NAME¶
cmsearch - search covariance model(s) against a sequence database
SYNOPSIS¶
cmsearch [options] <cmfile> <seqdb>
DESCRIPTION¶
cmsearch is used to search one or more covariance models (CMs) against a
  sequence database. For each CM in 
<cmfile>, use that query CM to
  search the target database of sequences in 
<seqdb>, and output
  ranked lists of the sequences with the most significant matches to the CM. To
  build CMs from multiple alignments, see 
cmbuild.
The query 
<cmfile> must have been calibrated for E-values with
  
cmcalibrate. As a special exception, any models in
  
<cmfile> that have zero basepairs need not be calibrated. For
  these models, profile HMM search algorithms will be used instead of CM ones,
  as discussed further below.
The query 
<cmfile> may be '-' (a dash character), in which case the
  query CM input will be read from a <stdin> pipe instead of from a file.
  The 
<seqdb> may not be '-' because the current implementation
  needs to be able to rewind the database, which is not possible with
  
stdin input.
The output format is designed to be human-readable, but is often so voluminous
  that reading it is impractical, and parsing it is a pain. The 
--tblout
  option saves output in a simple tabular format that is concise and easier to
  parse. The 
-o option allows redirecting the main output, including
  throwing it away in /dev/null.
cmsearch reexamines the 5' and 3' termini of target sequences using
  specialized algorithms for detection of 
truncated hits, in which part
  of the 5' and/or 3' end of the actual full length homologous sequence is
  missing in the target sequence file. These types of hits will be most common
  in sequence files consisting of unassembled sequencing reads. By default, any
  5' truncated hit is required to include the first residue of the target
  sequence it derives from in 
<seqdb>, and any 3' truncated hit is
  required to include the final residue of the target sequence it derives from.
  Any 5' and 3' truncated hit must include the first and final residue of the
  target sequence it derives from. The 
--anytrunc option will relax the
  requirements for hit inclusion of sequence endpoints, and truncated hits are
  allowed to start and stop at any positions of target sequences. Importantly
  though, with 
--anytrunc, hit E-values will be less accurate because
  model calibration does not consider the possibility of truncated hits, so use
  it with caution. The 
--notrunc option can be used to turn off truncated
  hit detection. 
--notrunc will reduce the running time of
  
cmsearch, most significantly for target 
<seqdb> files that
  include many short sequences.
Truncated hit detection is automatically turned off when the 
--max,
  --nohmm, --qdb, or 
--nonbanded options are used because
  it relies on the use of an accelerated HMM banded alignment strategy that is
  turned off by any of those options.
OPTIONS¶
  - -h
 
  - Help; print a brief reminder of command line usage and all available
      options.
    
  
 
  - -g
 
  - Turn on the glocal alignment algorithm, global with respect to the
      query model and local with respect to the target database. By default, the
      local alignment algorithm is used which is local with respect to both the
      target sequence and the model. In local mode, the alignment to span two or
      more subsequences if necessary (e.g. if the structures of the query model
      and target sequence are only partially shared), allowing certain large
      insertions and deletions in the structure to be penalized differently than
      normal indels. Local mode performs better on empirical benchmarks and is
      significantly more sensitive for remote homology detection. Empirically,
      glocal searches return many fewer hits than local searches, so glocal may
      be desired for some applications. With -g, all models must be
      calibrated, even those with zero basepairs.
    
  
 
  - -Z <x>
 
  - Calculate E-values as if the search space size was <x>
      megabases (Mb). Without the use of this option, the search space size is
      defined as the total number of nucleotides in <seqdb> times
      2, because both strands of each target sequence will be searched.
    
  
 
  - --devhelp
 
  - Print help, as with -h , but also include expert options that are
      not displayed with -h . These expert options are not expected to be
      relevant for the vast majority of users and so are not described in the
      manual page. The only resources for understanding what they actually do
      are the brief one-line descriptions output when --devhelp is
      enabled, and the source code.
    
  
 
OPTIONS FOR CONTROLLING OUTPUT¶
  - -o <f>
 
  - Direct the main human-readable output to a file <f> instead
      of the default stdout.
    
