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A Library for Deisotoping and Charge State Deconvolution For Mass Spectrometry

This library combines brainpy and ms_peak_picker to build a toolkit for MS and MS/MS data. The goal of these libraries is to provide pieces of the puzzle for evaluating MS data modularly. The goal of this library is to combine the modules to streamline processing raw data.

Installing

Building from source requires a version of Cython >= 0.27.0

API

Data Access

ms_deisotope can read from mzML, mzXML and MGF files directly, using the pyteomics library. On Windows, it can also use comtypes to access Thermo's MSFileReader.dll to read RAW files and Agilent's MassSpecDataReader.dll to read .d directories. Whenever possible, the library provides a common interface to all supported formats. With Thermo's pure .NET library, it can use pythonnet to read Thermo RAW files on Windows and Linux (and presumably Mac, too).

from ms_deisotope import MSFileReader
from ms_deisotope.data_source import mzxml

# open a file, selecting the appropriate reader automatically
reader = MSFileReader("path/to/data.mzML")

# or specify the reader type directly
reader = mzxml.MzXMLLoader("path/to/data.mzXML")

All supported readers provide fast random access for uncompressed files, and support the Iterator interface.

# jump the iterator to the MS1 scan nearest to 30 minutes into the run
reader.start_from_scan(rt=30)

# read out the next MS1 scans and all associated MSn scans
scan_bunch = next(reader)
print(scan_bunch.precursor, len(scan_bunch.products))

Averagine

An "Averagine" model is used to describe the composition of an "average amino acid", which can then be used to approximate the composition and isotopic abundance of a combination of specific amino acids. Given that often the only solution available is to guess at the composition of a particular m/z because there are too many possible elemental compositions, this is the only tractable solution.

This library supports arbitrary Averagine formulae, but the Senko Averagine is provided by default: {"C": 4.9384, "H": 7.7583, "N": 1.3577, "O": 1.4773, "S": 0.0417}

from ms_deisotope import Averagine
from ms_deisotope import plot

peptide_averagine = Averagine({"C": 4.9384, "H": 7.7583, "N": 1.3577, "O": 1.4773, "S": 0.0417})

plot.draw_peaklist(peptide_averagine.isotopic_cluster(1266.321, charge=1))
ms_deisotope includes several pre-defined averagines (or "averagoses" as may be more appropriate):
  1. Senko's peptide - ms_deisotope.peptide
  2. Native N- and O-glycan - ms_deisotope.glycan
  3. Permethylated glycan - ms_deisotope.permethylated_glycan
  4. Glycopeptide - ms_deisotope.glycopeptide
  5. Sulfated Glycosaminoglycan - ms_deisotope.heparan_sulfate
  6. Unsulfated Glycosaminoglycan - ms_deisotope.heparin

Deconvolution

The general-purpose averagine-based deconvolution procedure can be called by using the high level API function deconvolute_peaks, which takes a sequence of peaks, an averagine model, and a isotopic goodness-of-fit scorer:

import ms_deisotope

deconvoluted_peaks, _ = ms_deisotope.deconvolute_peaks(peaks, averagine=ms_deisotope.peptide,
                                                       scorer=ms_deisotope.MSDeconVFitter(10.))

The result is a deisotoped and charge state deconvoluted peak list where each peak's neutral mass is known and the fitted charge state is recorded along with the isotopic peaks that gave rise to the fit.

Refer to the documentation for a deeper description of isotopic pattern fitting.