11.2.1. Core object: Universe — MDAnalysis.core.universe
The Universe
class ties a topology
and a trajectory together. Almost all code in MDAnalysis starts with a
Universe
.
Normally, a Universe
is created from files:
import MDAnalysis as mda
u = mda.Universe("topology.psf", "trajectory.dcd")
In order to construct new simulation system it is also convenient to
construct a Universe
from existing
AtomGroup
instances with the
Merge()
function.
11.2.1.1. Classes
- class MDAnalysis.core.universe.Universe(topology=None, *coordinates, all_coordinates=False, format=None, topology_format=None, transformations=None, guess_bonds=False, vdwradii=None, in_memory=False, in_memory_step=1, **kwargs)[source]
The MDAnalysis Universe contains all the information describing the system.
The system always requires a topology file — in the simplest case just a list of atoms. This can be a CHARMM/NAMD PSF file or a simple coordinate file with atom informations such as XYZ, PDB, GROMACS GRO or TPR, or CHARMM CRD. See Table of Supported Topology Formats for what kind of topologies can be read.
A trajectory file provides coordinates; the coordinates have to be ordered in the same way as the list of atoms in the topology. A trajectory can be a single frame such as a PDB, CRD, or GRO file, or it can be a MD trajectory (in CHARMM/NAMD/LAMMPS DCD, GROMACS XTC/TRR, AMBER nc, generic XYZ format, …). See Table of supported coordinate formats for what can be read as a “trajectory”.
As a special case, when the topology is a file that contains atom information and coordinates (such as XYZ, PDB, GRO or CRD, see Table of supported coordinate formats) then the coordinates are immediately loaded from the “topology” file unless a trajectory is supplied.
- Parameters
topology (str, stream, Topology, numpy.ndarray, None) – A CHARMM/XPLOR PSF topology file, PDB file or Gromacs GRO file; used to define the list of atoms. If the file includes bond information, partial charges, atom masses, … then these data will be available to MDAnalysis. Alternatively, an existing
MDAnalysis.core.topology.Topology
instance may be given, numpy coordinates, orNone
for an empty universe.coordinates (str, stream, list of str, list of stream (optional)) – Coordinates can be provided as files of a single frame (eg a PDB, CRD, or GRO file); a list of single frames; or a trajectory file (in CHARMM/NAMD/LAMMPS DCD, Gromacs XTC/TRR, or generic XYZ format). The coordinates must be ordered in the same way as the list of atoms in the topology. See Table of supported coordinate formats for what can be read as coordinates. Alternatively, streams can be given.
topology_format (str,
None
, defaultNone
) – Provide the file format of the topology file;None
guesses it from the file extension. Can also pass a subclass ofMDAnalysis.topology.base.TopologyReaderBase
to define a custom reader to be used on the topology file.format (str,
None
, defaultNone
) – Provide the file format of the coordinate or trajectory file;None
guesses it from the file extension. Note that this keyword has no effect if a list of file names is supplied because the “chained” reader has to guess the file format for each individual list member. Can also pass a subclass ofMDAnalysis.coordinates.base.ProtoReader
to define a custom reader to be used on the trajectory file.all_coordinates (bool, default
False
) – If set toTrue
specifies that if more than one filename is passed they are all to be used, if possible, as coordinate files (employing aMDAnalysis.coordinates.chain.ChainReader
). The default behavior is to take the first file as a topology and the remaining as coordinates. The first argument will always always be used to infer a topology regardless of all_coordinates.guess_bonds (bool, default
False
) – Once Universe has been loaded, attempt to guess the connectivity between atoms. This will populate the .bonds, .angles, and .dihedrals attributes of the Universe.vdwradii (dict,
None
, defaultNone
) – For use with guess_bonds. Supply a dict giving a vdwradii for each atom type which are used in guessing bonds.transformations (function or list,
None
, defaultNone
) – Provide a list of transformations that you wish to apply to the trajectory upon reading. Transformations can be found inMDAnalysis.transformations
, or can be user-created.in_memory (bool, default
False
) – After reading in the trajectory, transfer it to an in-memory representations, which allow for manipulation of coordinates.in_memory_step (int, default 1) – Only read every nth frame into in-memory representation.
