knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>", eval = FALSE )
For retrieving the PIN file for an organism of your choice, you may use the function get_pin_file()
. As of this version, the only source for PIN data is "BioGRID".
By default, the function downloads the PIN data from BioGRID and processes it, saves it in a temporary file and returns the path:
## the default organism is "Homo_sapiens" path_to_pin_file <- get_pin_file()
You can retrieve the PIN data for the organism of your choice, by setting the org
argument:
## retrieving PIN data for "Gallus_gallus" path_to_pin_file <- get_pin_file(org = "Gallus_gallus")
You may also supply a path/to/PIN/file
to save the PIN file for later use (in this case, the path you supply will be returned):
## saving the "Homo_sapiens" PIN as "/path/to/PIN/file" path_to_pin_file <- get_pin_file(path2pin = "/path/to/PIN/file")
You may also retrieve a specific version of BioGRID via setting the release
argument:
## retrieving PIN data for "Mus_musculus" from BioGRID release 3.5.179 path_to_pin_file <- get_pin_file( org = "Mus_musculus", release = "3.5.179" )
To retrieve organism-specific gene sets list, you may use the function get_gene_sets_list()
. The available sources for gene sets are "KEGG", "Reactome" and "MSigDB". The function retrieves the gene sets data from the source and processes it into a list of two objects used by pathfindR for active-subnetwork-oriented enrichment analysis:
1. gene_sets A list containing the genes involved in each gene set
2. descriptions A named vector containing the descriptions for each gene set
By default, get_gene_sets_list()
obtains "KEGG" gene sets for "hsa".
To obtain the gene sets list of the KEGG pathways for an organism of your choice, use the KEGG organism code for the selected organism. For a full list of all available organisms, see here.
## obtaining KEGG pathway gene sets for Rattus norvegicus (rno) gsets_list <- get_gene_sets_list(org_code = "rno")
For obtaining Reactome pathway gene sets, set the source
argument to "Reactome". This downloads the most current Reactome pathways in gmt format and processes it into the list object that pathfindR uses:
gsets_list <- get_gene_sets_list(source = "Reactome")
For Reactome, there is only one collection of pathway gene sets.
Using msigdbr
, pathfindR
can retrieve all MSigDB gene sets. For this, set the source
argument to "MSigDB" and the collection
argument to the desired MSigDB collection (one of H, C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6, C7):
gsets_list <- get_gene_sets_list( source = "MSigDB", collection = "C2" )
The default organism for MSigDB is "Homo sapiens", you may obtain the gene sets data for another organism by setting the species
argument:
## obtaining C5 gene sets data for "Drosophila melanogaster" gsets_list <- get_gene_sets_list( source = "MSigDB", species = "Drosophila melanogaster", collection = "C5" )
## see msigdbr::msigdbr_species() for all available organisms msigdbr::msigdbr_species()
You may also obtain the gene sets for a subcollection by setting the subcollection
argument:
## obtaining C3 - MIR: microRNA targets gsets_list <- get_gene_sets_list( source = "MSigDB", collection = "C3", subcollection = "MIR" )
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