| name | gtars |
| description | High-performance toolkit for genomic interval analysis in Rust with Python bindings. Use when working with genomic regions, BED files, coverage tracks, overlap detection, tokenization for ML models, or fragment analysis in computational genomics and machine learning applications. |
| license | Unknown |
| metadata | {"skill-author":"K-Dense Inc."} |
Gtars: Genomic Tools and Algorithms in Rust
Overview
Gtars is a high-performance Rust toolkit for manipulating, analyzing, and processing genomic interval data. It provides specialized tools for overlap detection, coverage analysis, tokenization for machine learning, and reference sequence management.
Use this skill when working with:
- Genomic interval files (BED format)
- Overlap detection between genomic regions
- Coverage track generation (WIG, BigWig)
- Genomic ML preprocessing and tokenization
- Fragment analysis in single-cell genomics
- Reference sequence retrieval and validation
Installation
Python Installation
Install gtars Python bindings:
uv uv pip install gtars
CLI Installation
Install command-line tools (requires Rust/Cargo):
cargo install gtars-cli --features "uniwig overlaprs igd bbcache scoring fragsplit"
cargo install gtars-cli --features "uniwig overlaprs"
Rust Library
Add to Cargo.toml for Rust projects:
[dependencies]
gtars = { version = "0.1", features = ["tokenizers", "overlaprs"] }
Core Capabilities
Gtars is organized into specialized modules, each focused on specific genomic analysis tasks:
1. Overlap Detection and IGD Indexing
Efficiently detect overlaps between genomic intervals using the Integrated Genome Database (IGD) data structure.
When to use:
- Finding overlapping regulatory elements
- Variant annotation
- Comparing ChIP-seq peaks
- Identifying shared genomic features
Quick example:
import gtars
igd = gtars.igd.build_index("regions.bed")
overlaps = igd.query("chr1", 1000, 2000)
See references/overlap.md for comprehensive overlap detection documentation.
2. Coverage Track Generation
Generate coverage tracks from sequencing data with the uniwig module.
When to use:
- ATAC-seq accessibility profiles
- ChIP-seq coverage visualization
- RNA-seq read coverage
- Differential coverage analysis
Quick example:
gtars uniwig generate --input fragments.bed --output coverage.bw --format bigwig
See references/coverage.md for detailed coverage analysis workflows.
3. Genomic Tokenization
Convert genomic regions into discrete tokens for machine learning applications, particularly for deep learning models on genomic data.
When to use:
- Preprocessing for genomic ML models
- Integration with geniml library
- Creating position encodings
- Training transformer models on genomic sequences
Quick example:
from gtars.tokenizers import TreeTokenizer
tokenizer = TreeTokenizer.from_bed_file("training_regions.bed")
token = tokenizer.tokenize("chr1", 1000, 2000)
See references/tokenizers.md for tokenization documentation.
4. Reference Sequence Management
Handle reference genome sequences and compute digests following the GA4GH refget protocol.
When to use:
- Validating reference genome integrity
- Extracting specific genomic sequences
- Computing sequence digests
- Cross-reference comparisons
Quick example:
store = gtars.RefgetStore.from_fasta("hg38.fa")
sequence = store.get_subsequence("chr1", 1000, 2000)
See references/refget.md for reference sequence operations.
5. Fragment Processing
Split and analyze fragment files, particularly useful for single-cell genomics data.
When to use:
- Processing single-cell ATAC-seq data
- Splitting fragments by cell barcodes
- Cluster-based fragment analysis
- Fragment quality control
Quick example:
gtars fragsplit cluster-split --input fragments.tsv --clusters clusters.txt --output-dir ./by_cluster/
See references/cli.md for fragment processing commands.
6. Fragment Scoring
Score fragment overlaps against reference datasets.
When to use:
- Evaluating fragment enrichment
- Comparing experimental data to references
- Quality metrics computation
- Batch scoring across samples
Quick example:
gtars scoring score --fragments fragments.bed --reference reference.bed --output scores.txt
Common Workflows
Workflow 1: Peak Overlap Analysis
Identify overlapping genomic features:
import gtars
peaks = gtars.RegionSet.from_bed("chip_peaks.bed")
promoters = gtars.RegionSet.from_bed("promoters.bed")
overlapping_peaks = peaks.filter_overlapping(promoters)
overlapping_peaks.to_bed("peaks_in_promoters.bed")
Workflow 2: Coverage Track Pipeline
Generate coverage tracks for visualization:
gtars uniwig generate --input atac_fragments.bed --output coverage.wig --resolution 10
gtars uniwig generate --input atac_fragments.bed --output coverage.bw --format bigwig
Workflow 3: ML Preprocessing
Prepare genomic data for machine learning:
from gtars.tokenizers import TreeTokenizer
import gtars
regions = gtars.RegionSet.from_bed("training_peaks.bed")
tokenizer = TreeTokenizer.from_bed_file("training_peaks.bed")
tokens = [tokenizer.tokenize(r.chromosome, r.start, r.end) for r in regions]
Python vs CLI Usage
Use Python API when:
- Integrating with analysis pipelines
- Need programmatic control
- Working with NumPy/Pandas
- Building custom workflows
Use CLI when:
- Quick one-off analyses
- Shell scripting
- Batch processing files
- Prototyping workflows
Reference Documentation
Comprehensive module documentation:
references/python-api.md - Complete Python API reference with RegionSet operations, NumPy integration, and data export
references/overlap.md - IGD indexing, overlap detection, and set operations
references/coverage.md - Coverage track generation with uniwig
references/tokenizers.md - Genomic tokenization for ML applications
references/refget.md - Reference sequence management and digests
references/cli.md - Command-line interface complete reference
Integration with geniml
Gtars serves as the foundation for the geniml Python package, providing core genomic interval operations for machine learning workflows. When working on geniml-related tasks, use gtars for data preprocessing and tokenization.
Performance Characteristics
- Native Rust performance: Fast execution with low memory overhead
- Parallel processing: Multi-threaded operations for large datasets
- Memory efficiency: Streaming and memory-mapped file support
- Zero-copy operations: NumPy integration with minimal data copying
Data Formats
Gtars works with standard genomic formats:
- BED: Genomic intervals (3-column or extended)
- WIG/BigWig: Coverage tracks
- FASTA: Reference sequences
- Fragment TSV: Single-cell fragment files with barcodes
Error Handling and Debugging
Enable verbose logging for troubleshooting:
import gtars
gtars.set_log_level("DEBUG")
gtars --verbose <command>