IMP Manual
for IMP version 2.13.0
|
The IMP library provides tools to implement the computational parts of the integrative modeling iterative process (steps 2-4). IMP is primarily implemented in C++ for speed; however, each of the classes is wrapped so that it can also be used from Python. A protocol can thus be developed from scratch by simply writing a Python script. The examples below will use Python scripts.
Functionality in IMP is grouped into modules, each with its own namespace (in C++) or package (in Python). For example, the functionality for IMP::core can be found like
IMP::core::XYZ(p)
in C++ and
IMP.core.XYZ(p)
in Python.
A module contains classes, methods and data which are related. The top-level "IMP", otherwise known as the IMP kernel, is a small collection of classes that define the storage of information about the system and the main interfaces used to interact with that information. However, in most cases the kernel does not provide actual implementations of these classes; these are provided in other modules. For example, it merely defines a Restraint as any object that, given a set of particles, returns a score, and an Optimizer as an object that changes the attributes of all particles to yield an optimized score over all restraints. It is the core module that provides, for example, a concrete Restraint that acts like a harmonic 'spring' between two point-like particles, an Optimizer that utilizes the conjugate gradients minimization method, and much other functionality.
Other IMP modules provide the basic building blocks needed to construct a protocol, such as the atom module that provides atom-like particles, a molecular dynamics optimizer, etc. Other modules provide support for specific types of experimental data or specialized optimizers, such as the em module that supports electron microscopy data, and the domino module that provides an inference-based divide-and-conquer optimizer. Many other modules are available in this version of IMP.
IMP is designed so that it is easy to add a new module; for example, a developer working on incorporating data from a new experimental technique may add a new IMP module that translates the data from this technique into spatial restraints.
In IMP, the system is represented by the IMP::Model class, which stores a collection of "particles", each of which is a flexible and abstract data container, able to hold whatever information is necessary to represent the system. For example, a given particle may be assigned x, y, and z attributes to store point coordinates, another may be assigned x, y, z, and a radius to represent a sphere, and another may contain two pointers to other particles to represent a bond or another relationship.
In IMP, particle attributes can be numbers, strings, or lists of other particles, among other things. Each particle is identified by an index (IMP::ParticleIndex) and has an associated name, in order to make it easier to understand. Finally, attributes are identified by keys (e.g. IMP::StringKey for string attributes). The key identifies one type of data that may be contained in many particles.
At the most basic, to create particles and manipulate attributes you can do
import IMP model= IMP.Model() particle_0= model.add_particle("my first particle") string_key = IMP.StringKey("my first data") model.add_attribute(string_key, particle_0, "Hi, particle 0") particle_1= model.add_particle("my second particle") model.add_attribute(string_key, particle_1, "Hi, particle 1") print(model.get_attribute(string_key, particle_0))
Certain of the attributes can be marked as parameters of the model. These are attributes that you want to sample or optimize. To do so you can do model.set_is_optimized(float_key, particle_0)
Accessing all your data at such a low level can get tiresome, so we provide decorators to make it easier. Each type of decorator provides an interface to manipulate a particular type of data. For example, an IMP.atom.Residue decorator provides access to residue associated information (e.g. the index of the residue, or its type) in particles that have it.
residue= IMP.atom.Residue(model, my_residue) print(residue.get_residue_type())
Multiple decorators can be applied to a single particle, if appropriate; for example, an atom-like particle could be treated like a point, a sphere, an electrically charged particle, or an atom.
Decorators provide a standard interface to add their data to a particle, decorate a particle that already has the needed data or check if a particle is appropriate to have the decorator used with it.
# add coordinates to a particle decorated_particle = IMP.core.XYZ.setup_particle(model, my_particle, IMP.algebra.Vector3D(1,2,3)) print(decorated_particle.get_coordinates()) # my_other_particle has already been set up, so we can just decorate # it directly another_decorated_particle = IMP.core.XYZ(model, my_other_particle) print(another_decorated_particle.get_coordinates()) # we can change the coordinates too another_decorated_particle.set_coordinates(IMP.algebra.Vector3D(5,4,3))
(Vector3D is a simple IMP class that represents a 3D vector, or point. The IMP::algebra module contains many such general purpose algebraic and geometric methods and classes.)
Decorators can also be used to create relationships between particles. For example, rigid bodies are implemented using the IMP::core::RigidBody decorator. Each rigid body has a collection of other particles that move along with it, each of which is decorated with the IMP::core::RigidMember decorator.
