.\" Process this file with .\" groff -man -Tascii bam-rmdup.1 .\" .TH MT-ANNO 1 "JANUARY 2014" Applications "User Manuals" .SH NAME mt-anno \- annotate a .IR human (!) mitochondrion .SH SYNOPSIS .B mt-anno < .I junk.fa > .I crap.txt .SH DESCRIPTION .B mt-anno reads a set of .IR human (!) mitochondrial sequences in fasta format from stdin and for each of them writes a Genbank formatted annotation and the set of coded protein sequences in fasta format to stdout. The annotation is built in and applied blindly. This is a .IR "very stupid" ", " "very useless" " and " "very wasteful" thing to do, but biologists have been asking for it repeatedly. .B DO NOT USE this tool if you like to think of yourself as a scientist! .SH OPTIONS .B mt-anno comes without options and is not customizable. If you think any options or any further documentation might be useful, you are confused. Actually, if you want to use it at all, you are confused. .SH BUGS All .B mt-anno does is take the "official" annotation of rCRS and translate its coordinates. If after translation the annotation doesn't make sense anymore, there is no warning. If translated proteins lost their start codon or gained a stop codon, there is no warning. If there is a frame shift mutation, there is no warning. Arguable, the whole idea of .B mt-anno is one big bug, but it's considered unfixable. .SH AUTHOR Udo Stenzel .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR biohazard (7), fasta (5)