GFF is a standard file format for storing genomic features in a text file. GFF stands for Generic Feature Format. GFF files are plain text, 9 column, tab-delimited files. GFF databases also exist. They use a schema custom built to represent GFF data. GFF is frequently used in GMOD for data exchange and representation of genomic data.
GFF has several versions, the most recent of which is GFF3. GFF3 addresses several shortcomings in its predecessor, GFF2. GFF3 is the preferred format in GMOD, but data is not always available in GFF3 format, so you may have to use GFF2. The two versions are similar but are not compatible and scripts usually only work with one or the other format. This page discusses GFF3 in detail. GFF2 details are covered on a separate page.
Unfortunately, people, documentation, and even this web site are not always clear about what version of GFF is being discussed. This web page will always specify which version it is referring to.
Finally, GTF is another file format that is very similar to GFF and is sometimes referred to as GFF2.5.
The formal specification of GFF3 is on the Sequence Ontology web site. It completely describes the format, including column definitions, metadata and directives. It also contains lengthy sections explaining how to represent different situations in GFF3, including:
Some of these cases are covered on this page as well. If you want the full and definitive explanation of GFF3 then see the standard.
This first describes the format of the annotation section, and then provides explanations of how to represent several different types of data.
GFF3 format is a flat tab-delimited file. The first line of the file is a comment that identifies the file format and version. This is followed by a series of data lines, each one of which corresponds to an annotation.Here is a miniature GFF3 file:
##gff-version 3
ctg123 . exon 1300 1500 . + . ID=exon00001
ctg123 . exon 1050 1500 . + . ID=exon00002
ctg123 . exon 3000 3902 . + . ID=exon00003
ctg123 . exon 5000 5500 . + . ID=exon00004
ctg123 . exon 7000 9000 . + . ID=exon00005
The ##gff-version 3
line is required and must be the first line of
the file. It introduces the annotation section of the file.
The 9 columns of the annotation section are as follows:
Column 1: “seqid”
The ID of the landmark used to establish the coordinate system for the current feature. IDs may contain any characters, but must escape any characters not in the set [a-zA-Z0-9.:^*$@!+_?-|]. In particular, IDs may not contain unescaped whitespace and must not begin with an unescaped “>”.
To escape a character in this, or any of the other GFF3 fields, replace it with the percent sign followed by its hexadecimal representation. For example, “>” becomes “%E3”. See URL Encoding (or: ‘What are those “%20” codes in URLs?’) for details.
Column 2: “source”
The source is a free text qualifier intended to describe the algorithm or operating procedure that generated this feature. Typically this is the name of a piece of software, such as “Genescan” or a database name, such as “Genbank.” In effect, the source is used to extend the feature ontology by adding a qualifier to the type creating a new composite type that is a subclass of the type in the type column. It is not necessary to specify a source. If there is no source, put a “.” (a period) in this field.
Column 3: “type”
The type of the feature (previously called the “method”). This is constrained to be either: (a) a term from the “lite” sequence ontology, SOFA; or (b) a SOFA accession number. The latter alternative is distinguished using the syntax SO:000000. This field is required.
Columns 4 & 5: “start” and “end”
The start and end of the feature, in 1-based integer coordinates, relative to the landmark given in column 1. Start is always less than or equal to end.
For zero-length features, such as insertion sites, start equals end and the implied site is to the right of the indicated base in the direction of the landmark. These fields are required.
Column 6: “score”
The score of the feature, a floating point number. As in earlier versions of the format, the semantics of the score are ill-defined. It is strongly recommended that E-values be used for sequence similarity features, and that P-values be used for ab initio gene prediction features. If there is no score, put a “.” (a period) in this field.
Column 7: “strand”
The strand of the feature. + for positive strand (relative to the landmark), - for minus strand, and . for features that are not stranded. In addition, ? can be used for features whose strandedness is relevant, but unknown.
Column 8: “phase”
For features of type “CDS”, the phase indicates where the feature begins with reference to the reading frame. The phase is one of the integers 0, 1, or 2, indicating the number of bases that should be removed from the beginning of this feature to reach the first base of the next codon. In other words, a phase of “0” indicates that the next codon begins at the first base of the region described by the current line, a phase of “1” indicates that the next codon begins at the second base of this region, and a phase of “2” indicates that the codon begins at the third base of this region. This is NOT to be confused with the frame, which is simply start modulo 3. If there is no phase, put a “.” (a period) in this field.
For forward strand features, phase is counted from the start field. For reverse strand features, phase is counted from the end field.
The phase is required for all CDS features.
