Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • FASTA Viewer

    Hi all,
    I have several large FASTA files and i wanted to know if there is a FASTA visualizer for Windows or Linux?

    Thanks in advance.

    Regards,
    Ashwin

  • #2
    Ashwin,

    FASTA files are simply plain text files; they could be opened with any text editor. What do you wish to do with these files? There isn't really much to "look" at in a FASTA file, it's just a long string of DNA sequence (or RNA or protein).

    Comment


    • #3
      Hi,
      I wanted to search for a sequence in a FASTA file, for e.g the sequence could be

      GGTTCCGCTTTCCACTGCTGCCGCCAGTCGGCCTGAGATGCACTGGCCTCGGCCTCAGAGGAGGCAGTCGCTGACACCTGGCTCCAGGTCCTGGAATCCGGAGGGGCCTCTGGGCCACCGG

      OR

      GGTTCCGCTTTCCACTGCTGCCGCCAGTCGGCCTGAGATGCACTGGCCTCGGCCTCAGAGTAGGCAGTCGCTGACACCTGGCTCCAGGTCCTGGAATCCGGAGGGGCCTCTGGGCCACCGG

      If the FASTA was viewable, then i could do a find for confirmation, i.e. to confirm that the searching code is working fine.

      Does the program FASTA search for a sequence within a FASTA file.

      Ashwin

      Comment


      • #4
        If you do a simple text search with a text editor, you might miss it since the file contains linebreaks.

        I'd simply make a BLAST database out of the FASTA file and use BLAST to find the matching position.

        Comment


        • #5
          Hi there,
          I did run formatdb on my FASTA file but i am getting an error stating index file not found.

          Do you know the exact syntax for formatdb to convert a .fasta file into a BLAST able .fasta database file.

          Thanks in advance.
          Ashwin

          Comment


          • #6
            Legacy BLAST formatdb for nucleotide FASTA files:
            Code:
            formatdb -p F -i file.fasta
            To search:
            Code:
            blastall -p blastn -d file.fasta -i query.fasta
            Execute "formatdb --help" and "blastall --help" to see all options.

            Comment


            • #7
              Another, perhaps more user friendly approach for non bioinformaticians might be
              Artemis from the Sanger Institute.

              A good text editor, i.e. Notepad++ on Windows, might do the trick too, but watch out for
              line breaks.

              Comment


              • #8
                If you are familiar with command line terminal, you could try grep in the command line:

                Code:
                grep "yoursequence" yourfastafile
                Using the '-B 1' option will allow you to grab the header for this sequence too:

                Code:
                grep -B 1 "yoursequence" yourfastafile
                if you have a text file with each sequence on each line you can use fgrep:

                Code:
                fgrep -B 1 -f filewithlistofsequences yourfastafile
                These will produce an output to the screen if the sequence exists (or you could redirect to another file using '> output.txt'). Otherwise there will be no output. But the search will only be for exact matches, and will miss sequences with line breaks in between.
                Last edited by Kennels; 02-26-2012, 09:32 PM.

                Comment

                Latest Articles

                Collapse

                • seqadmin
                  Advancing Precision Medicine for Rare Diseases in Children
                  by seqadmin




                  Many organizations study rare diseases, but few have a mission as impactful as Rady Children’s Institute for Genomic Medicine (RCIGM). “We are all about changing outcomes for children,” explained Dr. Stephen Kingsmore, President and CEO of the group. The institute’s initial goal was to provide rapid diagnoses for critically ill children and shorten their diagnostic odyssey, a term used to describe the long and arduous process it takes patients to obtain an accurate...
                  12-16-2024, 07:57 AM
                • seqadmin
                  Recent Advances in Sequencing Technologies
                  by seqadmin



                  Innovations in next-generation sequencing technologies and techniques are driving more precise and comprehensive exploration of complex biological systems. Current advancements include improved accessibility for long-read sequencing and significant progress in single-cell and 3D genomics. This article explores some of the most impactful developments in the field over the past year.

                  Long-Read Sequencing
                  Long-read sequencing has seen remarkable advancements,...
                  12-02-2024, 01:49 PM

                ad_right_rmr

                Collapse

                News

                Collapse

                Topics Statistics Last Post
                Started by seqadmin, 12-17-2024, 10:28 AM
                0 responses
                32 views
                0 likes
                Last Post seqadmin  
                Started by seqadmin, 12-13-2024, 08:24 AM
                0 responses
                48 views
                0 likes
                Last Post seqadmin  
                Started by seqadmin, 12-12-2024, 07:41 AM
                0 responses
                34 views
                0 likes
                Last Post seqadmin  
                Started by seqadmin, 12-11-2024, 07:45 AM
                0 responses
                46 views
                0 likes
                Last Post seqadmin  
                Working...
                X