continuous (bool, default
False
) – The continuous option is used by theChainReader
, which contains the functionality to treat independent trajectory files as a single virtual trajectory.**kwargs (extra arguments are passed to the topology parser.) –
- trajectory
currently loaded trajectory reader; readers are described in Coordinates modules
- dimensions
system dimensions (simulation unit cell, if set in the trajectory) at the current time step (see
MDAnalysis.coordinates.timestep.Timestep.dimensions
). The unit cell can be set for the current time step (but the change is not permanent unless written to a file).- Type
- bonds
all bonds (if defined in the topology) as provided by
Universe.atoms.bonds
- Type
- angles
all angles (if defined in the topology), same as
Universe.atoms.angles
- Type
- dihedrals
all dihedral angles (if defined in the topology), same as
Universe.atoms.dihedrals
- impropers
all improper dihedral angles (if defined in the topology), same as
Universe.atoms.impropers
Examples
Examples for setting up a
Universe
:u = Universe(topology, trajectory) # read system from file(s) u = Universe(pdbfile) # read atoms and coordinates from PDB or GRO u = Universe(topology, [traj1, traj2, ...]) # read from a list of trajectories u = Universe(topology, traj1, traj2, ...) # read from multiple trajectories
Load new data into a universe (replaces old trajectory and does not append):
u.load_new(trajectory) # read from a new trajectory file
Selecting atoms with
select_atoms()
ag = u.select_atoms(...)
returns an
AtomGroup
.Changed in version 1.0.0: Universe() now raises an error. Use Universe(None) or
Universe.empty()
instead. Removed instant selectors.Changed in version 2.0.0: Universe now can be (un)pickled.
topology
andtrajectory
are reserved upon unpickle.- add_Residue(segment=None, **attrs)[source]
Add a new Residue to this Universe
New Residues will not contain any Atoms, but can be assigned to Atoms as per usual. If the Universe contains multiple segments, this must be specified as a keyword.
- Parameters
segment (MDAnalysis.Segment) – If there are multiple segments, then the Segment that the new Residue will belong in must be specified.
attrs (dict) – For each Residue attribute, the value for the new Residue must be specified
- Return type
A reference to the new Residue
- Raises
NoDataError – If any information was missing. This happens before any changes have been made, ie the change is rolled back.
Example
Adding a new GLY residue, then placing atoms within it:
>>> newres = u.add_Residue(segment=u.segments[0], resid=42, resname='GLY') >>> u.atoms[[1, 2, 3]].residues = newres >>> u.select_atoms('resname GLY and resid 42') <AtomGroup with 3 atoms>
- add_Segment(**attrs)[source]
Add a new Segment to this Universe
- Parameters
attrs (dict) – For each Segment attribute as a key, give the value in the new Segment
- Return type
A reference to the new Segment
- Raises
NoDataError – If any attributes were not specified as a keyword.
- add_TopologyAttr(topologyattr, values=None)[source]
Add a new topology attribute to the Universe
Adding a TopologyAttribute to the Universe makes it available to all AtomGroups etc throughout the Universe.
- Parameters
topologyattr (TopologyAttr or string) – Either a MDAnalysis TopologyAttr object or the name of a possible topology attribute.
values (np.ndarray, optional) – If initiating an attribute from a string, the initial values to use. If not supplied, the new TopologyAttribute will have empty or zero values.
Example
For example to add bfactors to a Universe:
>>> u.add_TopologyAttr('bfactors') >>> u.atoms.bfactors array([ 0., 0., 0., ..., 0., 0., 0.])
Changed in version 0.17.0: Can now also add TopologyAttrs with a string of the name of the attribute to add (eg ‘charges’), can also supply initial values using values keyword.
Changed in version 1.1.0: Now warns when adding bfactors to a Universe with existing tempfactors, or adding tempfactors to a Universe with existing bfactors. In version 2.0, MDAnalysis will stop treating tempfactors and bfactors as separate attributes. Instead, they will be aliases of the same attribute.
- add_angles(values, types=None, guessed=False)[source]
Add new Angles to this Universe.
- Parameters
values (iterable of tuples, AtomGroups, or Angles; or TopologyGroup) – An iterable of: tuples of 3 atom indices, or AtomGroups with 3 atoms, or Angles. If every value is a Angle, all keywords are ignored. If AtomGroups, Angles, or a TopologyGroup are passed, they must be from the same Universe.
types (iterable (optional, default None)) – None, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
guessed (bool or iterable (optional, default False)) – bool, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
versionadded: (..) – 1.0.0:
- add_bonds(values, types=None, guessed=False, order=None)[source]
Add new Bonds to this Universe.
