods.
       Internal methods are usually preceded with a _

   program_name
	Title	: program_name
	Usage	: $factory>program_name()
	Function: holds the program name
	Returns:  string
	Args	: None

   program_dir
	Title	: program_dir
	Usage	: $factory->program_dir(@params)
	Function: returns the program directory, obtained from ENV variable.
	Returns:  string
	Args	:

   version
	Title	: version
	Usage	: exit if $prog->version() < 1.8
	Function: Determine the version number of the program
	Example :
	Returns : float or undef
	Args	: none

   run
	Title	: run
	Usage	: ($aln, $tree) = $factory->run($inputfilename);
		  ($aln, $tree) = $factory->run($seq_array_ref);
	Function: Perform a multiple sequence alignment, generating a tree at the same
		  time. (Like align() and tree() combined.)
	Returns : A SimpleAlign object containing the sequence alignment and a
		  Bio::Tree::Tree object with the tree relating the sequences.
	Args	: Name of a file containing a set of unaligned fasta sequences
		  or else an array of references to Bio::Seq objects.

   align
	Title	: align
	Usage	: $inputfilename = 't/data/cysprot.fa';
		  $aln = $factory->align($inputfilename);
		  or
		  $seq_array_ref = \@seq_array; # @seq_array is array of Seq objs
		  $aln = $factory->align($seq_array_ref);
	Function: Perform a multiple sequence alignment
	Returns : Reference to a SimpleAlign object containing the
		  sequence alignment.
	Args	: Name of a file containing a set of unaligned fasta sequences
		  or else an array of references to Bio::Seq objects.

	Throws an exception if argument is not either a string (eg a
	filename) or a reference to an array of Bio::Seq objects.  If
	argument is string, throws exception if file corresponding to string
	name can not be found. If argument is Bio::Seq array, throws
	exception if less than two sequence objects are in array.

   profile_align
	Title	: profile_align
	Usage	: $aln = $factory->profile_align(@simple_aligns);
		  or
		  $aln = $factory->profile_align(@subalignment_filenames);
	Function: Perform an alignment of 2 (sub)alignments
	Returns : Reference to a SimpleAlign object containing the (super)alignment.
	Args	: Names of 2 files containing the subalignments
		  or references to 2 Bio::SimpleAlign objects.

       Throws an exception if arguments are not either strings (eg filenames)
       or references to SimpleAlign objects.

   add_sequences
	Title	: add_sequences
	Usage	:
	Function: Align and add sequences into an alignment
	Example :
	Returns : Reference to a SimpleAlign object containing the (super)alignment.
	Args	: Names of 2 files, the first one containing an alignment and the second one containing sequences to be added
		or references to 2 Bio::SimpleAlign objects.

       Throws an exception if arguments are not either strings (eg filenames)
       or references to SimpleAlign objects.

   tree
	Title	: tree
	Usage	: @params = ('bootstrap' => 1000,
				   'tossgaps'  => 1,
				   'kimura'    => 1,
				   'seed'      => 121,
				   'bootlabels'=> 'nodes',
				   'quiet'     => 1);
		  $factory = Bio::Tools::Run::Alignment::Clustalw->new(@params);
		  $tree_obj = $factory->tree($aln_obj);
		  or
		  $tree_obj = $factory->tree($treefilename);
	Function: Retrieve a tree corresponding to the input
	Returns : Bio::TreeIO object
	Args	: Bio::SimpleAlign or filename of a tree

   footprint
	Title	: footprint
	Usage	: @alns = $factory->footprint($treefilename, $window_size, $diff);
		  @alns = $factory->footprint($seqs_array_ref);
	Function: Aligns all the supplied sequences and slices out of the alignment
		  those regions along a sliding window who's tree length differs
		  significantly from the total average tree length.
	Returns : list of Bio::SimpleAlign objects
	Args	: first argument as per run(), optional second argument to specify
		  the size of the sliding window (default 5 bp) and optional third
		  argument to specify the % difference from the total tree length
		  needed for a window to be considered a footprint (default 33%).

   _run
	Title	: _run
	Usage	: Internal function, not to be called directly
	Function: makes actual system call to clustalw program
	Returns : nothing; clustalw output is written to a
		  temporary file
	Args	: Name of a file containing a set of unaligned fasta sequences
		  and hash of parameters to be passed to clustalw

   _setinput()
	Title	: _setinput
	Usage	: Internal function, not to be called directly
	Function: Create input file for clustalw program
	Returns : name of file containing clustalw data input
	Args	: Seq or Align object reference or input file name

   _setparams()
	Title	: _setparams
	Usage	: Internal function, not to be called directly
	Function: Create parameter inputs for clustalw program
	Returns : parameter string to be passed to clustalw
		  during align or profile_align
	Args	: name of calling object

perl v5.14.1			  2011-Bio::Tools::Run::Alignment::Clustalw(3)
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