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  • 454 contings blastn no hits found!!!

    Hi everyone,
    I'm fresh in the forum and a newbie in bioinformatics.
    I'm trying to blast some contigs to use the output in MEGAN. I installed the Blast+ suite (on a mac computer) and I downloaded the nr database in fasta format from NCBI ftp.
    I then formatted the database using:
    Code:
    makeblastdb -in nr -dbtype nucl -out nr.db
    the output looks ok to me:
    Code:
    Building a new DB, current time: 10/18/2012 19:12:48
    New DB name:   nr.db
    New DB title:  nr
    Sequence type: Nucleotide
    Keep Linkouts: T
    Keep MBits: T
    Maximum file size: 1000000000B
    Adding sequences from FASTA; added 21062489 sequences in 1624.48 seconds.
    Now i'm tring to run the blastn against my local database but I get *****no hits found**** for all my contigs. I've tried to blast few of them in the blast website and they get many good hits.
    What am I doing wrong??

    These are few contigs from my .fasta file:
    Code:
    >Assembly_Contig_1 
    GGGCGGTCGCCTCCGTAAAAAGTAACGGGAGGACGTTACAAAGTTCGGBTCAGGTGGGTTGGAAWHCCACCGTAGAGTATAATGGCATAAGCCGGACTGACTGTGAGACATACAAGTCGAGCAGAGTCGAAAGACGGTCATAGTGATCCGGTGGTTCTGTGTGGAAGGGCCATCGCTCAAAGGATAAAAGGTACGCCGGGGATAACAGGCTGATCTCCCCCAAGAGCTCACATCGACGGGGAGGTTTGGCACCTCGATGTCGGCTCATCGCATCCTGGGGCTGGAGCAGGTCCCAAGGGTATGGCTGTTCGCCATTTAAAGCGGTACGCGAGCTGGGTTCAGAACGTCGTGAGACAGTTCGGTCCCTATCTTCCGTGGGCGTAGGAACGTTGARGAGAGCTGACCCTAGTACGAGAGGACCGGGTTGGACGTGCCACTGGTGCACCAGTTGTTCTGCCAAGAGCATCGCTGGGTAGCTACGCACGGATGAGATAACCGCTGAAAGCATCTAAGCGGGAAGCCAACTCYGAGATGAACGTTCCCTGAAGTACGCTTGAAGACTACAAGCTTGAKASKMKGSWKGTTGTACCGCACGAGTAATCT
    >Assembly_Contig_2 
    CTCCCCGTCGATGTGAGCTCTTGGGGGAGATCAGCCTGTTATCCCCGTGCACCTTTACTATAGCTTGACACTGCAATTGGGATATWYWTGTGCAGGATAGGTGGGARSCWTTGATTCATAGTCGCYAGATTATGATGAGSYATCCTTGAGATACCACCCTTATATATTCTGATTGCTAACTTGCKMCAGTTATCCTGKSSGAGGACAATGTCTGGTGGGTAGTTTGACTGGGGCGGTCGCCTCCTAAAAAGTAACGGAGGCTTACAAAGGTTGGYTCAGATGGGTTGGAAATCCATCGYAGAGTATAATGGTACAARCCAGCTTAACTGYGAGACRTACAKGTCGARCAGAGACGAAAGTCGGTCATAGTGATCCGGTGGTTCTGTGTGGAAGGGCCATCGCTCAAAGGATAAAAGGTACGCCGGGGATAACAGGCTGATCTCCCCCAAGAGCTCACATCGACGGGGAGGTTTGGCACCTCGATGTCGGCTCATCGCATCCTGGGGCTGAAGCAGGTCCCAAGGGTATGGCTGTTCGCCATTTAAAGCGGTACGCGAGCTGGGTTCAGAACGTCGTGAGACAGTTCGGTCCCTATCTGCCGTGGGCGTTGGATGATTGAGGAGAGTTGCCCCTAGTACGAGAGGACCGGGGTGAACGAACCACTRGTGCACCARTTKTBSTGCCAAGRGCATMGSTKGGKWRGCTACGTTCGGATGG
    >Assembly_Contig_3 
    CTACGGTGGATTTCCAACCCACCTGAGCCGAACTTTGTAAGCCTCCGTTACTTTTTAGGAGGCTTACAAAGGTTGGCTCATATCGGTTGGAAAYCSATMGCAGAGTATAATGGTACAARCCAGCTTAACTGCGAGACRTACATGTCGAGCAGAGACGAAAGTCGGTCATAGTGATCCGGTGGTTCTGTGTGGAAGGGCCATCGCTCAAAGGATAAAAGGTACGCCGGGGATAACAGGCTGATCTCCCCCAAGAGCTCACATCGACGGGGAGGTTTGGCACCTCGATGTCGGCTCATCRCATCCTGGGGCTGAAGCAGGTCCCAAGGGTAYGGCTGTTCGCCRTTTAAAGYGGTACGCGAGCTGGGTTCAGAACGTCGTGAGACAGTTCGGTCCCTATCTGCCGTGGGCGTTGGATGATTGAGGAGAGTTGCCCCTAGTACGAGAGGACCGGGGTGAACGAACCACTAGTGCACCAATTGTTCTGCCAAGAGCATAGTTGGGTAGCTACGTTCGGATGWGATAACCGCTGAAGGCATCTAAGCGGGAAGCCAACTCCAAGATTAATCATCCCTGAAGATCCCAAGAAGACTACTTGGTTGATAGGCTGGGTGTGTAAGCGATGTAAGTCGTTTAGCTGACCAGTACTAATAGATCGTTTRKHTWWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
    >Assembly_Contig_4 
    CATATATATCCCAATTGCAGTGTCAAGCTGTAGTGGAGGTGAAAATTCCTCCTACCCGCGGAAGACGGAAAGACCCCGTGCACCTTTACTATAGCTTGACACTGCTGTTGGKAWWTTCATGTGCAGGATAGGTGGGAGCCATTGATTCATRGWCGCCAGWTTATGATGAGGCATCCYTKRRRWWMCACCCTTGAATATTCTGATAGCTAACTCCGTACAATTATCTTGTGCGAGGACAATGTCTGGTGGGTAGTTTGACTGGGGCGGTCGCCTCCTAAAAAGTAACGGAGGCTTACAAAGTTCGGCTCAGGTGGGTTGGAAATCCACCGTAGAGTATAATGGCATAAGCCGGACTGACTGTGAGACATACAWGTCGAGCAGAGTCGAAAGACGGTCATAGTGATCCGGTGGTTCTGTGTGGAAGGGCCATCGCTCAAAGGATAAAAGGTACGCCGGGGATAACAGGCTGATCTCCCCCAAGAGCTCACATCGACGGGGAGGTTTGGCACCTCGATGTCGGCTCATCGCATCCTGGGGCTGGAGCAGGTCCCAAGGGTATGGCTGTTCGCCATTTAAASSGGDVSGSSRRSYKGKTYHVRACGTCGTGAGACAGTTCGGTCCCTTA
    And this is the code i'm using:
    Code:
    blastn -db nr.db -query contigs.fasta -out  outblastn.txt -export_search_strategy  blastn_parameters.txt  -num_threads 4
    I need the top 10 hits for every sequence to feed to MEGAN. At the moment my output is:

