Book Image

R Bioinformatics Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Dan MacLean
Book Image

R Bioinformatics Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Dan MacLean

Overview of this book

The updated second edition of R Bioinformatics Cookbook takes a recipe-based approach to show you how to conduct practical research and analysis in computational biology with R. You’ll learn how to create a useful and modular R working environment, along with loading, cleaning, and analyzing data using the most up-to-date Bioconductor, ggplot2, and tidyverse tools. This book will walk you through the Bioconductor tools necessary for you to understand and carry out protocols in RNA-seq and ChIP-seq, phylogenetics, genomics, gene search, gene annotation, statistical analysis, and sequence analysis. As you advance, you'll find out how to use Quarto to create data-rich reports, presentations, and websites, as well as get a clear understanding of how machine learning techniques can be applied in the bioinformatics domain. The concluding chapters will help you develop proficiency in key skills, such as gene annotation analysis and functional programming in purrr and base R. Finally, you'll discover how to use the latest AI tools, including ChatGPT, to generate, edit, and understand R code and draft workflows for complex analyses. By the end of this book, you'll have gained a solid understanding of the skills and techniques needed to become a bioinformatics specialist and efficiently work with large and complex bioinformatics datasets.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Plotting features on genetic maps with karyoploteR

One of the most rewarding and insightful things we can do is visualize data. Very often, we want to see where some features lie concerning others on a chromosome or genetic map. These are sometimes called chromosome plots or ideograms. In this recipe, we’ll learn how to create one of these using the karyoploteR package. This package takes the familiar GRanges objects as input and creates detailed plots from the configuration. We’ll take a quick look at some different plot styles and configuration options for ironing out the bumps in your plots when labels spill off the page or overlap each other.

Getting ready

For this recipe, you’ll need karyoploteR installed. All of the data we’ll use will be generated within the recipe itself.

How to do it…

Plotting features on genetic maps with karyoploteR can be done by performing the following steps:

  1. First, load the necessary libraries:
    library...