- Parameters
values (iterable of tuples, AtomGroups, or Bonds; or TopologyGroup) – An iterable of: tuples of 2 atom indices, or AtomGroups with 2 atoms, or Bonds. If every value is a Bond, all keywords are ignored. If AtomGroups, Bonds, or a TopologyGroup are passed, they must be from the same Universe.
types (iterable (optional, default None)) – None, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
guessed (bool or iterable (optional, default False)) – bool, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
order (iterable (optional, default None)) – None, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
Example
Adding TIP4P water bonds with a list of AtomGroups:
import MDAnalysis as mda from MDAnalysis.tests.datafiles import GRO u = mda.Universe(GRO) sol = u.select_atoms('resname SOL') ow_hw1 = sol.select_atoms('name OW or name HW1').split('residue') ow_hw2 = sol.select_atoms('name OW or name HW2').split('residue') ow_mw = sol.select_atoms('name OW or name MW').split('residue') u.add_bonds(ow_hw1 + ow_hw2 + ow_mw)
You can only add bonds from the same Universe. If you would like to add AtomGroups, Bonds, or a TopologyGroup from a different Universe, convert them to indices first.
from MDAnalysis.tests.datafiles import PSF u2 = mda.Universe(PSF) # assuming you have already added bonds to u u2.add_bonds(u.bonds.to_indices())
New in version 1.0.0.
- add_dihedrals(values, types=None, guessed=False)[source]
Add new Dihedrals to this Universe.
- Parameters
values (iterable of tuples, AtomGroups, or Dihedrals; or TopologyGroup) – An iterable of: tuples of 4 atom indices, or AtomGroups with 4 atoms, or Dihedrals. If every value is a Dihedral, all keywords are ignored. If AtomGroups, Dihedrals, or a TopologyGroup are passed, they must be from the same Universe.
types (iterable (optional, default None)) – None, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
guessed (bool or iterable (optional, default False)) – bool, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
New in version 1.0.0.
- add_impropers(values, types=None, guessed=False)[source]
Add new Impropers to this Universe.
- Parameters
values (iterable of tuples, AtomGroups, or Impropers; or TopologyGroup) – An iterable of: tuples of 4 atom indices, or AtomGroups with 4 atoms, or Impropers. If every value is an Improper, all keywords are ignored. If AtomGroups, Impropers, or a TopologyGroup are passed, they must be from the same Universe.
types (iterable (optional, default None)) – None, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
guessed (bool or iterable (optional, default False)) – bool, or an iterable of hashable values with the same length as
values
New in version 1.0.0.
- property coord
Reference to current timestep and coordinates of universe.
The raw trajectory coordinates are
Universe.coord.positions
, represented as anumpy.float32
array.Because
coord
is a reference to aTimestep
, it changes its contents while one is stepping through the trajectory.Note
In order to access the coordinates it is better to use the
AtomGroup.positions()
method; for instance, all coordinates of the Universe as a numpy array:Universe.atoms.positions()
.
- del_TopologyAttr(topologyattr)[source]
Remove a topology attribute from the Universe
Removing a TopologyAttribute from the Universe makes it unavailable to all AtomGroups etc throughout the Universe.
- Parameters
topologyattr (TopologyAttr or string) – Either a MDAnalysis TopologyAttr object or the name of a possible topology attribute.
Example
For example to remove bfactors to a Universe:
>>> u.del_TopologyAttr('bfactors') >>> hasattr(u.atoms[:3], 'bfactors') False
New in version 2.0.0.
- delete_angles(values)[source]
Delete Angles from this Universe.
- Parameters
values (iterable of tuples, AtomGroups, or Angles; or TopologyGroup) – An iterable of: tuples of 3 atom indices, or AtomGroups with 3 atoms, or Angles. If AtomGroups, Angles, or a TopologyGroup are passed, they must be from the same Universe.
New in version 1.0.0.
- delete_bonds(values)[source]
Delete Bonds from this Universe.
- Parameters
values (iterable of tuples, AtomGroups, or Bonds; or TopologyGroup) – An iterable of: tuples of 2 atom indices, or AtomGroups with 2 atoms, or Bonds. If AtomGroups, Bonds, or a TopologyGroup are passed, they must be from the same Universe.
