Bio::Matrix::PSM::InstanceSiteBio::Matrix::PSM::InstanceSite is a PSM site occurance. | |
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Bio::Matrix::PSM::InstanceSite Ranking & Summary
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- License:
- Perl Artistic License
- Price:
- FREE
- Publisher Name:
- Stefan Kirov
- Publisher web site:
- http://search.cpan.org/~birney/bioperl-1.4/Bio/Matrix/PSM/InstanceSite.pm
Bio::Matrix::PSM::InstanceSite Tags
Bio::Matrix::PSM::InstanceSite Description
Bio::Matrix::PSM::InstanceSite is a PSM site occurance. Bio::Matrix::PSM::InstanceSite is a PSM site occurance.SYNOPSIS use Bio::Matrix::PSM::InstanceSite; #You can get an InstanceSite object either from a file: my ($instances,$matrix)=$SomePSMFile->parse_next; #or from memory my %params=(seq=>'TATAAT', id=>"TATAbox1", accession=>'ENSG00000122304', mid=>'TB1', desc=>'TATA box, experimentally verified in PRM1 gene', relpos=>-35);Abstract interface to PSM site occurrence (PSM sequence match). InstanceSite objects may be used to describe a PSM (See Bio::Matrix::PSM::SiteMatrix) sequence matches. The usual characteristic of such a match is sequence coordinates, score, sequence and sequence (gene) identifier- accession number or other id.This object inherits from Bio::LocatableSeq (which defines the real sequence) and might hold a SiteMatrix object, used to detect the CRE (cis-regulatory element), or created from this CRE.While the documentation states that the motif id and gene id (accession) combination should be unique, this is not entirely true- there might be more than one occurrence of the same cis-regulatory element in the upstream region of the same gene. Therefore relpos would be the third element to create a really unique combination. Requirements: · Perl
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