Making and Utilizing TxDb Objects

Marc Carlson, Patrick Aboyoun, Hervé Pagès, Seth Falcon, Martin Morgan

Friday, August 25, 2023

Introduction

The GenomicFeatures package retrieves and manages transcript-related features from the UCSC Genome Bioinformatics\footnote{(http://genome.ucsc.edu/)} and BioMart\footnote{(http://www.biomart.org/)} data resources. The package is useful for ChIP-chip, ChIP-seq, and RNA-seq analyses.

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library('GenomicFeatures'))

TxDb Objects

The GenomicFeatures package uses TxDb objects to store transcript metadata. This class maps the 5’ and 3’ untranslated regions (UTRs), protein coding sequences (CDSs) and exons for a set of mRNA transcripts to their associated genome. TxDb objects have numerous accessors functions to allow such features to be retrieved individually or grouped together in a way that reflects the underlying biology.

All TxDb objects are backed by a SQLite database that manages genomic locations and the relationships between pre-processed mRNA transcripts, exons, protein coding sequences, and their related gene identifiers.

Retrieving Data from TxDb objects

Loading Transcript Data

There are two ways that users can load pre-existing data to generate a TxDb object. One method is to use the loadDb method to load the object directly from an appropriate .sqlite database file.

Here we are loading a previously created TxDb object based on UCSC known gene data. This database only contains a small subset of the possible annotations for human and is only included to demonstrate and test the functionality of the GenomicFeatures package as a demonstration.

samplefile <- system.file("extdata", "hg19_knownGene_sample.sqlite",
                          package="GenomicFeatures")
txdb <- loadDb(samplefile)
txdb
## TxDb object:
## # Db type: TxDb
## # Supporting package: GenomicFeatures
## # Data source: UCSC
## # Genome: hg19
## # Organism: Homo sapiens
## # UCSC Table: knownGene
## # Resource URL: http://genome.ucsc.edu/
## # Type of Gene ID: Entrez Gene ID
## # Full dataset: no
## # miRBase build ID: NA
## # transcript_nrow: 178
## # exon_nrow: 620
## # cds_nrow: 523
## # Db created by: GenomicFeatures package from Bioconductor
## # Creation time: 2014-10-08 10:31:15 -0700 (Wed, 08 Oct 2014)
## # GenomicFeatures version at creation time: 1.17.21
## # RSQLite version at creation time: 0.11.4
## # DBSCHEMAVERSION: 1.0

In this case, the TxDb object has been returned by the loadDb method.

More commonly however, we expect that users will just load a TxDb annotation package like this:

library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene)
txdb <- TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene #shorthand (for convenience)
txdb
## TxDb object:
## # Db type: TxDb
## # Supporting package: GenomicFeatures
## # Data source: UCSC
## # Genome: hg19
## # Organism: Homo sapiens
## # Taxonomy ID: 9606
## # UCSC Table: knownGene
## # Resource URL: http://genome.ucsc.edu/
## # Type of Gene ID: Entrez Gene ID
## # Full dataset: yes
## # miRBase build ID: GRCh37
## # transcript_nrow: 82960
## # exon_nrow: 289969
## # cds_nrow: 237533
## # Db created by: GenomicFeatures package from Bioconductor
## # Creation time: 2015-10-07 18:11:28 +0000 (Wed, 07 Oct 2015)
## # GenomicFeatures version at creation time: 1.21.30
## # RSQLite version at creation time: 1.0.0
## # DBSCHEMAVERSION: 1.1

Loading the package like this will also create a TxDb object, and by default that object will have the same name as the package itself.

Pre-filtering data based on Chromosomes

It is possible to filter the data that is returned from a TxDb object based on it’s chromosome. This can be a useful way to limit the things that are returned if you are only interested in studying a handful of chromosomes.

To determine which chromosomes are currently active, use the seqlevels method. For example:

head(seqlevels(txdb))
## [1] "chr1" "chr2" "chr3" "chr4" "chr5" "chr6"

Will tell you all the chromosomes that are active for the TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene TxDb object (by default it will be all of them).

If you then wanted to only set Chromosome 1 to be active you could do it like this:

seqlevels(txdb) <- "chr1"

So if you ran this, then from this point on in your R session only chromosome 1 would be consulted when you call the various retrieval methods… If you need to reset back to the original seqlevels (i.e. to the seqlevels stored in the db), then set the seqlevels to seqlevels0(txdb).

seqlevels(txdb) <- seqlevels0(txdb)

\begin{Exercise} Use seqlevels to set only chromsome 15 to be active. BTW, the rest of this vignette will assume you have succeeded at this. \end{Exercise} `;N\begin{Solution}

seqlevels(txdb) <- "chr15"
seqlevels(txdb)
## [1] "chr15"

\end{Solution};N`

Retrieving data using the select method

The TxDb objects inherit from AnnotationDb objects (just as the ChipDb and OrgDb objects do). One of the implications of this relationship is that these object ought to be used in similar ways to each other. Therefore we have written supporting columns, keytypes, keys and select methods for TxDb objects.