Column 9: “attributes”
A list of feature attributes in the format tag=value. Multiple tag=value pairs are separated by semicolons. URL escaping rules are used for tags or values containing the following characters: “,=;”. Spaces are allowed in this field, but tabs must be replaced with the %09 URL escape. This field is not required.
Column 9 Tags
Column 9 tags have predefined meanings:
ID
Indicates the unique identifier of the feature. IDs must be unique
within the scope of the GFF file.
Name
Display name for the feature. This is the name to be displayed to the
user. Unlike IDs, there is no requirement that the Name be unique within
the file.
Alias
A secondary name for the feature. It is suggested that this tag be used
whenever a secondary identifier for the feature is needed, such as locus
names and accession numbers. Unlike ID, there is no requirement that
Alias be unique within the file.
Parent
Indicates the parent of the feature. A parent ID can be used to group
exons into transcripts, transcripts into genes, and so forth. A feature
may have multiple parents. Parent can *only* be used to indicate a
partof relationship.
Target
Indicates the target of a nucleotide-to-nucleotide or
protein-to-nucleotide alignment. The format of the value is “target_id
start end [strand]”, where strand is optional and may be “+” or “-“.
If the target_id contains spaces, they must be escaped as hex
escape %20.
Gap
The alignment of the feature to the target if the two are not collinear
(e.g. contain gaps). The alignment format is taken from the CIGAR format
described in the Exonerate documentation. http://cvsweb.sanger.ac.uk/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/exonerate?cvsroot=Ensembl).
See the GFF3 specification for more
information.
Derives_from
Used to disambiguate the relationship between one feature and another
when the relationship is a temporal one rather than a purely structural
“part of” one. This is needed for polycistronic genes. See the
GFF3 specification for more
information.
Note
A free text note.
Dbxref
A database cross reference. See the
GFF3 specification for more
information.
Ontology_term
A cross reference to an ontology term. See the
GFF3 specification for more
information.
Multiple attributes of the same type are indicated by separating the values with the comma “,” character, as in:
Parent=AF2312,AB2812,abc-3
Note that attribute names are case sensitive. “Parent” is not the same as “parent”.
All attributes that begin with an uppercase letter are reserved for later use. Attributes that begin with a lowercase letter can be used freely by applications. You can stash any semi-structured data into the database by using one or more unreserved (lowercase) tags.
Many genomic features are discontinuous and have multiple subparts. GFF3 represents such features by linking the parts together with the Parent tag. For example, to represent an mRNA transcript that has five exons, we could write this:
##gff-version 3
ctg123 . mRNA 1300 9000 . + . ID=mrna0001;Name=sonichedgehog
ctg123 . exon 1300 1500 . + . ID=exon00001;Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 1050 1500 . + . ID=exon00002;Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 3000 3902 . + . ID=exon00003;Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 5000 5500 . + . ID=exon00004;Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 7000 9000 . + . ID=exon00005;Parent=mrna0001
The first feature is an mRNA that extends from position 1300 to 9000 in genomic coordinates. It has an ID of “mrna0001” and a human-readable name of “sonichedgehog” (note that the ID and the Name are not the same thing). This is followed by five exon features, each of which is linked to the mRNA using a Parent tag. When GBrowse displays this transcript, it will display each of the exons linked together by a solid line. The entire set can be found by searching for the name “sonichedgehog.”
The ID is really only important for linking features together. If a feature does not have any subparts, then it does not formally need an ID. Thus, we could simplify this by removing all the exon IDs:
##gff-version 3
ctg123 . mRNA 1300 9000 . + . ID=mrna0001;Name=sonichedgehog
ctg123 . exon 1300 1500 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 1050 1500 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 3000 3902 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 5000 5500 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 7000 9000 . + . Parent=mrna0001
Multiple levels of nesting are allowed. If this transcript is part of an operon, then we can add another level of nesting:
##gff-version 3
ctg123 . operon 1300 15000 . + . ID=operon001;Name=superOperon
ctg123 . mRNA 1300 9000 . + . ID=mrna0001;Parent=operon001;Name=sonichedgehog
ctg123 . exon 1300 1500 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 1050 1500 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 3000 3902 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 5000 5500 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . exon 7000 9000 . + . Parent=mrna0001
ctg123 . mRNA 10000 15000 . + . ID=mrna0002;Parent=operon001;Name=subsonicsquirrel
ctg123 . exon 10000 12000 . + . Parent=mrna0002
ctg123 . exon 14000 15000 . + . Parent=mrna0002
In addition to nested features, another common type of genomic annotation is the discontinuous feature in which a single feature spans multiple discontinuous portions of the genome. The primary example is an alignment, such as a cDNA sequence that has been aligned to genomic sequence. GFF3 deals with these features by representing each continuous segment as a distinct row, and then giving each segment the same ID to tie them together. For example:
ctg123 example match 26122 26126 . + . ID=match001
ctg123 example match 26497 26869 . + . ID=match001
ctg123 example match 27201 27325 . + . ID=match001
ctg123 example match 27372 27433 . + . ID=match001
ctg123 example match 27565 27565 . + . ID=match001
Note that this is distinct from the nested features we looked at in the previous section. In the former case, there is a single parent feature and multiple child features that are linked to the parent via a Parent tag. The IDs of the children are distinct from each other (or absent altogether). In the latter case, each segment of the discontinuous feature has the same ID. There is no parent.