  
 
  - -A <f>
 
  - Save a multiple alignment of all significant hits (those satisfying
      inclusion thresholds) to the file <f>.
    
  
 
  - --tblout <f>
 
  - Save a simple tabular (space-delimited) file summarizing the hits found,
      with one data line per hit. The format of this file is described in the
      Infernal user guide.
    
  
 
  - --acc
 
  - Use accessions instead of names in the main output, where available for
      profiles and/or sequences.
    
  
 
  - --noali
 
  - Omit the alignment section from the main output. This can greatly reduce
      the output volume.
    
  
 
  - --notextw
 
  - Unlimit the length of each line in the main output. The default is a limit
      of 120 characters per line, which helps in displaying the output cleanly
      on terminals and in editors, but can truncate target profile description
      lines.
    
  
 
  - --textw <n>
 
  - Set the main output's line length limit to <n> characters per
      line. The default is 120.
    
  
 
  - --verbose
 
  - Include extra search pipeline statistics in the main output, including
      filter survival statistics for truncated hit detection and number of
      envelopes discarded due to matrix size overflows.
    
  
 
OPTIONS CONTROLLING REPORTING THRESHOLDS¶
Reporting thresholds control which hits are reported in output files (the main
  output and 
--tblout) Hits are ranked by statistical significance
  (E-value). By default, all hits with an E-value <= 10 are reported. The
  following options allow you to change the default E-value reporting
  thresholds, or to use bit score thresholds instead.
  - -E <x>
 
  - In the per-target output, report target sequences with an E-value of <=
      <x>. The default is 10.0, meaning that on average, about 10
      false positives will be reported per query, so you can see the top of the
      noise and decide for yourself if it's really noise.
    
  
 
  - -T <x>
 
  - Instead of thresholding per-CM output on E-value, report target sequences
      with a bit score of >= <x>.
    
    
  
 
OPTIONS FOR INCLUSION THRESHOLDS¶
Inclusion thresholds are stricter than reporting thresholds. Inclusion
  thresholds control which hits are considered to be reliable enough to be
  included in an output alignment or in a possible subsequent search round, or
  marked as significant ("!") as opposed to questionable
  ("?") in hit output.
  - --incE <x>
 
  - Use an E-value of <= <x> as the hit inclusion threshold.
      The default is 0.01, meaning that on average, about 1 false positive would
      be expected in every 100 searches with different query sequences.
    
  
 
  - --incT <x>
 
  - Instead of using E-values for setting the inclusion threshold, instead use
      a bit score of >= <x> as the hit inclusion threshold. By
      default this option is unset.
    
  
 
OPTIONS FOR MODEL-SPECIFIC SCORE THRESHOLDING¶
Curated CM databases may define specific bit score thresholds for each CM,
  superseding any thresholding based on statistical significance alone.
To use these options, the profile must contain the appropriate (GA, TC, and/or
  NC) optional score threshold annotation; this is picked up by 
cmbuild
  from Stockholm format alignment files. Each thresholding option has a score of
  
<x> bits, and acts as if 
-T <x>
  --incT <x> has been applied specifically using each
  model's curated thresholds.
  - --cut_ga
 
  - Use the GA (gathering) bit scores in the model to set hit reporting and
      inclusion thresholds. GA thresholds are generally considered to be the
      reliable curated thresholds defining family membership; for example, in
      Rfam, these thresholds define what gets included in Rfam Full alignments
      based on searches with Rfam Seed models.
    
  
 
  - --cut_nc
 
  - Use the NC (noise cutoff) bit score thresholds in the model to set hit
      reporting and inclusion thresholds. NC thresholds are generally considered
      to be the score of the highest-scoring known false positive.
    
  
 
  - --cut_tc
 
  - Use the TC (trusted cutoff) bit score thresholds in the model to set hit
      reporting and inclusion thresholds. TC thresholds are generally considered
      to be the score of the lowest-scoring known true positive that is above
      all known false positives.
    
