skbio.metadata.Interval(interval_metadata, bounds, fuzzy=None, metadata=None)[source]¶Stores the bounds and metadata of an interval feature.
This class stores an interval feature. An interval feature is defined as a sub-region of a biological sequence or sequence alignment that is a functional entity, e.g., a gene, a riboswitch, an exon, etc. It can span a single contiguous region or multiple non-contiguous regions (e.g. multiple exons in a transcript, or multiple genes in an operon).
interval_metadata (object) – A reference to the IntervalMetadata object that this
Interval object is associated to.
bounds (iterable of tuple of int) – Tuples representing start and end coordinates. It is zero-based numbering. It is always inclusive on start bound and exclusive on end bound.
fuzzy (iterable of tuple of bool, optional) – Tuples representing the fuzziness of each bound coordinates.
If this isn’t specified, then the fuzziness of all bound
coordinates are False. If any of the coordinate fuzziness
is True, it indicates that the exact bound point of a
interval feature is unknown. The bound may begin or end at
some points outside the specified coordinates. This
accommodates the location format 1 of INSDC.
metadata (dict, optional) – Dictionary of attributes storing information of the feature such as “strand”, “gene_name”, or “product”.
See also
Notes
While the construction of an Interval object automatically add
itself to its associated IntervalMetadata object,
IntervalMetadata.add is the typical/easier way to
create and add it to IntervalMetadata.
References
Examples
Hypothetically, let’s say we have a gene called “genA” with 10 nt as shown in the following diagram. The second row represents the two exons (indicated by “=”) on this gene:
TGGATTCTGC
-====--==-
0123456789
We can create an Interval object to represent the exons of the gene:
>>> from skbio.metadata import Interval, IntervalMetadata
>>> interval_metadata = IntervalMetadata(10)
Remember the coordinates are inclusive in lower bound and exclusive on upper bound:
>>> gene = Interval(interval_metadata,
... bounds=[(1, 5), (7, 9)],
... metadata={'name': 'genA'})
>>> gene
Interval(interval_metadata=..., bounds=[(1, 5), (7, 9)], fuzzy=[(False, False), (False, False)], metadata={'name': 'genA'})
Attributes
|
The coordinates of the interval feature. |
|
Boolean value indicating if the |
|
The openness of each coordinate. |
|
The metadata of the interval feature. |
Built-ins
Test if this |
|
Test if this |
Methods
|
Drop this |