Hi Satya, Hi Dana
Another tool and methodology of your interest for chip seq experiments could be,
http://great.stanford.edu/
(Genomic Regions Enrichment of Annotations Tool)
They take input as chip seq experiments and i know are integerated with galaxy and UCSC genome browser
Best
Abhay
Bioinformatician
Eye Diseases: from genetics & Epigenetics to therapy
Department of Cell therapy and Regenerative Medicine
CABIMER(Andalusian Center of Molecular Biology and regenerative medicine)
Sevilla Spain
Hello,
We have been trying to determine a method to convert ChIP-Seq coordinates into a list of genes and are wondering the best way to utilize the Galaxy browser. The UCSC folks suggested you could help but I should have been more specific with my request. Ideally we would like to take global binding coordinates and find out what genes are nearby (ie at either a 1 or 5kb) instead of simply the “closest feature”. Might you be able to advise on this? I have enclosed the text (.bed format) file I used to get the binding sites in the UCSC genome browser. Thanks in advance!
Cheers,
Dana
From: Mary Goldman [mailto:mary@soe.ucsc.edu]
Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2010 2:06 PM
To: Das, Satyabrata
Cc: genome@soe.ucsc.edu
Subject: Re: [Genome] Genome-wide dataset of protein location conversion
Hi Satya,
If you are looking for the nearest gene to a genomic coordinate, you should use Galaxy ( http://main.g2.bx.psu.edu/). Load your coordinates as a custom track on the UCSC genome browser, go to the table browser and send the output to Galaxy (click the check box after the output option pull down menu). I believe the tool you want is "Fetch closest feature" under the "Operate on Genomic Intervals" menu. If you have questions about Galaxy, please contact their help desk at galaxy-user@lists.bx.psu.edu.
I hope this information addresses your question and is helpful. Please feel free to contact the mail list again if you require further assistance.
Best,
Mary
------------------
Mary Goldman
UCSC Bioinformatics Group
On 8/11/10 10:03 PM, Das, Satyabrata wrote:Hello,I am analyzing a genome-wide dataset of protein location coordinates in the following format and want to know if they can be converted to the gene that they are most closely located next to:chr1:3002834-3002851chr1:4132776-4132783chr1:4322743-4322748chr2:155204062-155204080chr2:155207569-155207570chr2:155209754-155209758chr2:155275773-155275774chr2:155311478-155311484The coordinates are derived from the mm8, Feb 2006, Build 36 genome build. I would like to know if the UCSC table browser has a batch function that enables conversion of these coordinates into the gene descriptions or gene symbols that the binding sites are positioned near (either within the gene bodies or intergenically).Thank you,Satya
_______________________________________________
galaxy-user mailing list
galaxy-user@lists.bx.psu.edu
http://lists.bx.psu.edu/listinfo/galaxy-user