Example
Deleting bonds from a Universe:
import MDAnalysis as mda from MDAnalysis.tests.datafiles import PSF u = mda.Universe(PSF) # delete first 5 bonds u.delete_bonds(u.bonds[:5])
If you are deleting bonds in the form of AtomGroups, Bonds, or a TopologyGroup, they must come from the same Universe. If you want to delete bonds from another Universe, convert them to indices first.
from MDAnalysis.tests.datafiles import PDB u2 = mda.Universe(PDB) u.delete_bonds(u2.bonds.to_indices())
New in version 1.0.0.
- delete_dihedrals(values)[source]
Delete Dihedrals from this Universe.
- Parameters
values (iterable of tuples, AtomGroups, or Dihedrals; or TopologyGroup) – An iterable of: tuples of 4 atom indices, or AtomGroups with 4 atoms, or Dihedrals. If AtomGroups, Dihedrals, or a TopologyGroup are passed, they must be from the same Universe.
New in version 1.0.0.
- delete_impropers(values)[source]
Delete Impropers from this Universe.
- Parameters
values (iterable of tuples, AtomGroups, or Impropers; or TopologyGroup) – An iterable of: tuples of 4 atom indices, or AtomGroups with 4 atoms, or Impropers. If AtomGroups, Angles, or a TopologyGroup are passed, they must be from the same Universe.
New in version 1.0.0.
- classmethod empty(n_atoms, n_residues=1, n_segments=1, atom_resindex=None, residue_segindex=None, trajectory=False, velocities=False, forces=False)[source]
Create a blank Universe
Useful for building a Universe without requiring existing files, for example for system building.
If trajectory is set to
True
, aMDAnalysis.coordinates.memory.MemoryReader
will be attached to the Universe.- Parameters
n_atoms (int) – number of Atoms in the Universe
n_residues (int, default 1) – number of Residues in the Universe, defaults to 1
n_segments (int, default 1) – number of Segments in the Universe, defaults to 1
atom_resindex (array like, optional) – mapping of atoms to residues, e.g. with 6 atoms, atom_resindex=[0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2] would put 2 atoms into each of 3 residues.
residue_segindex (array like, optional) – mapping of residues to segments
trajectory (bool, optional) – if
True
, attaches aMDAnalysis.coordinates.memory.MemoryReader
allowing coordinates to be set and written.velocities (bool, optional) – include velocities in the
MDAnalysis.coordinates.memory.MemoryReader
forces (bool, optional) – include forces in the
MDAnalysis.coordinates.memory.MemoryReader
- Returns
Universe
instance with dummy values for atoms and undefined coordinates/velocities/forces- Return type
Examples
For example to create a new Universe with 6 atoms in 2 residues, with positions for the atoms and a mass attribute:
u = mda.Universe.empty(6, 2, atom_resindex=np.array([0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1]), trajectory=True, ) u.add_TopologyAttr('masses')
New in version 0.17.0.
Changed in version 0.19.0: The attached Reader when trajectory=True is now a MemoryReader
Changed in version 1.0.0: Universes can now be created with 0 atoms
- classmethod from_smiles(smiles, sanitize=True, addHs=True, generate_coordinates=True, numConfs=1, rdkit_kwargs={}, **kwargs)[source]
Create a Universe from a SMILES string with rdkit
- Parameters
smiles (str) – SMILES string
sanitize (bool (optional, default True)) – Toggle the sanitization of the molecule
addHs (bool (optional, default True)) – Add all necessary hydrogens to the molecule
generate_coordinates (bool (optional, default True)) – Generate 3D coordinates using RDKit’s
AllChem.EmbedMultipleConfs()
function. Requires adding hydrogens with the addHs parameternumConfs (int (optional, default 1)) – Number of frames to generate coordinates for. Ignored if
generate_coordinates=False
rdkit_kwargs (dict (optional)) – Other arguments passed to the RDKit
EmbedMultipleConfs()
functionkwargs (dict) – Parameters passed on Universe creation
- Returns
universe – contains atom names and topology information (bonds) derived from the input SMILES string; coordinates are included if generate_coordinates was set to
True
- Return type
Examples
To create a Universe with 10 conformers of ethanol:
>>> u = mda.Universe.from_smiles('CCO', numConfs=10) >>> u <Universe with 9 atoms> >>> u.trajectory <RDKitReader with 10 frames of 9 atoms>
To use a different conformer generation algorithm, like ETKDGv3:
>>> u = mda.Universe.from_smiles('CCO', rdkit_kwargs=dict( params=AllChem.ETKDGv3())) >>> u.trajectory <RDKitReader with 1 frames of 9 atoms>
New in version 2.0.0.