Note that this method of grouping discontinuous features is not currently supported by the GMOD Chado bulk GFF3 loader. Parent-child grouping is required.
We’ll now look at how to represent several common cases, starting with protein-coding genes.
The most general way of representing a protein-coding gene is the so-called “three-level gene.” The top level is a feature of type “gene” which bundles up the gene’s transcripts and regulatory elements. Beneath this level are one or more transcripts of type “mRNA”. This level can also accommodate promoters and other cis-regulatory elements. At the third level are the components of the mRNA transcripts, most commonly CDS coding segments and UTRs. This example shows how to represent a gene named “EDEN” which has three alternatively-spliced mRNA transcripts:
ctg123 example gene 1050 9000 . + . ID=EDEN;Name=EDEN;Note=protein kinase
ctg123 example mRNA 1050 9000 . + . ID=EDEN.1;Parent=EDEN;Name=EDEN.1;Index=1
ctg123 example five_prime_UTR 1050 1200 . + . Parent=EDEN.1
ctg123 example CDS 1201 1500 . + 0 Parent=EDEN.1
ctg123 example CDS 3000 3902 . + 0 Parent=EDEN.1
ctg123 example CDS 5000 5500 . + 0 Parent=EDEN.1
ctg123 example CDS 7000 7608 . + 0 Parent=EDEN.1
ctg123 example three_prime_UTR 7609 9000 . + . Parent=EDEN.1
ctg123 example mRNA 1050 9000 . + . ID=EDEN.2;Parent=EDEN;Name=EDEN.2;Index=1
ctg123 example five_prime_UTR 1050 1200 . + . Parent=EDEN.2
ctg123 example CDS 1201 1500 . + 0 Parent=EDEN.2
ctg123 example CDS 5000 5500 . + 0 Parent=EDEN.2
ctg123 example CDS 7000 7608 . + 0 Parent=EDEN.2
ctg123 example three_prime_UTR 7609 9000 . + . Parent=EDEN.2
ctg123 example mRNA 1300 9000 . + . ID=EDEN.3;Parent=EDEN;Name=EDEN.3;Index=1
ctg123 example five_prime_UTR 1300 1500 . + . Parent=EDEN.3
ctg123 example five_prime_UTR 3000 3300 . + . Parent=EDEN.3
ctg123 example CDS 3301 3902 . + 0 Parent=EDEN.3
ctg123 example CDS 5000 5500 . + 1 Parent=EDEN.3
ctg123 example CDS 7000 7600 . + 1 Parent=EDEN.3
ctg123 example three_prime_UTR 7601 9000 . + . Parent=EDEN.3
We start with a feature of type “gene” with the ID “EDEN”. This has three alternative splice forms named EDEN.1, EDEN.2 and EDEN.3. To tell GBrowse that each of these splice forms are part of the same gene, we give each one a Parent attribute of “EDEN” corresponding to the ID of the parent gene. Now consider mRNA EDEN.1. It has a five_prime_UTR feature, a three_prime_UTR feature, and four CDS features. To indicate that the CDS and UTR features belong to the mRNA, we give the mRNA a unique ID of “EDEN.1” and give each of the subfeatures a corresponding parent. This pattern repeats for each of the other two splice forms. Note how the five_prime_UTR of EDEN.3 is split in two parts.
We use “Name” to give the gene and its alternative splice forms a human-readable name, and use Note to provide a description for the gene as a whole (you can add notes to the individual mRNAs but they won’t display by default). The Index=1 attribute is a hint to some indexed database to make the mRNAs searchable by name. This lets users find the gene by searching for the mRNA names (“EDEN.1”) as well as by the gene name (“EDEN”). However, it is usually unnecessary to do this. Also notice that we are using the Phase column for the CDS features to describe how the CDS is translated into protein. See the description of phase at the beginning of this section.
There are other ways of representing genes. Please see the GFF3 Specification and The GBrowse Administration Tutorial for more information.