Biological modules are represented hierarchically in IMP using the IMP::atom::Hierarchy. These hierarchies follow the natural hierarchical nature of most biomolecules. A protein from a PDB would be a hierarchy with a root for the whole PDB file with a child per chain. Each chain particle has a child for each residue in the chain, and each residue has a child for each atom. Each particle has various types of associated data. For example an atom has data using the IMP::atom::Atom, IMP::core::XYZR, IMP::atom::Mass and IMP::atom::Hierarchy decorators.
The structures represented do not have to be atomic and can be multi-resolution - that is, they can have coordinates at any level of the hierarchy. The invariants are that the leaves must have coordinates, radii and mass. Pieces of the hierarchy can be picked out using IMP::atom::Selection using the standard sorts of biological criteria:
# Select residues 10 through 49. my_residues= IMP.atom.Selection(my_pdb, residue_indexes=range(10,50)).get_particles()
You can manipulate and maintain collections of particles using IMP::Container. A collection can be anything from a list of particles gathered manually, to all pairs of particles from some list that are closer than a certain distance to one another. For example, to maintain a list of all close pairs of particles you can do
# all particle pairs closer than 3A # it is always good to give things names; that is what the last argument does close_pairs= IMP.container.ClosePairContainer(all_my_particles, 3, "My close pairs")
These containers can then be used to create scoring functions or analyze the data.
Many things such as rigid bodies and lists of all close pairs depend on maintaining some property as the model changes. These properties are maintained by IMP::Constraint objects. Since the invariants may depend on things that are reasonably expensive to compute, these invariants are updated only when requested. This means that if you change the coordinates of some particles, the contents of the close pairs list might be incorrect until it is updated. The required update can be triggered implicitly, for example when some scoring function needs it, or explicitly, when IMP::Model::update() is called.
Behind the scenes, IMP maintains an IMP::DependencyGraph that tracks how information flows between the particles and the containers, based on the constraints. It is used to detect, for example, that a particular particle is part of a rigid body, and so if its coordinates are needed for scoring, the rigid body must be brought up to date and the appropriate constraint must be asked to update the member particle's coordinates. In order to be able to track this information, relevant objects (IMP::ModelObject) have methods IMP::ModelObject::get_inputs() and IMP::ModelObject::get_outputs() that return the things that are read and written respectively.
One then needs to be able to evaluate how well the current configuration of the model fits this data that one is using to model. In addition to scores, when requested derivatives of the total score as a function of each parameter can be computed.
An IMP::Restraint computes a score on some set of particles. For example, a restraint be used to penalize configurations of the model that have collisions
# penalize collisions with a spring constant of 10 kcal/mol/A soft_sphere_pair_score= IMP.core.SoftSpherePairScore(10) my_excluded_volume_restraint= IMP.container.PairsRestraint(soft_sphere_pair_score, close_pairs, "excluded volume")
To get the score of an individual restraint, you can use its IMP::Restraint::get_score() method.
Scoring in IMP is done by creating an IMP::ScoringFunction. A scoring function is simply the sum of its terms (restraints). You can create many different scoring functions for different purposes and each restraint can be part of multiple scoring functions.
my_scoring_function= IMP.core.RestraintsScoringFunction([my_excluded_volume_restraint], "score excluded volume")
It is now time to find configurations of the model that score well with regards to the scoring function you developed. IMP provides a number of tools for that.
An IMP::Optimizer takes the current configuration of the model and perturbs it, typically trying to make it better (but perhaps just into a different configuration following some rule, such as molecular dynamics). They use a scoring function you provide to guide the process.
my_optimizer= IMP.core.ConjugateGradients(m) my_optimizer.set_scoring_function(my_scoring_function) my_optimizer.optimize(1000)
Optionally, you can use an IMP::Sampler, which uses an IMP::Optimizer to produce a set of configurations of the model using some sampling scheme.
Configurations of the model can be saved and visualized in a variety of ways. Atomic structures can be written as PDB files using IMP::atom::write_pdb(). More flexibly, coarse grained models, geometry and information about the scoring function can be written to RMF files.
my_rmf= RMF.create_rmf_file("my.rmf") IMP.rmf.add_hierarchy(my_rmf, my_hierarchy) IMP.rmf.add_restraint(my_rmf, my_excluded_volume_restraint) IMP.rmf.save_frame(my_rmf)
For more information on the various IMP classes and modules, see the Reference Guide.