  
 
OPTIONS CONTROLLING THE ACCELERATION PIPELINE¶
Infernal 1.1 searches are accelerated in a six-stage filter pipeline. The first
  five stages use a profile HMM to define envelopes that are passed to the stage
  six CM CYK filter. Any envelopes that survive all filters are assigned final
  scores using the the CM Inside algorithm. (See the user guide for more
  information.)
The profile HMM filter is built by the 
cmbuild program and is stored in
  
<cmfile>.
Each successive filter is slower than the previous one, but better than it at
  disciminating between subsequences that may contain high-scoring CM hits and
  those that do not. The first three HMM filter stages are the same as those
  used in HMMER3. Stage 1 (F1) is the local HMM SSV filter modified for long
  sequences. Stage 2 (F2) is the local HMM Viterbi filter. Stage 3 (F3) is the
  local HMM Forward filter. Each of the first three stages uses the profile HMM
  in local mode, which allows a target subsequence to align to any region of the
  HMM. Stage 4 (F4) is a glocal HMM filter, which requires a target subsequence
  to align to the full-length profile HMM. Stage 5 (F5) is the glocal HMM
  envelope definition filter, which uses HMMER3's domain identification
  heursitics to define envelope boundaries. After each stage from 2 to 5 a bias
  filter step (F2b, F3b, F4b, and F5b) is used to remove sequences that appear
  to have passed the filter due to biased composition alone. Any envelopes that
  survive stages F1 through F5b are then passed with the local CM CYK filter.
  The CYK filter uses constraints (bands) derived from an HMM alignment of the
  envelope to reduce the number of required calculations and save time. Any
  envelopes that pass CYK are scored with the local CM Inside algorithm, again
  using HMM bands for acceleration.
The default filter thresholds that define the minimum score required for a
  subsequence to survive each stage are defined based on the size of the
  database in 
<seqdb> (or the size 
<x> in megabases
  (Mb) specified by the 
-Z <x> or 
--FZ
  <x> options). For larger databases, the filters are more strict
  leading to more acceleration but potentially a greater loss of sensitivity.
  The rationale is that for larger databases, hits must have higher scores to
  achieve statistical significance, so stricter filtering that removes lower
  scoring insignificant hits is acceptable.
The P-value thresholds for all possible search space sizes and all filter stages
  are listed next. (A P-value threshold of 0.01 means that roughly 1% of the
  highest scoring nonhomologous subsequence are expected to pass the filter.) Z
  is defined as the number of nucleotides in the complete target sequence file
  times 2 because both strands will be searched with each model.
If Z is less than 2 Mb: F1 is 0.35; F2 and F2b are off; F3, F3b, F4, F4b and F5
  are 0.02; F6 is 0.0001.
If Z is between 2 Mb and 20 Mb: F1 is 0.35; F2 and F2b are off; F3, F3b, F4, F4b
  and F5 are 0.005; F6 is 0.0001.
If Z is between 20 Mb and 200 Mb: F1 is 0.35; F2 and F2b are 0.15; F3, F3b, F4,
  F4b and F5 are 0.003; F6 is 0.0001.
If Z is between 200 Mb and 2 Gb: F1 is 0.15; F2 and F2b are 0.15; F3, F3b, F4,
  F4b, F5, and F5b are 0.0008; and F6 is 0.0001.
If Z is between 2 Gb and 20 Gb: F1 is 0.15; F2 and F2b are 0.15; F3, F3b, F4,
  F4b, F5, and F5b are 0.0002; and F6 is 0.0001.
If Z is more than 20 Gb: F1 is 0.06; F2 and F2b are 0.02; F3, F3b, F4, F4b, F5,
  and F5b are 0.0002; and F6 is 0.0001.
These thresholds were chosen based on performance on an internal benchmark
  testing many different possible settings.
There are five options for controlling the general filtering level. These
  options are, in order from least strict (slowest but most sensitive) to most
  strict (fastest but least sensitive): 
--max, --nohmm,
  --mid, --default, (this is the default setting), 
--rfam.
  and 
--hmmonly. With 
--default the filter thresholds will be
  database-size dependent. See the explanation of each of these individual
  options below for more information.
Additionally, an expert user can precisely control each filter stage score
  threshold with the 
--F1, --F1b, --F2, --F2b,
  --F3, --F3b, --F4, --F4b, --F5,
  --F5b, and 
--F6 options. As well as turn each stage on or off
  with the 
--noF1, --doF1b, --noF2, --noF2b,
  --noF3, --noF3b, --noF4, --noF4b, --noF5,
  and 
--noF6. options. These options are only displayed if the
  