Nucleotide to genome, and protein to genome alignments are a little tricky because they involve two coordinate systems, the coordinates of the alignment on the genome (known as the “source” coordinates), and the coordinates of the cDNA, EST or protein (known as the “target” coordinates). In GFF3, the target coordinates are specified using the Target tag.
ctg123 est EST_match 1050 1500 . + . ID=Match1;Name=agt830.5;Target=agt830.5 1 451
ctg123 est EST_match 3000 3202 . + . ID=Match1;Name=agt830.5;Target=agt830.5 452 654
ctg123 est EST_match 5410 5500 . - . ID=Match2;Name=agt830.3;Target=agt830.3 505 595
ctg123 est EST_match 7000 7503 . - . ID=Match2;Name=agt830.3;Target=agt830.3 1 504
ctg123 est EST_match 1050 1500 . + . ID=Match3;Name=agt221.5;Target=agt221.5 1 451
ctg123 est EST_match 5000 5500 . + . ID=Match3;Name=agt221.5;Target=agt221.5 452 952
ctg123 est EST_match 7000 7300 . + . ID=Match3;Name=agt221.5;Target=agt221.5 953 1253
This example shows three different alignment features of type “EST_match”. Each alignment has a distinct ID, and all the discontinuous parts of the alignment have the same ID, as described earlier. In addition to the ID and Name tags, each segment also has a Target tag whose value has the format “<target seqid> <target start> <target end>.” For example, the very first line indicates that the EST named agt830.5 aligns to genomic contig ctg123 such that positions 1 through 451 of agt830.5 aligns to bases 1050-1500 of ctg123.
Using the ##FASTA section of the GFF3 file, you can specify the sequence of the ESTs as well as of the contig, and GBrowse will display the DNA and/or protein sequences in the appropriate contexts.
See the GFF3 specification for instructions on how to represent gapped alignments.
GBrowse can plot quantitative data such as alignment scores, confidence scores from gene prediction programs, and microarray intensity data. There is a simple format that can be placed directly inside of a GFF3 file but does not scale to very large data sets, and a “WIG” format designed for very high-density quantitative data such as tiling arrays.
We first look at the simple format:
ctg123 affy microarray_oligo 1 100 281 . . Name=Expt1
ctg123 affy microarray_oligo 101 200 183 . . Name=Expt1
ctg123 affy microarray_oligo 201 300 213 . . Name=Expt1
ctg123 affy microarray_oligo 301 400 191 . . Name=Expt1
ctg123 affy microarray_oligo 401 500 288 . . Name=Expt1
ctg123 affy microarray_oligo 501 600 184 . . Name=Expt1
In this format, which can be embedded directly in the GFF3 file, each data point is a distinct feature with a start and end point. The features are grouped together by giving them a common experimental name so that they can be retrieved together. We use the score field (column 6) to represent the quantitative information (e.g. hybridization intensity).
In contrast, when using WIG format, the quantitative data is kept outside of the main database in a special-purpose binary file that is kept somewhere on the file system. In this case the GFF3 file contains a single line per experiment like this one:
ctg123 . microarray_oligo 1 50000 . . . Name=example;wigfile=/usr/data/ctg123.Expt1.wig
The .wig file is created and managed using a script called
wiggle2gff3.pl
that comes with GBrowse.
Instructions on how to use this script is described in the GBrowse Administration Tutorial.
GFF3 files can also include sequence in FASTA format
at the end of the file. The FASTA sequences are preceded by a ##FASTA
line. This sequence section is optional. If present, the sequence
section can define sequence for any landmark used in column 1 (the frame
of reference). For example: For example:
##gff-version 3
ctg123 . exon 1300 1500 . + . ID=exon00001
ctg123 . exon 1050 1500 . + . ID=exon00002
ctg123 . exon 3000 3902 . + . ID=exon00003
ctg123 . exon 5000 5500 . + . ID=exon00004
ctg123 . exon 7000 9000 . + . ID=exon00005
##FASTA
>ctg123
cttctgggcgtacccgattctcggagaacttgccgcaccattccgccttg
tgttcattgctgcctgcatgttcattgtctacctcggctacgtgtggcta
tctttcctcggtgccctcgtgcacggagtcgagaaaccaaagaacaaaaa
aagaaattaaaatatttattttgctgtggtttttgatgtgtgttttttat
aatgatttttgatgtgaccaattgtacttttcctttaaatgaaatgtaat
cttaaatgtatttccgacgaattcgaggcctgaaaagtgtgacgccattc
...
When the GFF3 file is processed the IDs on the header line of FASTA entries are matched with IDs used in column 1 in the annotation section of the file.
You don’t have to store the FASTA in the GFF file. You can also store your sequences in a separate file containing only FASTA entries.
You can validate reasonably large GFF3 files at the following sites: