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A tool to convert IUPAC representations of glycans into SMILES strings.

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GlyLES

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A tool to convert IUPAC representation of Glycans into SMILES representation. This repo is still in the development phase; so, feel free to report any errors or issues. The code is available on github and the documentation can be found on ReadTheDocs.

Specification and (current) Limitations

The exact specification we're referring to when talking about "IUPAC representations of glycan" or "IUPAC-condensed", is given in the "Notes" section of this website. But as this package is still in the development phase, not everything of the specification is implemented yet (especially not all side chains you can attach to monomers). The structure of the glycan can be represented as a tree of the monosaccharides with maximal branching factor 4, i.e., each monomer in the glycan has at most 4 children.

Installation

So far, this package can only be downloaded from the python package index. So the installation with pip is very easy. Just type

pip install glyles

and you're ready to use it as described below. Use

pip install --upgrade glyles

to upgrade the glyles package to the most recent version.

Basic Usage

As a Python Package

Convert the IUPAC into a SMILES representation using the handy convert method

from glyles import convert

convert(glycan="Man(a1-2)Man", output_file="./test.txt")

You can also use the convert_generator method to get a generator for all SMILES:

from glyles import convert_generator

for smiles in convert_generator(glycan_list=["Man(a1-2)Man a", "Man(a1-2)Man b"]):
    print(smiles)

For more examples of how to use this package, please see the notebooks in the examples folder and checkout the documentation on ReadTheDocs.

In the Commandline

As of version 0.5.9, there is a commandline interface to GlyLES which is automatically installed when installing GlyLES through pip. The CLI is open for one or multiple IUPAC inputs as individual arguments. Due to the syntax of the IUPAC-condensed notation and the argument parsing in commandlines, the IUPAC strings must be given in quotes.

glyles -i "Man(a1-2)Man" -o test_output.txt
glyles -i "Man(a1-2)Man" "Fuc(a1-6)Glc" -o test_output.txt

File-input is also possible.

glyles -i input_file.txt -o test_output.txt

Providing multiple files and IUPAC-condensed names is als supported.

glyles -i input_file1.txt "Man(a1-2)Man" input_file2.txt input_file13.txt "Fuc(a1-6)Glc" -o test_output.txt

Notation of glycans

There are multiple different notations for glycans in IUPAC. So, according to the SNGF specification, Man(a1-4)Gal, Mana1-4Gal, and Mana4Gal all describe the same disaccharide. This is also covered in this package as all three notations will be parsed into the same tree of monosaccharides and result in the same SMILES string.

This is also described more detailed in a section on ReadTheDocs.

Poetry

To develop this package, we use the poetry package manager (see here for detailed instruction). It has basically the same functionality as conda but supports the package management better and also supports distinguishing packages into those that are needed to use the package and those that are needed in the development of the package. To enable others to work on this repository, we also publish the exact specifications of our poetry environment.

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A tool to convert IUPAC representations of glycans into SMILES strings.

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