Difference between revisions of "BIN-Sequence"
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<b>Outcomes:</b><br /> | <b>Outcomes:</b><br /> | ||
After working through this unit you ... | After working through this unit you ... | ||
− | * can draw the structure formula of all 20 proteinogenic amino acids<ref>''Technically'' there are 21 proteinogenic amino acids, because some proteins contain {{WP|Selenocysteine}} translated from TGA codons. However this is not universal, and thus '''<tt>Sec</tt>''' is as much a proteinogenic amino acid as [https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/images/wallpaper/PIA20291-800x600.jpg Pluto is not a planet]. Technically correct. | + | * can draw the structure formula of all 20 proteinogenic amino acids<ref>''Technically'' there are 21 proteinogenic amino acids, because some proteins contain {{WP|Selenocysteine}} translated from TGA codons. However this is not universal, and thus '''<tt>Sec</tt>''' is as much a proteinogenic amino acid as [https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/images/wallpaper/PIA20291-800x600.jpg Pluto is not a planet]. Technically correct. The memnonic for the <tt>Sec</tt> one-letter code '''U''' is: u as in Pl'''U'''to.</ref> and assign them to categories like "small", "charged" or "hydrophobic"; |
* can identify the coding sequence and frame for a DNA sequence that is labelled as "plus" or "minus"; | * can identify the coding sequence and frame for a DNA sequence that is labelled as "plus" or "minus"; | ||
− | * can | + | * can competently read, analyse and manipulate strings in R; |
* can shuffle sequences (permute them) and create sequences with specific target ditributions of characters, in R. | * can shuffle sequences (permute them) and create sequences with specific target ditributions of characters, in R. | ||
</td> | </td> | ||
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<b>Deliverables:</b><br /> | <b>Deliverables:</b><br /> | ||
<section begin=deliverables /> | <section begin=deliverables /> | ||
− | < | + | <li><b>Time management</b>: Before you begin, estimate how long it will take you to complete this unit. Then, record in your course journal: the number of hours you estimated, the number of hours you worked on the unit, and the amount of time that passed between start and completion of this unit.</li> |
− | + | <li><b>Journal</b>: Document your progress in your [[FND-Journal|Course Journal]]. Some tasks may ask you to include specific items in your journal. Don't overlook these.</li> | |
− | < | + | <li><b>Insights</b>: If you find something particularly noteworthy about this unit, make a note in your [[ABC-Insights|'''insights!''' page]].</li> |
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− | < | ||
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<section end=deliverables /> | <section end=deliverables /> | ||
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<section begin=prerequisites /> | <section begin=prerequisites /> | ||
<b>Prerequisites:</b><br /> | <b>Prerequisites:</b><br /> | ||
− | + | You need the following preparation before beginning this unit. If you are not familiar with this material from courses you took previously, you need to prepare yourself from other information sources:<br /> | |
− | You need the following preparation before beginning this unit. If you are not familiar with this material from courses you took previously, you need to prepare yourself from other information sources: | ||
− | < | ||
*<b>Biomolecules</b>: The molecules of life; nucleic acids and amino acids; the genetic code; protein folding; post-translational modifications and protein biochemistry; membrane proteins; biological function. | *<b>Biomolecules</b>: The molecules of life; nucleic acids and amino acids; the genetic code; protein folding; post-translational modifications and protein biochemistry; membrane proteins; biological function. | ||
− | + | This unit builds on material covered in the following prerequisite units:<br /> | |
− | This unit builds on material covered in the following prerequisite units: | ||
*You are expected to know the names, structures and (bio)chemical properties of the 20 proteinogenic amino acids; | *You are expected to know the names, structures and (bio)chemical properties of the 20 proteinogenic amino acids; | ||
*[[BIN-Abstractions|BIN-Abstractions (Abstractions for Bioinformatics)]] | *[[BIN-Abstractions|BIN-Abstractions (Abstractions for Bioinformatics)]] | ||
