Book Image

Bioinformatics with Python Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Tiago Antao
Book Image

Bioinformatics with Python Cookbook - Third Edition

By: Tiago Antao

Overview of this book

Bioinformatics is an active research field that uses a range of simple-to-advanced computations to extract valuable information from biological data, and this book will show you how to manage these tasks using Python. This updated third edition of the Bioinformatics with Python Cookbook begins with a quick overview of the various tools and libraries in the Python ecosystem that will help you convert, analyze, and visualize biological datasets. Next, you'll cover key techniques for next-generation sequencing, single-cell analysis, genomics, metagenomics, population genetics, phylogenetics, and proteomics with the help of real-world examples. You'll learn how to work with important pipeline systems, such as Galaxy servers and Snakemake, and understand the various modules in Python for functional and asynchronous programming. This book will also help you explore topics such as SNP discovery using statistical approaches under high-performance computing frameworks, including Dask and Spark. In addition to this, you’ll explore the application of machine learning algorithms in bioinformatics. By the end of this bioinformatics Python book, you'll be equipped with the knowledge you need to implement the latest programming techniques and frameworks, empowering you to deal with bioinformatics data on every scale.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Working with high-quality reference genomes

In this recipe, you will learn about a few general techniques to manipulate reference genomes. As an illustrative example, we will study the GC content – the fraction of the genome that is based on guanine-cytosine in Plasmodium falciparum, the most important parasite species that causes malaria. Reference genomes are normally made available as FASTA files.

Getting ready

Organism genomes come in widely different sizes, ranging from viruses such as HIV, which is 9.7 kbp, to bacteria such as E. coli, to protozoans such as Plasmodium falciparum, which has a 22 Mbp spread across 14 chromosomes, mitochondrion, and apicoplast, to the fruit fly with three autosomes, a mitochondrion, and X/Y sex chromosomes, to humans with their three Gbp pairs spread across 22 autosomes, X/Y chromosomes, and mitochondria, all the way up to Paris japonica, a plant with 150 Gbp of the genome. Along the way, you have different ploidy and sex chromosome...