PABST peptide examples

From SPCTools

Revision as of 17:24, 29 October 2009; view current revision
←Older revision | Newer revision→
Jump to: navigation, search

PABST is a tool to help users select the best potential peptides to use for Mass Spectrometric identification of a set of proteins. It merges various data sources and evaluates the results based on user-tunable parameters. The current default parameter weightings are shown below, and the lower sections show links to example peptides along with comments to aid in the development of the selection algorithm.

The script can be run with the -h flag, or no args at all, to see the usage statement below. The only required parameter is build_id, which the script uses to determine which atlas build to export peptides from. The default config file is shown below the usage stmt, these values will be used unless a user-defined config file is used. To get a template config file, simply execute the script with the -d flag and an example config file will be written to the CWD, which can then be edited as desired.

The config file specifies various sequence attributes and an associated score; each peptide sequence is evaluated for every attribute, and a composite score is reached by multiplying together the score for each that matches. Each peptide has 2 possible sources, empirical data from having been observed in the specified atlas build, and theoretical data from the electronic analysis of the reference database. Scores less than 1 will penalize matching sequences, scores greater than 1 will reward them. For example, if a sequence had both a Proline and a Serine, and the score for each is set to 0.5, then the final score will be multiplied by 0.5 * 0.5, or 0.25. If the bonus_obs param is set to 2, then the empirical (observed) suitability score will be multiplied by 2.

The script must be run from $SBEAMS/lib/scripts/PeptideAtlas/, where $SBEAMS=/net/dblocal/www/html/<your_dev_area>/sbeams. If you don't have a dev area, use that of someone you know who's recently updated their software (maybe dev2 -- Eric Deutsch -- or devTF -- Terry Farrah).

usage: fetch_best_peptides.pl -a build_id [ -t outfile -n obs_cutoff -p proteins_file -v -b .3 ]

  -a, --atlas_build    one or more atlas builds to be queried for observed
                       peptides, will be used in order provided.  Can be
                       specified as a numeric id ( -a 123 -a 189 ) or as a composite
                       id:weight ( -a 123:3 ).  Scores from EPS and ESS will
                       be multiplied by given weight, defaults to 1.
  -c, --config         Config file defining penalites for various sequence
  -d, --default_config prints an example config file with defaults in CWD,
                       named best_peptide.conf, will not overwrite existing
                       file.  Exits after printing.
  -p, --protein_file   file of protein names, one per line.  Should match
                       biosequence.biosequence_name
  -s, --show_builds    Print info about builds in db
  -b, --bioseq_set     Explictly defined biosequence set.  If not provided,
                       the BSS defined by the first atlas_build specified will
                       be used.
  -t, --tsv_file       print output to specified file rather than stdout
  -n, --n_peptides     number of peptides to return per protein
  -o, --obs_min        Minimum n_obs to consider for observed peptides
  -h, --help           Print usage
  -v, --verbose        Verbose output, prints progress


Default config file:

C       0.7     # Avoid C
D       1       # Slightly penalize D or S in general?
DG      0.5     # Avoid dipeptide DG
DP      0.5     # Avoid dipeptide DP
M       0.3     # Avoid M
NG      0.5     # Avoid dipeptide NG
P       0.5     # Avoid P
QG      0.5     # Avoid dipeptide QG
S       1       # Slightly penalize D or S in general?
W       0.1     # Avoid W
Xc      0.5     # Avoid any C-terminal peptide
max_l   28      # Maximum length for peptide
max_p   0.2     # Penalty for peptides over max length
min_l   6       # Minimum length for peptide
min_p   0.1     # Penalty for peptides under min length
nE      0.9     # Avoid N-terminal E
nGPG    0.5     # Avoid nxyG where x or y is P or G
nQ      0.1     # Avoid N-terminal Q
nxxG    0.8     # Avoid nxxG
obs     2       # Bonus for observed peptides, usually > 1
ssr_p   0.5     # Penalty for very high or low hydrophobicity

Usage notes

Single-protein examples to illustrate the effects of the parameters

On each of the pages below, scroll down to "PABST best peptides". You will be able to adjust the PABST settings and see how that changes the results. You will need to log in to SBEAMS.


https://db.systemsbiology.net/devDC/sbeams/cgi/PeptideAtlas/GetProtein?atlas_build_id=195&protein_name=YAL003W&action=QUERY


https://db.systemsbiology.net/devDC/sbeams/cgi/PeptideAtlas/GetProtein?atlas_build_id=195&protein_name=YKL098W&action=QUERY



These are temporarily decommissioned...


Protein: ALCAM, moderate number of observations https://db.systemsbiology.net/devDC/sbeams/cgi/shortURL?key=c87rxtje

Protein with tons of observed peptides, lots of them NT or MC. https://db.systemsbiology.net/devDC/sbeams/cgi/shortURL?key=xsp03v1h

Protein with many fewer observations https://db.systemsbiology.net/devDC/sbeams/cgi/shortURL?key=h5bwnrt2

Protein with moderate number of obs, mixed MGL/SGL https://db.systemsbiology.net/devDC/sbeams/cgi/shortURL?key=s2kvwg9r


Looking at empirical or theoretical peptides only

If you want just empirically observed peptides, filter for lines that do not have "na" in the empirical_proteotypic_score and suitability_score columns:

./fetch_best_peptides.pl --atlas_build 162 --bioseq_set 33 | awk '{if ($5!="na" && $6!="na" ) print}'

If you want just theoretical peptides (an in silico digest of an Atlas proteome), filter for lines that do not have "na" in the predicted_suitability_score column:

./fetch_best_peptides.pl --atlas_build 162 --bioseq_set 33 | awk '{ if ($7!="na") print }'

Of course, some peptides are both theoretical and empirically observed.

Personal tools