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+ | === Evaluation === | ||
+ | <b>Evaluation: NA</b><br /> | ||
+ | <div style="margin-left: 2rem;">This unit is not evaluated for course marks.</div> | ||
== Contents == | == Contents == | ||
− | |||
{{Task|1= | {{Task|1= | ||
*Read the introductory notes on {{ABC-PDF|BIN-Sequence|the concept of biomolecular "sequence"}}. | *Read the introductory notes on {{ABC-PDF|BIN-Sequence|the concept of biomolecular "sequence"}}. | ||
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{{ABC-unit|BIN-Sequence.R}} | {{ABC-unit|BIN-Sequence.R}} | ||
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== Further reading, links and resources == | == Further reading, links and resources == | ||
<!-- {{#pmid: 19957275}} --> | <!-- {{#pmid: 19957275}} --> | ||
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<div class="reference-box">[https://github.com/tidyverse/stringr Introduction to the <tt>'''stringr'''</tt> package]</div> | <div class="reference-box">[https://github.com/tidyverse/stringr Introduction to the <tt>'''stringr'''</tt> package]</div> | ||
+ | == Notes == | ||
+ | <references /> | ||
{{Vspace}} | {{Vspace}} | ||
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<div class="about"> | <div class="about"> | ||
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:2017-08-05 | :2017-08-05 | ||
<b>Modified:</b><br /> | <b>Modified:</b><br /> | ||
− | : | + | :2020-09-23 |
<b>Version:</b><br /> | <b>Version:</b><br /> | ||
− | :1. | + | :1.1 |
<b>Version history:</b><br /> | <b>Version history:</b><br /> | ||
+ | *1.1 2020 Updates | ||
*1.0 First live version | *1.0 First live version | ||
*0.1 First stub | *0.1 First stub | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
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{{CC-BY}} | {{CC-BY}} | ||
+ | [[Category:ABC-units]] | ||
+ | {{UNIT}} | ||
+ | {{LIVE}} | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
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Latest revision as of 13:22, 23 September 2020
Sequence
(The 20 amino acids and the one-letter code)
Abstract:
Sequence is the most fundamental concept to abstract biomolecules for computational purposes. In this unit we discuss some of the implications and conventions, and explore handling and processing character vectors and strings in R.
Objectives:
|
Outcomes:
|
Deliverables:
Prerequisites:
You need the following preparation before beginning this unit. If you are not familiar with this material from courses you took previously, you need to prepare yourself from other information sources:
- Biomolecules: The molecules of life; nucleic acids and amino acids; the genetic code; protein folding; post-translational modifications and protein biochemistry; membrane proteins; biological function.
This unit builds on material covered in the following prerequisite units:
- You are expected to know the names, structures and (bio)chemical properties of the 20 proteinogenic amino acids;
- BIN-Abstractions (Abstractions for Bioinformatics)
- FND-Genetic_code (Genetic Code)
Evaluation
Evaluation: NA
Contents
Task:
- Read the introductory notes on the concept of biomolecular "sequence".
Task:
- Open RStudio and load the
ABC-units
R project. If you have loaded it before, choose File → Recent projects → ABC-Units. If you have not loaded it before, follow the instructions in the RPR-Introduction unit. - Choose Tools → Version Control → Pull Branches to fetch the most recent version of the project from its GitHub repository with all changes and bug fixes included.
- Type
init()
if requested. - Open the file
BIN-Sequence.R
and follow the instructions.
Note: take care that you understand all of the code in the script. Evaluation in this course is cumulative and you may be asked to explain any part of code.
Self-evaluation
Further reading, links and resources
Notes
- ↑ Technically there are 21 proteinogenic amino acids, because some proteins contain Selenocysteine translated from TGA codons. However this is not universal, and thus Sec is as much a proteinogenic amino acid as Pluto is not a planet. Technically correct. The memnonic for the Sec one-letter code U is: u as in PlUto.
About ...
Author:
- Boris Steipe <boris.steipe@utoronto.ca>
Created:
- 2017-08-05
Modified:
- 2020-09-23
Version:
- 1.1
Version history:
- 1.1 2020 Updates
- 1.0 First live version
- 0.1 First stub
This copyrighted material is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Follow the link to learn more.