scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

GenomeTools: A Comprehensive Software Library for Efficient Processing of Structured Genome Annotations

TLDR
The GenomeTools, a convenient and efficient software library and associated software tools for developing bioinformatics software intended to create, process or convert annotation graphs, strictly follow the annotation graph approach, offering a unified graph-based representation.
Abstract
Genome annotations are often published as plain text files describing genomic features and their subcomponents by an implicit annotation graph. In this paper, we present the GenomeTools, a convenient and efficient software library and associated software tools for developing bioinformatics software intended to create, process or convert annotation graphs. The GenomeTools strictly follow the annotation graph approach, offering a unified graph-based representation. This gives the developer intuitive and immediate access to genomic features and tools for their manipulation. To process large annotation sets with low memory overhead, we have designed and implemented an efficient pull-based approach for sequential processing of annotations. This allows to handle even the largest annotation sets, such as a complete catalogue of human variations. Our object-oriented C-based software library enables a developer to conveniently implement their own functionality on annotation graphs and to integrate it into larger workflows, simultaneously accessing compressed sequence data if required. The careful C implementation of the GenomeTools does not only ensure a light-weight memory footprint while allowing full sequential as well as random access to the annotation graph, but also facilitates the creation of bindings to a variety of script programming languages (like Python and Ruby) sharing the same interface.

read more

Citations
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

The GFF3toolkit: QC and Merge Pipeline for Genome Annotation.

TL;DR: This chapter explains when and how to use the provided tools to obtain nonredundant arthropod gene sets in high quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

COGNATE: comparative gene annotation characterizer.

TL;DR: A new open-source command-line tool, COGNATE (Comparative Gene Annotation Characterizer), which uses a given genome assembly and its annotation of protein-coding genes for a detailed description of the respective gene and genome structure parameters.
Journal ArticleDOI

OUP accepted manuscript

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used high-coverage Oxford Nanopore long-read and chromosome-conformation capture data to generate chromosome-level reference genomes for two C. briggsae strains: QX1410 and VX34.
Book ChapterDOI

A Predictive Approach to Infer the Activity and Natural Variation of Retrotransposon Families in Plants.

TL;DR: Paszkowski et al. as discussed by the authors used a combination of software and molecular biology tools for functional annotation, activity monitoring, and the assessment of the population structure of particular retrotransposon families in multiple plant species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chromosome-level genome assembly and manually-curated proteome of model necrotroph Parastagonospora nodorum Sn15 reveals a genome-wide trove of candidate effector homologs, and redundancy of virulence-related functions within an accessory chromosome

TL;DR: In this article, a chromosome-scale genome assembly of Parastagonospora nodorum Sn15 was presented, which combined long read sequencing, optical mapping and manual curation to produce a high-quality predicted gene annotation dataset, which comprises 13,869 high confidence genes, and an additional 2534 lower confidence genes retained to assist pathogenicity effector discovery.
References
More filters
Book

Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software

TL;DR: The book is an introduction to the idea of design patterns in software engineering, and a catalog of twenty-three common patterns, which most experienced OOP designers will find out they've known about patterns all along.
Book

Introduction to Algorithms

TL;DR: The updated new edition of the classic Introduction to Algorithms is intended primarily for use in undergraduate or graduate courses in algorithms or data structures and presents a rich variety of algorithms and covers them in considerable depth while making their design and analysis accessible to all levels of readers.
Journal ArticleDOI

BEDTools: a flexible suite of utilities for comparing genomic features

TL;DR: A new software suite for the comparison, manipulation and annotation of genomic features in Browser Extensible Data (BED) and General Feature Format (GFF) format, which allows the user to compare large datasets (e.g. next-generation sequencing data) with both public and custom genome annotation tracks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The variant call format and VCFtools

TL;DR: VCFtools is a software suite that implements various utilities for processing VCF files, including validation, merging, comparing and also provides a general Perl API.
Book ChapterDOI

Introduction to Algorithms

Xin-She Yang
TL;DR: This chapter provides an overview of the fundamentals of algorithms and their links to self-organization, exploration, and exploitation.
Related Papers (5)