GO::AnnotationProviderUser Contributed Perl DocumentaGO::AnnotationProvider(3)NAMEGO::AnnotationProvider - abstract base class defining interface for how
Annotation information should be provided
DESCRIPTIONGO::AnnotationProvider is an interface that defines an API that should
be implemented by specific subclasses, which may read GO annotation
from databases, flatfiles, XML files etc.
GO (Gene Ontology) is a project of the Gene Ontology Consortium
(http://www.geneontology.org). The GO project has 3 'aspects' :
Biological Process
Molecular Function
Cellular Component
When a method requires the client to refer to an aspect, it is simply
by a shorthand, namely P, F and C, respectively.
In GO associations, annotated entities may be identified by many
different names. Firstly, they should have a database identifier,
which should be unique for an entity. Secondly, they should have a
standard name. Standard names should be unique among standard names,
but it is possible that a standard name of one entity may be used as an
alias of another. An entity may have many aliases, and an alias may be
used for many entities. Hence, a name (drawn from databaseIds,
standard names, and aliases) may be ambiguous in the entity to which it
refers. This is an important concept for clients of concrete
subclasses to take into consideration, so that unexpected results are
avoided.
TODO
Currently this interface dictates that clients can retrieve GOIDs that
have been used to annotated genes. In future, this interface is likely
to change, such that instead of GOIDs, GO::Annotation objects are
instead returned, which will be richer in the terms of information they
can give about a given annotation. Such objects would contain a
GO::AnnotatedGene object, one or more GO::Reference objects, and an
evidence code. The retrieval of annotations for a given database id
could then be extended to allow filtering by evidence codes, to either
include or exclude certain codes.
This interface also currently only allows retrieval of GOIDs for genes,
in future, it will be extended such that the genes can be retrieved by
GOID.
Constructor
Because this is an abstract class, there is no constructor. A
constructor must be implemented by concrete subclasses.
Public instance methods
All of these public instance methods must be implemented by concrete
subclasses.
Some methods dealing with ambiguous names
Because there are many names by which an annotated entity may be
referred to, that are non-unique, this interface defines a set of
methods for determining whether a name is ambiguous, and to what
database identifiers such ambiguous names may refer.
Note, that the AnnotationProvider subclasses should now be case
insensitive, though there are some caveats. For instance, you can use
'cdc6' to retrieve data for CDC6. However, This if gene has been
referred to as abc1, and another referred to as ABC1, then these are
treated as different, and unambiguous. However, the text 'Abc1' would
be considered ambiguous, because it could refer to either. On the
other hand, if a single gene is referred to as XYZ1 and xyz1, and no
other genes have that name (in any casing), then Xyz1 would still be
considered unambiguous.
nameIsAmbiguous
NB: API change:
nameIsAmbiguous is now case insensitive - that is, if there is a name
that is used twice using different casing, that will be treated as
ambiguous. Previous versions would have not treated these as
ambiguous. In the case that a name is provided in a certain casing,
which was encountered only once, then it will be treated as
unambiguous. This is the price of wanting a case insensitive
annotation provider...
Usage:
if ($annotationProvider->nameIsAmbiguous($name)){
do something useful....or not....
}
databaseIdsForAmbiguousName
This public method returns an array of database identifiers for an
ambiguous name. If the name is not ambiguous, an empty list will be
returned.
B: API change:
databaseIdsForAmbiguousName is now case insensitive - that is, if there
is a name that is used twice using different casing, that will be
treated as ambiguous. Previous versions would have not treated these
as ambiguous. However, if the name provided is of the exact casing as
a name that appeared only once with that exact casing, then it is
treated as unambiguous. This is the price of wanting a case insensitive
annotation provider...
Usage:
my @databaseIds = $annotationProvider->databaseIdsForAmbiguousName($name);
ambiguousNames
This method returns an array of names, which from the annotation source
have been deemed to be ambiguous.
Note - even though this is now case insensitive, if something is called
both BLAH1 and blah1, we would not deem either of these to be
ambiguous. However, if it appeared as blah1 twice, referring to two
different genes, then blah1 would be ambiguous.
Usage:
my @ambiguousNames = $annotationProvider->ambiguousNames;
Methods for retrieving GO annotations for entities
goIdsByDatabaseId
This public method returns a reference to an array of GOIDs that are
associated with the supplied databaseId for a specific aspect. If no
annotations are associated with that databaseId in that aspect, then a
reference to an empty array will be returned. If the databaseId is not
recognized, then undef will be returned.
Usage:
my $goidsRef = $annotationProvider->goIdsByDatabaseId(databaseId=>$databaseId,
aspect=><P|F|C>);
goIdsByStandardName
This public method returns a reference to an array of GOIDs that are
associated with the supplied standardName for a specific aspect. If no
annotations are associated with the entity with that standard name in
that aspect, then a a reference to an empty list will be returned. If
the supplied name is not used as a standard name, then undef will be
returned.
Usage:
my $goidsRef = $annotationProvider->goIdsByStandardName(standardName=>$databaseId,
aspect=><P|F|C>);
goIdsByName
This public method returns a reference to an array of GO IDs that are
associated with the supplied name for a specific aspect. If there are
no GO associations for the entity corresponding to the supplied name in
the provided aspect, then a reference to an empty list will be
returned. If the supplied name does not correspond to any entity, then
undef will be returned. Because the name can be any of the databaseId,
the standard name, or any of the aliases, it is possible that the name
might be ambiguous. Clients of this object should first test whether
the name they are using is ambiguous, using the nameIsAmbiguous()
method, and handle it accordingly. If an ambiguous name is supplied,
then it will die.
