BMC Genomics (Apr 2022)

GenomicDistributions: fast analysis of genomic intervals with Bioconductor

  • Kristyna Kupkova,
  • Jose Verdezoto Mosquera,
  • Jason P. Smith,
  • Michał Stolarczyk,
  • Tessa L. Danehy,
  • John T. Lawson,
  • Bingjie Xue,
  • John T. Stubbs,
  • Nathan LeRoy,
  • Nathan C. Sheffield

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-022-08467-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Background Epigenome analysis relies on defined sets of genomic regions output by widely used assays such as ChIP-seq and ATAC-seq. Statistical analysis and visualization of genomic region sets is essential to answer biological questions in gene regulation. As the epigenomics community continues generating data, there will be an increasing need for software tools that can efficiently deal with more abundant and larger genomic region sets. Here, we introduce GenomicDistributions, an R package for fast and easy summarization and visualization of genomic region data. Results GenomicDistributions offers a broad selection of functions to calculate properties of genomic region sets, such as feature distances, genomic partition overlaps, and more. GenomicDistributions functions are meticulously optimized for best-in-class speed and generally outperform comparable functions in existing R packages. GenomicDistributions also offers plotting functions that produce editable ggplot objects. All GenomicDistributions functions follow a uniform naming scheme and can handle either single or multiple region set inputs. Conclusions GenomicDistributions offers a fast and scalable tool for exploratory genomic region set analysis and visualization. GenomicDistributions excels in user-friendliness, flexibility of outputs, breadth of functions, and computational performance. GenomicDistributions is available from Bioconductor ( https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenomicDistributions.html ).

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