    Code:
    BLASTN 2.2.27+
    
    Reference: Zheng Zhang, Scott Schwartz, Lukas Wagner, and Webb
    Miller (2000), "A greedy algorithm for aligning DNA sequences", J
    Comput Biol 2000; 7(1-2):203-14.
    
    Database: nr
               21,062,489 sequences; 7,218,481,314 total letters
    
    Query= Assembly_Contig_1
    Length=603
    
    ***** No hits found *****
    
    Lambda      K        H
        1.35    0.627     1.14 
    Gapped
    Lambda      K        H
        1.28    0.460    0.850 
    Effective search space used: 3755491256660
    
    Query= Assembly_Contig_2
    Length=717
    
    ***** No hits found *****
    and so on.....

    Can someone help me please?

    Don

  • #2
    The nr database on NCBI is proteins, so you could format that as protein and do a blastx search against it. That is what many people would do to use MEGAN because distant similarities are much easier to see at the protein level.

    If you really want to search nucleic acid against nucleic acid, download the database labeled nt (aka nr/nt).

    A timesaver is that you can download either one preformatted, you don't have to format them with makeblastdb yourself.

    Comment


    • #3
      ooooppppss.....my bad...
      I'm reformatting the database with the prot option and i'll try again.

      I have one more question. Some people suggest to remove the low complexity filtering. How do I do it in blast+? and is it a good idea?

      Thank you very much for your suggestion. greatly appreciated!
      Don

      Comment


      • #4
        I think masking is off by default for protein searches.

        Maybe you could check a small subset and see what you get - if you see what seem to be erroneous taxonomic assignments and the alignments are to low complexity areas, then include it?

        Comment

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