NB: API change:
goIdsByName is now case insensitive - that is, if there is a name that
is used twice using different casing, that will be treated as
ambiguous. Previous versions would have not treated these as
ambiguous. This is the price of wanting a case insensitive annotation
provider. In the event that a name is provided that is ambiguous
because of case, if it matches exactly the case of one of the possible
matches, it will be treated unambiguously.
Usage:
my $goidsRef = $annotationProvider->goIdsByName(name=>$name,
aspect=><P|F|C>);
Methods for mapping different types of name to each other
standardNameByDatabaseId
This method returns the standard name for a database id.
NB: API change
standardNameByDatabaseId is now case insensitive - that is, if there is
a databaseId that is used twice (or more) using different casing, it
will be treated as ambiguous. Previous versions would have not treated
these as ambiguous. This is the price of wanting a case insensitive
annotation provider. In the event that a name is provided that is
ambiguous because of case, if it matches exactly the case of one of the
possible matches, it will be treated unambiguously.
Usage:
my $standardName = $annotationProvider->standardNameByDatabaseId($databaseId);
databaseIdByStandardName
This method returns the database id for a standard name.
NB: API change
databaseIdByStandardName is now case insensitive - that is, if there is
a standard name that is used twice (or more) using different casing, it
will be treated as ambiguous. Previous versions would have not treated
these as ambiguous. This is the price of wanting a case insensitive
annotation provider. In the event that a name is provided that is
ambiguous because of case, if it matches exactly the case of one of the
possible matches, it will be treated unambiguously.
Usage:
my $databaseId = $annotationProvider->databaseIdByStandardName($standardName);
databaseIdByName
This method returns the database id for any identifier for a gene (e.g.
by databaseId itself, by standard name, or by alias). If the used name
is ambiguous, then the program will die. Thus clients should call the
nameIsAmbiguous() method, prior to using this method. If the name does
not map to any databaseId, then undef will be returned.
NB: API change
databaseIdByName is now case insensitive - that is, if there is a name
that is used twice using different casing, that will be treated as
ambiguous. Previous versions would have not treated these as
ambiguous. This is the price of wanting a case insensitive annotation
provider. In the event that a name is provided that is ambiguous
because of case, if it matches exactly the case of one of the possible
matches, it will be treated unambiguously.
Usage:
my $databaseId = $annotationProvider->databaseIdByName($name);
standardNameByName
This public method returns the standard name for the the gene specified
by the given name. Because a name may be ambiguous, the
nameIsAmbiguous() method should be called first. If an ambiguous name
is supplied, then it will die with an appropriate error message. If
the name does not map to a standard name, then undef will be returned.
NB: API change
standardNameByName is now case insensitive - that is, if there is a
name that is used twice using different casing, that will be treated as
ambiguous. Previous versions would have not treated these as
ambiguous. This is the price of wanting a case insensitive annotation
provider.
Usage:
my $standardName = $annotationProvider->standardNameByName($name);
Other methods relating to names
nameIsStandardName
This method returns a boolean to indicate whether the supplied name is
used as a standard name.
NB : API change.
This is now case insensitive. If you provide abC1, and ABc1 is a
standard name, then it will return true.
Usage :
if ($annotationProvider->nameIsStandardName($name)){
# do something
}
nameIsDatabaseId
This method returns a boolean to indicate whether the supplied name is
used as a database id.
NB : API change.
This is now case insensitive. If you provide abC1, and ABc1 is a
database id, then it will return true.
Usage :
if ($annotationProvider->nameIsDatabaseId($name)){
# do something
}
nameIsAnnotated
This method returns a boolean to indicate whether the supplied name has
any annotations, either when considered as a databaseId, a
standardName, or an alias. If an aspect is also supplied, then it
indicates whether that name has any annotations in that aspect only.
NB: API change.
This is now case insensitive. If you provide abC1, and ABc1 has
annotation, then it will return true.
Usage :
if ($annotationProvider->nameIsAnnotated(name => $name)){
# blah
}
or:
if ($annotationProvider->nameIsAnnotated(name => $name,
aspect => $aspect)){
# blah
}
Other public methods
databaseName
This method returns the name of the annotating authority of the
annotations.
Usage :
my $databaseName = $annotationProvider->databaseName;
numAnnotatedGenes
This method returns the number of entities in the annotation file that
have annotations in the supplied aspect. If no aspect is provided,
then it will return the number of genes with an annotation in at least
one aspect of GO.
Usage:
my $numAnnotatedGenes = $annotationProvider->numAnnotatedGenes;
my $numAnnotatedGenes = $annotationProvider->numAnnotatedGenes($aspect);
allDatabaseIds
This public method returns an array of all the database identifiers
Usage:
my @databaseIds = $annotationProvider->allDatabaseIds;
allStandardNames
This public method returns an array of all standard names.
Usage:
my @standardNames = $annotationProvider->allStandardNames;
Protected Methods
_handleMissingArgument
This protected method simply provides a simple way for concrete
subclasses to deal with missing arguments from method calls. It will
die with an appropriate error message.
Usage:
$self->_handleMissingArgument(argument=>'blah');
AUTHOR
Gavin Sherlock, sherlock@genome.stanford.edu
perl v5.14.1 2006-07-27 GO::AnnotationProvider(3)