--- title: "Infer species" author: "

Author: Brian M. Schilder

" date: "

Most recent update: `r format( Sys.Date(), '%b-%d-%Y')`

" output: BiocStyle::html_document: vignette: > %\VignetteIndexEntry{Infer species} %\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} %\VignetteEngine{knitr::rmarkdown} --- # Installation ```{r, eval=FALSE} if (!requireNamespace("BiocManager", quietly = TRUE)) install.packages("BiocManager") # orthogene is only available on Bioconductor>=3.14 if(BiocManager::version()<"3.14") BiocManager::install(update = TRUE, ask = FALSE) BiocManager::install("orthogene") ``` ```{r setup} library(orthogene) data("exp_mouse") # Setting to "homologene" for the purposes of quick demonstration. # We generally recommend using method="gprofiler" (default). method <- "homologene" ``` # Introduction It's not always clear whether a dataset is using the original species gene names, human gene names, or some other species' gene names. `infer_species` takes a list/matrix/data.frame with genes and infers the species that they best match to! For the sake of speed, the genes extracted from `gene_df` are tested against genomes from only the following 6 `test_species` by default: - human - monkey - rat - mouse - zebrafish - fly However, you can supply your own list of `test_species`, which will be automatically be mapped and standardised using `map_species`. # Examples ## Mouse genes ### Infer the species ```{r} matches <- orthogene::infer_species(gene_df = exp_mouse, method = method) ``` ## Rat genes ### Create example data To create an example dataset, turn the gene names into rat genes. ```{r} exp_rat <- orthogene::convert_orthologs(gene_df = exp_mouse, input_species = "mouse", output_species = "rat", method = method) ``` ### Infer the species ```{r} matches <- orthogene::infer_species(gene_df = exp_rat, method = method) ``` ## Human genes ### Create example data To create an example dataset, turn the gene names into human genes. ```{r} exp_human <- orthogene::convert_orthologs(gene_df = exp_mouse, input_species = "mouse", output_species = "human", method = method) ``` ### Infer the species ```{r} matches <- orthogene::infer_species(gene_df = exp_human, method = method) ``` # Additional `test_species` You can even supply `test_species` with the name of one of the R packages that `orthogene` gets orthologs from. This will test against all species available in that particular R package. For example, by setting `test_species="homologene"` we automatically test for % gene matches in each of the 20+ species available in `homologene`. ```{r} matches <- orthogene::infer_species(gene_df = exp_human, test_species = method, method = method) ``` # Session Info
```{r Session Info} utils::sessionInfo() ```