public/SKILLS/Scientific & Research Tools/pyopenms/SKILL.md
Complete mass spectrometry analysis platform. Use for proteomics workflows feature detection, peptide identification, protein quantification, and complex LC-MS/MS pipelines. Supports extensive file formats and algorithms. Best for proteomics, comprehensive MS data processing. For simple spectral comparison and metabolite ID use matchms.
npx skillsauth add eric861129/skills_all-in-one pyopenmsInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
PyOpenMS provides Python bindings to the OpenMS library for computational mass spectrometry, enabling analysis of proteomics and metabolomics data. Use for handling mass spectrometry file formats, processing spectral data, detecting features, identifying peptides/proteins, and performing quantitative analysis.
Install using uv:
uv uv pip install pyopenms
Verify installation:
import pyopenms
print(pyopenms.__version__)
PyOpenMS organizes functionality into these domains:
Handle mass spectrometry file formats and convert between representations.
Supported formats: mzML, mzXML, TraML, mzTab, FASTA, pepXML, protXML, mzIdentML, featureXML, consensusXML, idXML
Basic file reading:
import pyopenms as ms
# Read mzML file
exp = ms.MSExperiment()
ms.MzMLFile().load("data.mzML", exp)
# Access spectra
for spectrum in exp:
mz, intensity = spectrum.get_peaks()
print(f"Spectrum: {len(mz)} peaks")
For detailed file handling: See references/file_io.md
Process raw spectral data with smoothing, filtering, centroiding, and normalization.
Basic spectrum processing:
# Smooth spectrum with Gaussian filter
gaussian = ms.GaussFilter()
params = gaussian.getParameters()
params.setValue("gaussian_width", 0.1)
gaussian.setParameters(params)
gaussian.filterExperiment(exp)
For algorithm details: See references/signal_processing.md
Detect and link features across spectra and samples for quantitative analysis.
# Detect features
ff = ms.FeatureFinder()
ff.run("centroided", exp, features, params, ms.FeatureMap())
For complete workflows: See references/feature_detection.md
Integrate with search engines and process identification results.
Supported engines: Comet, Mascot, MSGFPlus, XTandem, OMSSA, Myrimatch
Basic identification workflow:
# Load identification data
protein_ids = []
peptide_ids = []
ms.IdXMLFile().load("identifications.idXML", protein_ids, peptide_ids)
# Apply FDR filtering
fdr = ms.FalseDiscoveryRate()
fdr.apply(peptide_ids)
For detailed workflows: See references/identification.md
Perform untargeted metabolomics preprocessing and analysis.
Typical workflow:
For complete metabolomics workflows: See references/metabolomics.md
PyOpenMS uses these primary objects:
For detailed documentation: See references/data_structures.md
import pyopenms as ms
# Load mzML file
exp = ms.MSExperiment()
ms.MzMLFile().load("sample.mzML", exp)
# Get basic statistics
print(f"Number of spectra: {exp.getNrSpectra()}")
print(f"Number of chromatograms: {exp.getNrChromatograms()}")
# Examine first spectrum
spec = exp.getSpectrum(0)
print(f"MS level: {spec.getMSLevel()}")
print(f"Retention time: {spec.getRT()}")
mz, intensity = spec.get_peaks()
print(f"Peaks: {len(mz)}")
Most algorithms use a parameter system:
# Get algorithm parameters
algo = ms.GaussFilter()
params = algo.getParameters()
# View available parameters
for param in params.keys():
print(f"{param}: {params.getValue(param)}")
# Modify parameters
params.setValue("gaussian_width", 0.2)
algo.setParameters(params)
Convert data to pandas DataFrames for analysis:
import pyopenms as ms
import pandas as pd
# Load feature map
fm = ms.FeatureMap()
ms.FeatureXMLFile().load("features.featureXML", fm)
# Convert to DataFrame
df = fm.get_df()
print(df.head())
PyOpenMS integrates with:
references/file_io.md - Comprehensive file format handlingreferences/signal_processing.md - Signal processing algorithmsreferences/feature_detection.md - Feature detection and linkingreferences/identification.md - Peptide and protein identificationreferences/metabolomics.md - Metabolomics-specific workflowsreferences/data_structures.md - Core objects and data structuresdevelopment
Run structured What-If scenario analysis with multi-branch possibility exploration. Use this skill when the user asks speculative questions like "what if...", "what would happen if...", "what are the possibilities", "explore scenarios", "scenario analysis", "possibility space", "what could go wrong", "best case / worst case", "risk analysis", "contingency planning", "strategic options", or any question about uncertain futures. Also trigger when the user faces a fork-in-the-road decision, wants to stress-test an idea, or needs to think through consequences before committing.
development
Access comprehensive LaTeX templates, formatting requirements, and submission guidelines for major scientific publication venues (Nature, Science, PLOS, IEEE, ACM), academic conferences (NeurIPS, ICML, CVPR, CHI), research posters, and grant proposals (NSF, NIH, DOE, DARPA). This skill should be used when preparing manuscripts for journal submission, conference papers, research posters, or grant proposals and need venue-specific formatting requirements and templates.
development
Use when challenging ideas, plans, decisions, or proposals using structured critical reasoning. Invoke to play devil's advocate, run a pre-mortem, red team, or audit evidence and assumptions.
tools
Core skill for the deep research and writing tool. Write scientific manuscripts in full paragraphs (never bullet points). Use two-stage process with (1) section outlines with key points using research-lookup then (2) convert to flowing prose. IMRAD structure, citations (APA/AMA/Vancouver), figures/tables, reporting guidelines (CONSORT/STROBE/PRISMA), for research papers and journal submissions.