1-DAV-202 Data Management 2023/24
Previously 2-INF-185 Data Source Integration

Materials · Introduction · Rules · Contact
· Grades from marked homeworks are on the server in file /grades/userid.txt
· Dates of project submission and oral exams:
Early: submit project May 24 9:00am, oral exams May 27 1:00pm (limit 5 students).
Otherwise submit project June 11, 9:00am, oral exams June 18 and 21 (estimated 9:00am-1:00pm, schedule will be published before exam).
Sign up for one the exam days in AIS before June 11.
Remedial exams will take place in the last week of the exam period. Beware, there will not be much time to prepare a better project. Projects should be submitted as homeworks to /submit/project.
· Cloud homework is due on May 20 9:00am.


Difference between revisions of "HWbash"

From MAD
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(31 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 4: Line 4:
  
 
* In this set of tasks, use command-line tools or one-liners in Perl, awk or sed. Do not write any scripts or programs.  
 
* In this set of tasks, use command-line tools or one-liners in Perl, awk or sed. Do not write any scripts or programs.  
* Each task can be split into several stages and intermediate files written to disk, but you can also use pipelines to reduce the number of temporary files.
 
 
* Your commands should work also for other input files with the same format (do not try to generalize them too much, but also do not use very specific properties of a particular input, such as the number of lines etc.)
 
* Your commands should work also for other input files with the same format (do not try to generalize them too much, but also do not use very specific properties of a particular input, such as the number of lines etc.)
<!-- NOTEX -->
 
* Include all relevant used commands in your protocol and add a short description of your approach.
 
* Submit the protocol and required output files.
 
* Outline of the protocol is in <tt>/tasks/bash/protocol.txt</tt>, submit to directory <tt>/submit/bash/yourname</tt>
 
<!-- /NOTEX -->
 
  
===Task B (chromosomes)===
+
===Preparatory steps and submitting===
* Continue processing file from task A.  
+
 
* For each chromosome, the file contains a line which has in column 2 string <tt>chromosome</tt>, and the interval is the whole chromosome.
+
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
* To file <tt>chrosomes.txt</tt>, print a tab-separated list of chromosome names and sizes in the same order as in the input
+
# create a folder for this homework
* The last line of <tt>chromosomes.txt</tt> should list the total size of all chromosomes combined.
+
mkdir bash
<!-- NOTEX -->
+
# move to the new folder
* '''Submit''' file <tt>chromosomes.txt</tt>
+
cd bash
<!-- /NOTEX -->
+
# link input files to the current folder
* Hints:
+
ln -s /tasks/bash/human.fa /tasks/bash/dog.fa /tasks/bash/matches.tsv /tasks/bash/names.txt .
** The total size can be computed by a perl one-liner.
+
# copy protocol to the current folder
** Example from the lecture: compute the sum of interval sizes if each line of the file contains start and end of one interval: <tt>perl -lane'$sum += $F[1]-$F[0]; END { print $sum; }'</tt>
+
cp -i /tasks/bash/protocol.txt .
** Grepping for word chromosome does not check if this word is indeed in the second column
+
</syntaxhighlight>
** Tab character is written in Perl as <tt>"\t"</tt>.
+
 
* Your output should start and end as follows:
+
* Now you can open <tt>protocol.txt</tt> in your favorite editor and start working
 +
* Command <tt>ln</tt> created symbolic links (shortcuts) to the input files, so you can use them under names such as <tt>human.fa</tt> rather than full paths such as <tt>/tasks/bash/human.fa</tt>.
 +
 
 +
When you are done, you can '''submit''' all required files as follows (substitute your username):
 +
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 +
cp -ipv protocol.txt human.txt pairs.txt frequency.txt best.txt function.txt passwords.csv /submit/bash/your_username
 +
 
 +
# check what was submitted
 +
ls -l /submit/bash/your_username
 +
</syntaxhighlight>
 +
 