--devhelp option is used to keep the number of displayed options with
  
-h reasonable, and because they are only expected to be useful to a
  small minority of users.
As a special case, for any models in 
<cmfile> which have zero
  basepairs, profile HMM searches are run instead of CM searches. HMM algorithms
  are more efficient than CM algorithms, and the benefit of CM algorithms is
  lost for models with no secondary structure (zero basepairs). These profile
  HMM searches will run significantly faster than the CM searches. You can force
  HMM-only searches with the 
--hmmonly option. For more information on
  HMM-only searches see the description of the 
--hmmonly option below,
  and the user guide.
  - --max
 
  - Turn off all filters, and run non-banded Inside on every full-length
      target sequence. This increases sensitivity somewhat, at an extremely
      large cost in speed.
    
  
 
  - --nohmm
 
  - Turn off all HMM filter stages (F1 through F5b). The CYK filter, using
      QDBs, will be run on every full-length target sequence and will enforce a
      P-value threshold of 0.0001. Each subsequence that survives CYK will be
      passed to Inside, which will also use QDBs (but a looser set). This
      increases sensitivity somewhat, at a very large cost in speed.
    
  
 
  - --mid
 
  - Turn off the HMM SSV and Viterbi filter stages (F1 through F2b). Set
      remaining HMM filter thresholds (F3 through F5b) to 0.02 by default, but
      changeable to <x> with --Fmid <x>
      sequence. This may increase sensitivity, at a significant cost in speed.
    
  
 
  - --default
 
  - Use the default filtering strategy. This option is on by default. The
      filter thresholds are determined based on the database size.
    
  
 
  - --rfam
 
  - Use a strict filtering strategy devised for large databases (more than 20
      Gb). This will accelerate the search at a potential cost to sensitivity.
      It will have no effect if the database is larger than 20 Gb.
    
  
 
  - --hmmonly
 
  - Only use the filter profile HMM for searches, do not use the CM. Only
      filter stages F1 through F3 will be executed, using strict P-value
      thresholds (0.02 for F1, 0.001 for F2 and 0.00001 for F3). Additionally a
      bias composition filter is used after the F1 stage (with P=0.02 survival
      threshold). Any hit that survives all stages and has an HMM E-value or bit
      score above the reporting threshold will be output. The user can change
      the HMM-only filter thresholds and options with --hmmF1,
      --hmmF2, --hmmF3, --hmmnobias, --hmmnonull2,
      and --hmmmax. By default, searches for any model with zero
      basepairs will be run in HMM-only mode. This can be turned off, forcing CM
      searches for these models with the --nohmmonly option. These
      options are only displayed if the --devhelp option is used.
    
  
 
  - --FZ <x>
 
  - Set filter thresholds as the defaults used if the database were
      <x> megabases (Mb). If used with <x> greater
      than 20000 (20 Gb) this option has the same effect as --rfam.
    
    
  
 
  - --Fmid <x>
 
  - With the --mid option set the HMM filter thresholds (F3 through
      F5b) to <x>. By default, <x> is 0.02.
    
  
 
OTHER OPTIONS¶
  - --notrunc
 
  - Turn off truncated hit detection.
    
  
 
  - --anytrunc
 
  - Allow truncated hits to begin and end at any position in a target
      sequence. By default, 5' truncated hits must include the first residue of
      their target sequence and 3' truncated hits must include the final residue
      of their target sequence. With this option you may observe fewer full
      length hits that extend to the beginning and end of the query CM.
    
  
 
  - --nonull3
 
  - Turn off the null3 CM score corrections for biased composition. This
      correction is not used during the HMM filter stages.
    
  
 
  - --mxsize <x>
 
  - Set the maximum allowable CM DP matrix size to <x> megabytes.
      By default this size is 128 Mb. This should be large enough for the vast
      majority of searches, especially with smaller models. If cmsearch
      encounters an envelope in the CYK or Inside stage that requires a larger
      matrix, the envelope will be discounted from consideration. This behavior
      is like an additional filter that prevents expensive (slow) CM DP
      calculations, but at a potential cost to sensitivity. Note that if
      cmsearch is being run in <n> multiple threads on a
      multicore machine then each thread may have an allocated matrix of up to
      size <x> Mb at any given time.
    
