Intra range transformations of a GRanges or GRangesList object
This man page documents intra range transformations of a GenomicRanges object (i.e. of an object that belongs to the GenomicRanges class or one of its subclasses, this includes for example GRanges objects), or a GRangesList object.
See ?`intra-range-methods`
and
?`inter-range-methods`
in the IRanges
package for a quick introduction to intra range and inter
range transformations.
Intra range methods for GAlignments and GAlignmentsList objects are defined and documented in the GenomicAlignments package.
See ?`inter-range-methods`
for
inter range transformations of a GenomicRanges or
GRangesList object.
## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges' shift(x, shift=0L, use.names=TRUE) ## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges' narrow(x, start=NA, end=NA, width=NA, use.names=TRUE) ## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges' resize(x, width, fix="start", use.names=TRUE, ignore.strand=FALSE) ## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges' flank(x, width, start=TRUE, both=FALSE, use.names=TRUE, ignore.strand=FALSE) ## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges' promoters(x, upstream=2000, downstream=200, use.names=TRUE) ## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges' restrict(x, start=NA, end=NA, keep.all.ranges=FALSE, use.names=TRUE) ## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges' trim(x, use.names=TRUE)
x |
A GenomicRanges object. |
shift, use.names, start, end, width, both, fix, keep.all.ranges,
upstream, downstream |
See |
ignore.strand |
|
shift
behaves like the shift
method for
IntegerRanges objects. See
?`intra-range-methods`
for the details.
narrow
on a GenomicRanges object behaves
like on an IntegerRanges object. See
?`intra-range-methods`
for the details.
A major difference though is that it returns a GenomicRanges
object instead of an IntegerRanges object.
The returned object is parallel (i.e. same length and names)
to the original object x
.
resize
returns an object of the same type and length as
x
containing intervals that have been resized to width
width
based on the strand(x)
values. Elements where
strand(x) == "+"
or strand(x) == "*"
are anchored at
start(x)
and elements where strand(x) == "-"
are anchored
at the end(x)
. The use.names
argument determines whether
or not to keep the names on the ranges.
flank
returns an object of the same type and length
as x
containing intervals of width width
that flank
the intervals in x
. The start
argument takes a
logical indicating whether x
should be flanked at the
"start" (TRUE
) or the "end" (FALSE
), which for
strand(x) != "-"
is start(x)
and end(x)
respectively and for strand(x) == "-"
is end(x)
and
start(x)
respectively. The both
argument takes a
single logical value indicating whether the flanking region
width
positions extends into the range. If
both=TRUE
, the resulting range thus straddles the end
point, with width
positions on either side.
promoters
returns an object of the same type and length
as x
containing promoter ranges. Promoter ranges extend
around the transcription start site (TSS) which is defined as
start(x)
for ranges on the +
or *
strand
and as end(x)
for ranges on the -
strand.
The upstream
and downstream
arguments define the
number of nucleotides in the 5' and 3' direction, respectively.
More precisely, the output range is defined as
(start(x) - upstream) to (start(x) + downstream - 1)
for ranges on the +
or *
strand, and as
(end(x) - downstream + 1) to (end(x) + upstream)
for ranges on the -
strand.
Note that the returned object might contain out-of-bound ranges i.e. ranges that start before the first nucleotide position and/or end after the last nucleotide position of the underlying sequence.
restrict
returns an object of the same type and length as
x
containing restricted ranges for distinct seqnames. The
start
and end
arguments can be a named numeric vector of
seqnames for the ranges to be resticted or a numeric vector or length 1
if the restriction operation is to be applied to all the sequences in
x
. See ?`intra-range-methods`
for more
information about range restriction and for a description of the optional
arguments.
trim
trims out-of-bound ranges located on non-circular
sequences whose length is not NA.
P. Aboyoun and V. Obenchain
GenomicRanges, GRanges, and GRangesList objects.
The intra-range-methods man page in the IRanges package.
The IntegerRanges class in the IRanges package.
## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## A. ON A GRanges OBJECT ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- gr <- GRanges( seqnames=Rle(paste("chr", c(1, 2, 1, 3), sep=""), c(1, 3, 2, 4)), ranges=IRanges(1:10, width=10:1, names=letters[1:10]), strand=Rle(strand(c("-", "+", "*", "+", "-")), c(1, 2, 2, 3, 2)), score=1:10, GC=seq(1, 0, length=10) ) gr shift(gr, 1) narrow(gr[-10], start=2, end=-2) resize(gr, width=10) flank(gr, width=10) restrict(gr, start=3, end=7) gr <- GRanges("chr1", IRanges(rep(10, 3), width=6), c("+", "-", "*")) promoters(gr, 2, 2) ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## B. ON A GRangesList OBJECT ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- gr1 <- GRanges("chr2", IRanges(3, 6)) gr2 <- GRanges(c("chr1", "chr1"), IRanges(c(7,13), width=3), strand=c("+", "-")) gr3 <- GRanges(c("chr1", "chr2"), IRanges(c(1, 4), c(3, 9)), strand="-") grl <- GRangesList(gr1= gr1, gr2=gr2, gr3=gr3) grl resize(grl, width=20) flank(grl, width=20) restrict(grl, start=3)
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