from BAC name to list of genes in that BAC
2
0
Entering edit mode
@federico-abascal-2006
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Estimated colleagues, I am working with CGH data. I have the name of the BAC clones and their chromosome locations. They correspond to OncoBAC arrays (?). Is there any way in bioconductor to determine which genes belong to each BAC clone? Thank you in advance, Best, Federico PD: I am a newbie in R and Bioconductor
CGH BAC CGH BAC • 1.8k views
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
@sean-davis-490
Last seen 3 months ago
United States
On Thursday 18 January 2007 11:32, Federico Abascal wrote: > Estimated colleagues, > > I am working with CGH data. I have the name of the BAC clones and their > chromosome locations. They correspond to OncoBAC arrays (?). > Is there any way in bioconductor to determine which genes belong to each > BAC clone? I don't think there is a way directly in Bioconductor to do that. However, the UCSC table browser can "overlap" your BACs with other genome annotation such as genes. You might want to try there. They have a contact email address on their page and are quite helpful with queries like "how to I do...". Using their interface, you should have something approximating what you need in a few minutes. Sean
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
@hilmar-berger-1799
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Hi, mapping BAC clones to genomic positions and genes can be a time consuming process, especially if you have to do it manually. If public databases can help you depends on the way the BAC clones are named. Could you give some example ? Anyway, usually you should be able to get a table of BAC clones and other parameters (genomic location, (uni)gene id etc.) which might help in identifiying the genes in question. Regards, Hilmar Federico Abascal schrieb: > Estimated colleagues, > > I am working with CGH data. I have the name of the BAC clones and their > chromosome locations. They correspond to OncoBAC arrays (?). > Is there any way in bioconductor to determine which genes belong to each > BAC clone? > > Thank you in advance, > Best, > Federico > > > PD: I am a newbie in R and Bioconductor > > _______________________________________________ > Bioconductor mailing list > Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor > Search the archives: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor > -- Hilmar Berger Studienkoordinator Institut f?r medizinische Informatik, Statistik und Epidemiologie Universit?t Leipzig H?rtelstr. 16-18 D-04107 Leipzig Tel. +49 341 97 16 101 Fax. +49 341 97 16 109 email: hilmar.berger at imise.uni-leipzig.de
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
thank you very much for your responses Hilmar and Sean. Hilmar Berger wrote: > mapping BAC clones to genomic positions and genes can be a time > consuming process, especially if you have to do it manually. If public > databases can help you depends on the way the BAC clones are named. > Could you give some example ? > Here are some examples. I was unable to obtain information from the UCSC table browser (as Sean suggested), although I have to try it more. CTD-2082H4 CTD-2060E7 RP11-130N6 RP11-142M16 RP11-221G13 RP11-238E12 CTD-2088A19 GS1-225F6 RP11-48J15 RP11-4D2 RP11-82L3 RP11-71M14 RP11-135H9 RP11-256K9 RP11-65G9 RP11-185N10 RP11-140H23 RP11-247J14 > Anyway, usually you should be able to get a table of BAC clones and > other parameters (genomic location, (uni)gene id etc.) which might help > in identifiying the genes in question. > > yes, I have that information. Isn't there a way in Bioconductor to ask for the genes present between nucleotides 130000 and 145000?? Best, Federico >> Estimated colleagues, >> >> I am working with CGH data. I have the name of the BAC clones and their >> chromosome locations. They correspond to OncoBAC arrays (?). >> Is there any way in bioconductor to determine which genes belong to each >> BAC clone? >>
ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode
Hi Federico, Federico Abascal schrieb: > CTD-2082H4 > CTD-2060E7 > RP11-130N6 > RP11-142M16 > RP11-221G13 > RP11-238E12 OK, these are standard BAC-Names you might find in public databases. > >>Anyway, usually you should be able to get a table of BAC clones and >>other parameters (genomic location, (uni)gene id etc.) which might help >>in identifiying the genes in question. > > yes, I have that information. > Isn't there a way in Bioconductor to ask for the genes present between > nucleotides 130000 and 145000?? Last time I had to map BAC clones to genes (actually to probesets) I chose to use a list from GoldenPath (http://genome.ucsc.edu) because that way it is easier to chose the release version of the genome assembly. This release (or approximate date) should match the one that was used for creation of your BAC-annotation list, since different releases might have different positions for your BACs and genes. The table "knownGene" from GoldenPath gives you start and end positions for each gene. A simple filter in R (e.g. "subset(gene.list, gene.chrom=BAC.chrom & gene.start >= BAC.start & gene.stop <= BAC.stop", done for every BAC) should be sufficient to get all genes within or nearby your BAC-clones. Regards, Hilmar -- Hilmar Berger Studienkoordinator Institut f?r medizinische Informatik, Statistik und Epidemiologie Universit?t Leipzig H?rtelstr. 16-18 D-04107 Leipzig Tel. +49 341 97 16 101 Fax. +49 341 97 16 109 email: hilmar.berger at imise.uni-leipzig.de
ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode
Giving you knew clone RP11-238E12 in ChrX, a straightforward alternative might be to parse: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mapview/maps.cgi?taxid=9606&chr=X&maps=gen es,clone[RP11-238E12]-r&cmd=txt You can modify Build version as well. Good luck! Wenwu Cui, PhD -----Original Message----- From: Hilmar Berger [mailto:hilmar.berger@imise.uni-leipzig.de] Sent: Friday, January 19, 2007 7:23 AM To: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: Re: [BioC] from BAC name to list of genes in that BAC Hi Federico, Federico Abascal schrieb: > CTD-2082H4 > CTD-2060E7 > RP11-130N6 > RP11-142M16 > RP11-221G13 > RP11-238E12 OK, these are standard BAC-Names you might find in public databases. > >>Anyway, usually you should be able to get a table of BAC clones and >>other parameters (genomic location, (uni)gene id etc.) which might help >>in identifiying the genes in question. > > yes, I have that information. > Isn't there a way in Bioconductor to ask for the genes present between > nucleotides 130000 and 145000?? Last time I had to map BAC clones to genes (actually to probesets) I chose to use a list from GoldenPath (http://genome.ucsc.edu) because that way it is easier to chose the release version of the genome assembly. This release (or approximate date) should match the one that was used for creation of your BAC-annotation list, since different releases might have different positions for your BACs and genes. The table "knownGene" from GoldenPath gives you start and end positions for each gene. A simple filter in R (e.g. "subset(gene.list, gene.chrom=BAC.chrom & gene.start >= BAC.start & gene.stop <= BAC.stop", done for every BAC) should be sufficient to get all genes within or nearby your BAC-clones. Regards, Hilmar -- Hilmar Berger Studienkoordinator Institut f?r medizinische Informatik, Statistik und Epidemiologie Universit?t Leipzig H?rtelstr. 16-18 D-04107 Leipzig Tel. +49 341 97 16 101 Fax. +49 341 97 16 109 email: hilmar.berger at imise.uni-leipzig.de _______________________________________________ Bioconductor mailing list Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor Search the archives: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor
ADD REPLY

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 626 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6