 +
===Introduction to tasks A-C===
 +
* In these tasks we will again process bioinformatics data. We have two files of sequences in the FASTA format. This time the sequences represent proteins, not DNA, and therefore they use 20 different letters representing different amino acids. Lines starting with '>' contain the identifier of a protein and potentially an additional description. This is followed by the sequence of this protein, which will not be needed in this task. This data comes from the [https://www.uniprot.org/ Uniprot] database.
 +
* File <tt>/tasks/bash/dog.fa</tt> is a FASTA file conatining about 10% of randomly selected dog proteins. Each protein is identified in the FASTA file only by its ID such as <tt>A0A8I3MJS8_CANLF</tt>.
 +
* File <tt>/tasks/bash/human.fa</tt> is a FASTA file with all human proteins. Each ID is followed by a description of the biological function of the protein.  
 +
* These two sets of proteins were compared by the bioinformatics tool called [https://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/doc/blast-help/ BLAST], which finds proteins with similar sequences. The results of BLAST are in file <tt>/tasks/bash/matches.tsv</tt>. This file contains a section for each dog protein. This section starts with several comments, i.e. lines starting with <tt>#</tt> symbol.  This is followed by a table with the found matches in the <tt>TSV</tt> format, i.e., several values delimited by tab characters <tt>\t</tt>. We will be interested in the first two columns representing the IDs of the dog and human proteins, respectively.
 +
 
 +
===Task A (counting proteins)===
 +
 
 +
'''Steps (1) and (2)'''
 +
* Use files  <tt>human.fa</tt> and <tt>dog.fa</tt> to find out how many proteins are in each. Each protein starts with a line starting with the <tt>></tt> symbol, so it is sufficient to count those.
 +
* Beware that <tt>></tt> symbol means redirect in bash. Therefore you have to enclose it in single quotation marks <tt>'>'</tt> so that it is taken literally. 
 +
* For each file write a single command or a pipeline of several commands that will produce the number with the answer. Write the commands and the resulting protein counts to the appropriate sections of your '''protocol'''.
 +
 
 +
'''Step (3)'''
 +
* Create file <tt>human.txt</tt> which contains sequence IDs and descriptions extracted from <tt>human.fa</tt>. This file will be used in Task C.
 +
* Leading <tt>></tt> should be removed. Any text after  <tt>OS=</tt> in the description should be also removed.
 +
* This file should be sorted alphabetically.
 +
* The file should start as follows:
 +
<pre>
 +
1433B_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein beta/alpha
 +
1433E_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein epsilon
 +
1433F_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein eta
 +
1433G_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein gamma
 +
1433S_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein sigma
 +
</pre>
 +
* '''Submit''' file <tt>human.txt</tt>, write your commands to the '''protocol'''.
 +
 
 +
===Task B (counting matches)===
 +
 
 +
'''Step (1)'''
 +
* From file <tt>matches.tsv</tt> extract pairs of similar proteins and store them in file <tt>pairs.txt</tt>. 
 +
* Each line of the file should contain a pair of protein IDs extracted from the first two columns of the <tt>matches.tsv</tt> file.
 +
* These IDs should be separated by a single space and the file should be sorted alphabetically.
 +
* Do not forget to omit lines with comments.
 +
* Each pair from the input should be listed only once in the output.
 +
* Commands <tt>grep</tt>, <tt>sort</tt> and <tt>uniq</tt> would be helpful. To select only some columns, you can use commands <tt>cut</tt>, <tt>awk</tt> or a Perl one-liner.
 +
* The file <tt>pairs.txt</tt> should have 18939 lines (verify using command <tt>wc</tt>) and it should start as follows:
 +
<pre>
 +
A0A1Y6D565_CANLF P_HUMAN
 +
A0A1Y6D565_CANLF S13A4_HUMAN
 +
A0A222YTD8_CANLF S39A4_HUMAN
 +
</pre>
 +
* '''Submit''' file <tt>pairs.txt</tt> and write your commands to the '''protocol'''.
 +
 
 +
'''Step (2)'''
 +
* Find out how many proteins from <tt>dog.fa</tt> have at least one similarity found in <tt>matches.tsv</tt>. This can be done by counting distinct values in the first column of your <tt>pairs.txt</tt> file from step (1).
 +
* We suggest commands <tt>cut/awk/perl</tt>, <tt>sort</tt>, <tt>uniq</tt>, <tt>wc</tt>
 +
* The result of your commands should be an output consisting of a single number (and the end-of-line character).
 +
* Write your answer and commands to the '''protocol'''. What percentage is this number out of all dog proteins found in Task A(2)?
 +
 
 +
'''Step (3)'''
 +
* For each dog protein in the first column of <tt>pairs.txt</tt> file, count how many times it occurs in the file. The result should be a file named <tt>frequency.txt</tt> with pairs dog protein ID, count separated by space. It should be sorted by the second column (count) from highest to lowest and in case of ties by the first column alphabetically.
 +
* To check you answer, look at lines 999 and 1000 of the file as follows: <tt>head -n 1000 frequency.txt | tail -n 2</tt>
 +
* You should get the following two lines:
 +
<pre>
 +
A0A8I3P697_CANLF 6
 +
A0A8I3P812_CANLF 6
 +
</pre>
 +
* This means that dog proteins <tt>A0A8I3P697_CANLF</tt> and <tt>A0A8I3P812_CANLF 6</tt> both occur 6 times in the first column of <tt>pairs.txt</tt>, which means 6 human proteins are similar to each.
 +
* '''Submit''' file <tt>frequency.txt</tt>, write your commands to the protocol. Also write to the protocol what is the highest and lowest count in the second column of your file.
 +
* Note: The dog proteins with zero matches are not listed in your file. Their number could be deduced from your results in step (2) and Task A(2) if needed.
 +
* Note2: The highest number of matches per dog protein is actually restricted by a parameter in the search algorithm to produce at most that many answers. Without this setting the number would be much higher.
 +
 
 +
===Task C (joining information) ===
 +
 
 +
'''Step (1)'''
 +
* For each dog protein, the first (top) match in <tt>matches.tsv</tt> represents the strongest similarity.
 +
* In this step, we want to extract such strongest match for each dog protein which has at least one match.
 +
* The result should be a file <tt>best.txt</tt> listing the two IDs separated by a space. The file should be sorted by the '''second column''' (human protein ID). 
 +
* The file should start as follows:
 +
<pre>
 +
A0A8I3MVQ9_CANLF 1433E_HUMAN
 +
A0A8I3MT06_CANLF 1433G_HUMAN
 +
A0A8I3QRX3_CANLF 1433T_HUMAN
 +
</pre>
 +
* This task can be done by printing the lines that are not comments but follow a comment line starting with <tt>#</tt>.
 +
* In a Perl one-liner, you can create a state variable which will remember if the previous line was a comment and based on that you decide if you print the current line.
 +
* Instead of using Perl, you can play with <tt>grep</tt>. Option <tt>-A 1</tt> prints the matching lines as well as one line after each match.
 +
* '''Submit''' file <tt>best.txt</tt> with the result and write your commands to the '''protocol'''.
 +
 
 +
'''Step (2):'''
 +
* Now we want to extend file <tt>best.txt</tt> with a description of each human protein.
 +
* Since similar proteins often have similar functions, this will allow somebody studying dog proteins to learn something about their possible functions based on similarity to well-studied human proteins.
 +
* To achieve this, we join together file <tt>best.txt</tt> from step 1 and <tt>human.txt</tt> created in Task A(3). Conveniently, they are both sorted by the ID of the human protein.
 +
* Use command [http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/manual/html_node/join-invocation.html join] to join these files.
 +
* Use option <tt>-1 2</tt> to use the second column of <tt>best.txt</tt> as a key for joining.
 +
* The output of <tt>join</tt> may start as follows:
 +
<pre>
 +
1433E_HUMAN A0A8I3MVQ9_CANLF 14-3-3 protein epsilon
 +
1433G_HUMAN A0A8I3MT06_CANLF 14-3-3 protein gamma
 +
1433T_HUMAN A0A8I3QRX3_CANLF 14-3-3 protein theta
 +
</pre>
 +
* Further reformat the output so that the dog ID goes first (e.g. <tt>A0A8I3MVQ9_CANLF</tt>), followed by human protein ID (e.g. <tt>1433E_HUMAN</tt>), followed by the rest of the text.
 +
* Sort by dog protein ID, store in file <tt>function.txt</tt>.
 +
* The output should start as follows:
 
<pre>
 
<pre>
chrI    230218
+
A0A1Y6D565_CANLF P_HUMAN P protein
chrII  813184
+
A0A222YTD8_CANLF S39AA_HUMAN Zinc transporter ZIP10
...
+
A0A5F4CW23_CANLF ELA_HUMAN Apelin receptor early endogenous ligand
...
 
chrXVI  948066
 
chrmt  85779
 
total  12157105
 
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
 +
* Files <tt>best.txt</tt> and <tt>function.txt</tt> should have the same number of lines.
 +
* Which human protein is the best match for the dog protein <tt>A0A8I3RVG4_CANLF</tt> and what is its function?
 +
* '''Submit''' file  <tt>best.txt</tt>. Write your commands and the answer to the question above to your '''protocol'''.
  
