SBOannotator: a Python tool for the automated assignment of Systems Biology Ontology terms
Developers : Nantia Leonidou & Elisabeth Fritze
The SBOannotator is described in this article: https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btad437
SBOannotator is the first standalone tool that automatically assigns SBO terms to multiple entities of a given SBML model, The main focus lies on the reactions, as the correct assignment of precise SBO annotations requires their extensive classification. Our implementation does not consider only top-level terms but examines the functionality of the underlying enzymes to allocate precise and highly specific ontology terms to biochemical reactions. Transport reactions are examined separately and are classified based on the mechanism of molecule transport. Pseudo-reactions that serve modeling purposes are given reasonable terms to distinguish between biomass production and the import or export of metabolites. Finally, other model entities, such as metabolites and genes, are annotated with appropriate terms. Including SBO annotations in the models will enhance the reproducibility, usability, and analysis of biochemical networks.
Web application hosted at TueVis is accessible and ready to use at sbo-annotator-tuevis.cs.uni-tuebingen.de/
pip install SBOannotator
This tool has the following dependencies:
python >=3.8.5
Packages:
- sqlite3
- libsbml
- collections
- requests
- json
- time
doc
: an SBML documentmodel_libsbml
: SBML model of interestmodelType
: type of modelling framework (see below)database_name
: name of imported database, without extensionnew_filename
: file name for output model
Types of modelling framework accepted:
- constraint-based
- logical
- continuous
- discrete
- hybrid
- logical
model_libsbml
: Annotated libSBML model
To run SBOannotator use the __main__.py
script and modify the parameters in the readSBML
and sbo_annotator
functions as wished.
Alternatively run python __main__.py
in the command line within the project folder.
If ERROR occurs, check the current version of Python:
python --version'
conda install python>=3.8.5
The folder models/BiGG_Models
contains all the tested models as they were downloaded from
the BiGG database.
The annotated models after using the SBOannotator are listed in the folder named models/Annotated_Models
.