  
 
  - --smxsize <x>
 
  - Set the maximum allowable CM search DP matrix size to <x>
      megabytes. By default this size is 128 Mb. This option is only relevant if
      the CM will not use HMM banded matrices, i.e. if the --max,
      --nohmm, --qdb, --fqdb, --nonbanded, or
      --fnonbanded options are also used. Note that if cmsearch is
      being run in <n> multiple threads on a multicore machine then
      each thread may have an allocated matrix of up to size <x> Mb
      at any given time.
    
  
 
  - --cyk
 
  - Use the CYK algorithm, not Inside, to determine the final score of all
      hits.
    
  
 
  - --acyk
 
  - Use the CYK algorithm to align hits. By default, the Durbin/Holmes optimal
      accuracy algorithm is used, which finds the alignment that maximizes the
      expected accuracy of all aligned residues.
    
  
 
  - --wcx <x>
 
  - For each CM, set the W parameter, the expected maximum length of a hit, to
      <x> times the consensus length of the model. By default, the
      W parameter is read from the CM file and was calculated based on the
      transition probabilities of the model by cmbuild. You can find out
      what the default W is for a model using cmstat. This option should
      be used with caution as it impacts the filtering pipeline at several
      different stages in nonobvious ways. It is only recommended for expert
      users searching for hits that are much longer than any of the homologs
      used to build the model in cmbuild, e.g. ones with large introns or
      other large insertions. This option cannot be used in combination with the
      --nohmm, --fqdb or --qdb options because in those
      cases W is limited by query-dependent bands.
    
  
 
  - --toponly
 
  - Only search the top (Watson) strand of target sequences in
      <seqdb>. By default, both strands are searched. This will
      halve the database size (Z).
    
  
 
  - --bottomonly
 
  - Only search the bottom (Crick) strand of target sequences in
      <seqdb>. By default, both strands are searched. This will
      halve the database size (Z).
    
  
 
  - --tformat <s>
 
  - Assert that the target sequence database file is in format
      <s>. Accepted formats include fasta, embl,
      genbank, ddbj, stockholm, pfam, a2m,
      afa, clustal, and phylip The default is to autodetect
      the format of the file.
    
  
 
  - --cpu <n>
 
  - Set the number of parallel worker threads to <n>. By default,
      Infernal sets this to the number of CPU cores it detects in your machine -
      that is, it tries to maximize the use of your available processor cores.
      Setting <n> higher than the number of available cores is of
      little if any value, but you may want to set it to something less. You can
      also control this number by setting an environment variable,
      INFERNAL_NCPU. This option is only available if Infernal was
      compiled with POSIX threads support. This is the default, but it may have
      been turned off at compile-time for your site or machine for some reason.
    
  
 
  - --stall
 
  - For debugging the MPI master/worker version: pause after start, to enable
      the developer to attach debuggers to the running master and worker(s)
      processes. Send SIGCONT signal to release the pause. (Under gdb: (gdb)
      signal SIGCONT) (Only available if optional MPI support was enabled at
      compile-time.)
    
  
 
  - --mpi
 
  - Run in MPI master/worker mode, using mpirun. To use --mpi,
      the sequence file must have first been 'indexed' using the
      esl-sfetch program, which is included with Infernal, in the
      easel/miniapps/ subdirectory. (Only available if optional MPI
      support was enabled at compile-time.)
    
  
 
SEE ALSO¶
See 
infernal(1) for a master man page with a list of all the individual
  man pages for programs in the Infernal package.
For complete documentation, see the user guide that came with your Infernal
  distribution (Userguide.pdf); or see the Infernal web page ().
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 2014 Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Freely distributed under the GNU General Public License (GPLv3).
For additional information on copyright and licensing, see the file called
  COPYRIGHT in your Infernal source distribution, or see the Infernal web page
  ().
AUTHOR¶
The Eddy/Rivas Laboratory
Janelia Farm Research Campus
19700 Helix Drive
Ashburn VA 20147 USA
http://eddylab.org