===Task C (passwords)===
+
===Task D (passwords)===
 
* The file <tt>/tasks/bash/names.txt</tt> contains data about several people, one per line.  
 
* The file <tt>/tasks/bash/names.txt</tt> contains data about several people, one per line.  
 
* Each line consists of given name(s), surname and email separated by spaces.  
 
* Each line consists of given name(s), surname and email separated by spaces.  
Line 44: Line 142:
 
** The first column contains username extracted from email address, the second column surname, the third column all given names and the fourth column the randomly generated password
 
** The first column contains username extracted from email address, the second column surname, the third column all given names and the fourth column the randomly generated password
 
<!-- NOTEX -->
 
<!-- NOTEX -->
* '''Submit''' file <tt>passwords.csv</tt> with the result of your commands.  
+
* '''Submit''' file <tt>passwords.csv</tt> with the result of your commands. Write your commands to the '''protocol'''.
 
<!-- /NOTEX -->
 
<!-- /NOTEX -->
  
Line 61: Line 159:
 
* We also recommend using <tt>perl</tt>, <tt>wc</tt>, <tt>paste</tt> (check option <tt>-d</tt> in <tt>paste</tt>)
 
* We also recommend using <tt>perl</tt>, <tt>wc</tt>, <tt>paste</tt> (check option <tt>-d</tt> in <tt>paste</tt>)
 
* In Perl, function <tt>[http://perldoc.perl.org/functions/pop.html pop]</tt> may be useful for manipulating <tt>@F</tt> and function <tt>[http://perldoc.perl.org/functions/join.html join]</tt> for connecting strings with a separator.
 
* In Perl, function <tt>[http://perldoc.perl.org/functions/pop.html pop]</tt> may be useful for manipulating <tt>@F</tt> and function <tt>[http://perldoc.perl.org/functions/join.html join]</tt> for connecting strings with a separator.
 
===Task D (blast)===
 
'''Overall goal:'''
 
* Proteins from several well-studied yeast species were downloaded from database http://www.uniprot.org/ on 2016-03-09. The file contains sequence of the protein as well as a short description of its biological function.
 
* We have also downloaded proteins from the yeast ''Yarrowia lipolytica''. We will pretend that nothing is known about the function of these proteins (as if they were produced by gene finding program in a newly sequenced genome).
 
* For each ''Y.lipolytica'' protein, we have found similar proteins from other yeasts
 
* Now we want to extract for each protein in ''Y.lipolytica'' its closest match among all known proteins and see what is its function. This will give a clue about the potential function of the ''Y.lipolytica'' protein.
 
 
'''Files:'''
 
* <tt>/tasks/bash/known.fa</tt> is a FASTA file containing sequences of known proteins from several species
 
* <tt>/tasks/bash/yarLip.fa</tt> is a FASTA file with proteins from ''Y.lipolytica''
 
* <tt>/tasks/bash/known.blast</tt> is the result of finding similar proteins in <tt>yarLip.fa</tt> versus <tt>known.fa</tt> by these commands (already done by us):
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 
formatdb -i known.fa
 
blastall -p blastp -d known.fa -i yarLip.fa -m 9 -e 1e-5 > known.blast
 
</syntaxhighlight>
 
* you can link these files to your directory as follows:
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 
ln -s /tasks/bash/known.fa .
 
ln -s /tasks/bash/yarLip.fa .
 
ln -s /tasks/bash/known.blast .
 
</syntaxhighlight>
 
 
'''Step 1:'''
 
* Get the first (strongest) match for each query from <tt>known.blast</tt>.
 
* This can be done by printing the lines that are not comments but follow a comment line starting with #.
 
* In a Perl one-liner, you can create a state variable which will remember if the previous line was a comment and based on that you decide if you print the current line.
 
* Instead of using Perl, you can play with grep. Option <tt>-A 1</tt> prints the matching lines as well as one line after each match
 
* Print only the first two columns separated by tab (name of query, name of target), sort the file by the second column.
 
* Store the result in file <tt>best.tsv</tt>. The file should start as follows:
 
<pre>
 
Q6CBS2  sp|B5BP46|YP52_SCHPO
 
Q6C8R4  sp|B5BP48|YP54_SCHPO
 
Q6CG80  sp|B5BP48|YP54_SCHPO
 
Q6CH56  sp|B5BP48|YP54_SCHPO
 
</pre>
 
<!-- NOTEX -->
 
* '''Submit''' file <tt>best.tsv</tt> with the result
 
<!-- /NOTEX -->
 
 
'''Step 2:'''
 
* Create file <tt>known.tsv</tt> which contains sequence names extracted from <tt>known.fa</tt> with leading <tt>></tt> removed
 
* This file should be sorted alphabetically.
 
* The file should start as follows (lines are trimmed below):
 
<pre>
 
sp|A0A023PXA5|YA19A_YEAST Putative uncharacterized protein YAL019W-A OS=Saccharomyces...
 
sp|A0A023PXB0|YA019_YEAST Putative uncharacterized protein YAR019W-A OS=Saccharomyces...
 
</pre>
 
<!-- NOTEX -->
 
* '''Submit''' file <tt>known.tsv</tt>
 
<!-- /NOTEX -->
 
 
'''Step 3:'''
 
* Use command [http://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/manual/html_node/join-invocation.html join] to join the files <tt>best.tsv</tt> and <tt>known.tsv</tt> so that each line of <tt>best.tsv</tt> is extended with the text describing the corresponding target in <tt>known.tsv</tt>
 
* Use option <tt>-1 2</tt> to use the second column of <tt>best.tsv</tt> as a key for joining
 
* The output of <tt>join</tt> may look as follows:
 
<pre>
 
sp|B5BP46|YP52_SCHPO Q6CBS2 Putative glutathione S-transferase C1183.02 OS=Schizosaccharomyces...
 
sp|B5BP48|YP54_SCHPO Q6C8R4 Putative alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent sulfonate dioxygenase OS=...
 
</pre>
 
* Further reformat the output so that the query name goes first (e.g. <tt>Q6CBS2</tt>), followed by target name (e.g. <tt>sp|B5BP46|YP52_SCHPO</tt>), followed by the rest of the text, but remove all text after <tt>OS=</tt>
 
* Sort by query name, store as <tt>best.txt</tt>
 
* The output should start as follows:
 
<pre>
 
B5FVA8  tr|Q5A7D5|Q5A7D5_CANAL  Lysophospholipase
 
B5FVB0  sp|O74810|UBC1_SCHPO    Ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2 1
 
B5FVB1  sp|O13877|RPAB5_SCHPO  DNA-directed RNA polymerases I, II, and III subunit RPABC5
 
</pre>
 
<!-- NOTEX -->
 
* '''Submit''' file  <tt>best.txt</tt>
 
<!-- /NOTEX -->
 
 
'''Note:'''
 
* Not all ''Y.lipolytica'' proteins are necessarily included in your final output (some proteins do not have blast match).
 
** You can think how to find the list of such proteins, but this is not part of the task.
 
* Files <tt>best.txt</tt> and <tt>best.tsv</tt> should have the same number of lines.
 

Latest revision as of 11:02, 29 February 2024

Lecture on Perl, Lecture on command-line tools

  • In this set of tasks, use command-line tools or one-liners in Perl, awk or sed. Do not write any scripts or programs.
  • Your commands should work also for other input files with the same format (do not try to generalize them too much, but also do not use very specific properties of a particular input, such as the number of lines etc.)

Preparatory steps and submitting

# create a folder for this homework
mkdir bash
# move to the new folder
cd bash
# link input files to the current folder
ln -s /tasks/bash/human.fa /tasks/bash/dog.fa /tasks/bash/matches.tsv /tasks/bash/names.txt .
# copy protocol to the current folder
cp -i /tasks/bash/protocol.txt .
  • Now you can open protocol.txt in your favorite editor and start working
  • Command ln created symbolic links (shortcuts) to the input files, so you can use them under names such as human.fa rather than full paths such as /tasks/bash/human.fa.

When you are done, you can submit all required files as follows (substitute your username):

cp -ipv protocol.txt human.txt pairs.txt frequency.txt best.txt function.txt passwords.csv /submit/bash/your_username

# check what was submitted
ls -l /submit/bash/your_username

Introduction to tasks A-C

  • In these tasks we will again process bioinformatics data. We have two files of sequences in the FASTA format. This time the sequences represent proteins, not DNA, and therefore they use 20 different letters representing different amino acids. Lines starting with '>' contain the identifier of a protein and potentially an additional description. This is followed by the sequence of this protein, which will not be needed in this task. This data comes from the Uniprot database.
  • File /tasks/bash/dog.fa is a FASTA file conatining about 10% of randomly selected dog proteins. Each protein is identified in the FASTA file only by its ID such as A0A8I3MJS8_CANLF.
  • File /tasks/bash/human.fa is a FASTA file with all human proteins. Each ID is followed by a description of the biological function of the protein.
  • These two sets of proteins were compared by the bioinformatics tool called BLAST, which finds proteins with similar sequences. The results of BLAST are in file /tasks/bash/matches.tsv. This file contains a section for each dog protein. This section starts with several comments, i.e. lines starting with # symbol. This is followed by a table with the found matches in the TSV format, i.e., several values delimited by tab characters \t. We will be interested in the first two columns representing the IDs of the dog and human proteins, respectively.

Task A (counting proteins)

Steps (1) and (2)

  • Use files human.fa and dog.fa to find out how many proteins are in each. Each protein starts with a line starting with the > symbol, so it is sufficient to count those.
  • Beware that > symbol means redirect in bash. Therefore you have to enclose it in single quotation marks '>' so that it is taken literally.
  • For each file write a single command or a pipeline of several commands that will produce the number with the answer. Write the commands and the resulting protein counts to the appropriate sections of your protocol.

Step (3)

  • Create file human.txt which contains sequence IDs and descriptions extracted from human.fa. This file will be used in Task C.
  • Leading > should be removed. Any text after OS= in the description should be also removed.
  • This file should be sorted alphabetically.
  • The file should start as follows:
1433B_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein beta/alpha 
1433E_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein epsilon 
1433F_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein eta 
1433G_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein gamma 
1433S_HUMAN 14-3-3 protein sigma 
  • Submit file human.txt, write your commands to the protocol.

Task B (counting matches)

Step (1)

  • From file matches.tsv extract pairs of similar proteins and store them in file pairs.txt.
  • Each line of the file should contain a pair of protein IDs extracted from the first two columns of the matches.tsv file.
  • These IDs should be separated by a single space and the file should be sorted alphabetically.
  • Do not forget to omit lines with comments.
  • Each pair from the input should be listed only once in the output.
  • Commands grep, sort and uniq would be helpful. To select only some columns, you can use commands cut, awk or a Perl one-liner.
  • The file pairs.txt should have 18939 lines (verify using command wc) and it should start as follows:
A0A1Y6D565_CANLF P_HUMAN
A0A1Y6D565_CANLF S13A4_HUMAN
A0A222YTD8_CANLF S39A4_HUMAN
  • Submit file pairs.txt and write your commands to the protocol.

Step (2)

  • Find out how many proteins from dog.fa have at least one similarity found in matches.tsv. This can be done by counting distinct values in the first column of your pairs.txt file from step (1).
  • We suggest commands cut/awk/perl, sort, uniq, wc
  • The result of your commands should be an output consisting of a single number (and the end-of-line character).
  • Write your answer and commands to the protocol. What percentage is this number out of all dog proteins found in Task A(2)?