- property kwargs
keyword arguments used to initialize this universe
- load_new(filename, format=None, in_memory=False, in_memory_step=1, **kwargs)[source]
Load coordinates from filename.
The file format of filename is autodetected from the file name suffix or can be explicitly set with the format keyword. A sequence of files can be read as a single virtual trajectory by providing a list of filenames.
- Parameters
filename (str or list) – the coordinate file (single frame or trajectory) or a list of filenames, which are read one after another.
format (str or list or object (optional)) – provide the file format of the coordinate or trajectory file;
None
guesses it from the file extension. Note that this keyword has no effect if a list of file names is supplied because the “chained” reader has to guess the file format for each individual list member [None
]. Can also pass a subclass ofMDAnalysis.coordinates.base.ProtoReader
to define a custom reader to be used on the trajectory file.in_memory (bool (optional)) –
Directly load trajectory into memory with the
MemoryReader
New in version 0.16.0.
**kwargs (dict) – Other kwargs are passed to the trajectory reader (only for advanced use)
- Returns
universe
- Return type
- Raises
TypeError – if trajectory format can not be determined or no appropriate trajectory reader found
Changed in version 0.8: If a list or sequence that is provided for filename only contains a single entry then it is treated as single coordinate file. This has the consequence that it is not read by the
ChainReader
but directly by its specialized file format reader, which typically has more features than theChainReader
.Changed in version 0.17.0: Now returns a
Universe
instead of the tuple of file/array and detected file type.Changed in version 2.4.0: Passes through kwargs if in_memory=True.
- property models
Models in this Universe.
The MMTF format can define various models for a given structure. The topology (eg residue identity) can change between different models, resulting in a different number of atoms in each model.
- Return type
A list of AtomGroups, each representing a single model.
Note
This requires the underlying topology to have models. Otherwise, a
NoDataError
is raised.
- transfer_to_memory(start=None, stop=None, step=None, verbose=False, **kwargs)[source]
Transfer the trajectory to in memory representation.
Replaces the current trajectory reader object with one of type
MDAnalysis.coordinates.memory.MemoryReader
to support in-place editing of coordinates.- Parameters
New in version 0.16.0.
Changed in version 2.4.0: Passes through kwargs to MemoryReader
11.2.1.2. Functions
- MDAnalysis.core.universe.Merge(*args)[source]
Create a new new
Universe
from one or moreAtomGroup
instances.- Parameters
*args (
AtomGroup
) – One or more AtomGroups.- Returns
universe
- Return type
- Raises
ValueError – Too few arguments or an AtomGroup is empty and
TypeError – Arguments are not
AtomGroup
instances.
Notes
The resulting
Universe
will only inherit the common topology attributes that all merged universes share.AtomGroup
instances can come from different Universes, or can come directly from aselect_atoms()
call.Merge
can also be used with a singleAtomGroup
if the user wants to, for example, re-order the atoms in theUniverse
.If multiple
AtomGroup
instances from the sameUniverse
are given, the merge will first simply “add” together theAtomGroup
instances.Merging does not create a full trajectory but only a single structure even if the input consists of one or more trajectories. However, one can use the
MemoryReader
to construct a trajectory for the new Universe as described under Creating an in-memory trajectory of a sub-system.Example
In this example, protein, ligand, and solvent were externally prepared in three different PDB files. They are loaded into separate
Universe
objects (where they could be further manipulated, e.g. renumbered, relabeled, rotated, …) TheMerge()
command is used to combine all of them together:u1 = Universe("protein.pdb") u2 = Universe("ligand.pdb") u3 = Universe("solvent.pdb") u = Merge(u1.select_atoms("protein"), u2.atoms, u3.atoms) u.atoms.write("system.pdb")
The complete system is then written out to a new PDB file.
Changed in version 0.9.0: Raises exceptions instead of assertion errors.
Changed in version 0.16.0: The trajectory is now a
MemoryReader
.