Step (3)

  • For each dog protein in the first column of pairs.txt file, count how many times it occurs in the file. The result should be a file named frequency.txt with pairs dog protein ID, count separated by space. It should be sorted by the second column (count) from highest to lowest and in case of ties by the first column alphabetically.
  • To check you answer, look at lines 999 and 1000 of the file as follows: head -n 1000 frequency.txt | tail -n 2
  • You should get the following two lines:
A0A8I3P697_CANLF 6
A0A8I3P812_CANLF 6
  • This means that dog proteins A0A8I3P697_CANLF and A0A8I3P812_CANLF 6 both occur 6 times in the first column of pairs.txt, which means 6 human proteins are similar to each.
  • Submit file frequency.txt, write your commands to the protocol. Also write to the protocol what is the highest and lowest count in the second column of your file.
  • Note: The dog proteins with zero matches are not listed in your file. Their number could be deduced from your results in step (2) and Task A(2) if needed.
  • Note2: The highest number of matches per dog protein is actually restricted by a parameter in the search algorithm to produce at most that many answers. Without this setting the number would be much higher.

Task C (joining information)

Step (1)

  • For each dog protein, the first (top) match in matches.tsv represents the strongest similarity.
  • In this step, we want to extract such strongest match for each dog protein which has at least one match.
  • The result should be a file best.txt listing the two IDs separated by a space. The file should be sorted by the second column (human protein ID).
  • The file should start as follows:
A0A8I3MVQ9_CANLF 1433E_HUMAN
A0A8I3MT06_CANLF 1433G_HUMAN
A0A8I3QRX3_CANLF 1433T_HUMAN
  • This task can be done by printing the lines that are not comments but follow a comment line starting with #.
  • In a Perl one-liner, you can create a state variable which will remember if the previous line was a comment and based on that you decide if you print the current line.
  • Instead of using Perl, you can play with grep. Option -A 1 prints the matching lines as well as one line after each match.
  • Submit file best.txt with the result and write your commands to the protocol.

Step (2):

  • Now we want to extend file best.txt with a description of each human protein.
  • Since similar proteins often have similar functions, this will allow somebody studying dog proteins to learn something about their possible functions based on similarity to well-studied human proteins.
  • To achieve this, we join together file best.txt from step 1 and human.txt created in Task A(3). Conveniently, they are both sorted by the ID of the human protein.
  • Use command join to join these files.
  • Use option -1 2 to use the second column of best.txt as a key for joining.
  • The output of join may start as follows:
1433E_HUMAN A0A8I3MVQ9_CANLF 14-3-3 protein epsilon 
1433G_HUMAN A0A8I3MT06_CANLF 14-3-3 protein gamma 
1433T_HUMAN A0A8I3QRX3_CANLF 14-3-3 protein theta 
  • Further reformat the output so that the dog ID goes first (e.g. A0A8I3MVQ9_CANLF), followed by human protein ID (e.g. 1433E_HUMAN), followed by the rest of the text.
  • Sort by dog protein ID, store in file function.txt.
  • The output should start as follows:
A0A1Y6D565_CANLF P_HUMAN P protein
A0A222YTD8_CANLF S39AA_HUMAN Zinc transporter ZIP10
A0A5F4CW23_CANLF ELA_HUMAN Apelin receptor early endogenous ligand
  • Files best.txt and function.txt should have the same number of lines.
  • Which human protein is the best match for the dog protein A0A8I3RVG4_CANLF and what is its function?
  • Submit file best.txt. Write your commands and the answer to the question above to your protocol.

Task D (passwords)

  • The file /tasks/bash/names.txt contains data about several people, one per line.
  • Each line consists of given name(s), surname and email separated by spaces.
  • Each person can have multiple given names (at least 1), but exactly one surname and one email. Email is always of the form username@uniba.sk.
  • The task is to generate file passwords.csv which contains a randomly generated password for each of these users
    • The output file has columns separated by commas ','
    • The first column contains username extracted from email address, the second column surname, the third column all given names and the fourth column the randomly generated password
  • Submit file passwords.csv with the result of your commands. Write your commands to the protocol.

Example line from input:

Pavol Orszagh Hviezdoslav hviezdoslav32@uniba.sk

Example line from output (password will differ):

hviezdoslav32,Hviezdoslav,Pavol Orszagh,3T3Pu3un

Hints:

  • Passwords can be generated using pwgen (e.g. pwgen -N 10 -1 prints 10 passwords, one per line)
  • We also recommend using perl, wc, paste (check option -d in paste)
  • In Perl, function pop may be useful for manipulating @F and function join for connecting strings with a separator.