These methods can be a useful way of extracting data from a TxDb object. And they are used in the same way that they would be used to extract information about a ChipDb or an OrgDb object. Here is a simple example of how to find the UCSC transcript names that match with a set of gene IDs.

keys <- c("100033416", "100033417", "100033420")
columns(txdb)
##  [1] "CDSCHROM"   "CDSEND"     "CDSID"      "CDSNAME"    "CDSSTART"  
##  [6] "CDSSTRAND"  "EXONCHROM"  "EXONEND"    "EXONID"     "EXONNAME"  
## [11] "EXONRANK"   "EXONSTART"  "EXONSTRAND" "GENEID"     "TXCHROM"   
## [16] "TXEND"      "TXID"       "TXNAME"     "TXSTART"    "TXSTRAND"  
## [21] "TXTYPE"
keytypes(txdb)
## [1] "CDSID"    "CDSNAME"  "EXONID"   "EXONNAME" "GENEID"   "TXID"     "TXNAME"
select(txdb, keys = keys, columns="TXNAME", keytype="GENEID")
## 'select()' returned 1:1 mapping between keys and columns
##      GENEID     TXNAME
## 1 100033416 uc001yxl.4
## 2 100033417 uc001yxo.3
## 3 100033420 uc001yxr.3

\begin{Exercise} For the genes in the example above, find the chromosome and strand information that will go with each of the transcript names. \end{Exercise} `;N\begin{Solution}

columns(txdb)
##  [1] "CDSCHROM"   "CDSEND"     "CDSID"      "CDSNAME"    "CDSSTART"  
##  [6] "CDSSTRAND"  "EXONCHROM"  "EXONEND"    "EXONID"     "EXONNAME"  
## [11] "EXONRANK"   "EXONSTART"  "EXONSTRAND" "GENEID"     "TXCHROM"   
## [16] "TXEND"      "TXID"       "TXNAME"     "TXSTART"    "TXSTRAND"  
## [21] "TXTYPE"
cols <- c("TXNAME", "TXSTRAND", "TXCHROM")
select(txdb, keys=keys, columns=cols, keytype="GENEID")
## 'select()' returned 1:1 mapping between keys and columns
##      GENEID     TXNAME TXCHROM TXSTRAND
## 1 100033416 uc001yxl.4   chr15        +
## 2 100033417 uc001yxo.3   chr15        +
## 3 100033420 uc001yxr.3   chr15        +

\end{Solution};N`

Methods for returning GRanges objects

Retrieving data with select is useful, but sometimes it is more convenient to extract the result as GRanges objects. This is often the case when you are doing counting or specialized overlap operations downstream. For these use cases there is another family of methods available.

Perhaps the most common operations for a TxDb object is to retrieve the genomic coordinates or ranges for exons, transcripts or coding sequences. The functions transcripts, exons, and cds return the coordinate information as a GRanges object.

As an example, all transcripts present in a TxDb object can be obtained as follows:

GR <- transcripts(txdb)
GR[1:3]
## GRanges object with 3 ranges and 2 metadata columns:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |     tx_id     tx_name
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <character>
##   [1]    chr15 20362688-20364420      + |     53552  uc001yte.1
##   [2]    chr15 20487997-20496811      + |     53553  uc001ytf.1
##   [3]    chr15 20723929-20727150      + |     53554  uc001ytj.3
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from hg19 genome

The transcripts function returns a GRanges class object. You can learn a lot more about the manipulation of these objects by reading the GenomicRanges introductory vignette. The show method for a GRanges object will display the ranges, seqnames (a chromosome or a contig), and strand on the left side and then present related metadata on the right side. At the bottom, the seqlengths display all the possible seqnames along with the length of each sequence.

The strand function is used to obtain the strand information from the transcripts. The sum of the Lengths of the Rle object that strand returns is equal to the length of the GRanges object.

tx_strand <- strand(GR)
tx_strand
## factor-Rle of length 3337 with 2 runs
##   Lengths: 1732 1605
##   Values :    +    -
## Levels(3): + - *
sum(runLength(tx_strand))
## [1] 3337
length(GR)
## [1] 3337

In addition, the transcripts function can also be used to retrieve a subset of the transcripts available such as those on the \(+\)-strand of chromosome 1.

GR <- transcripts(txdb, filter=list(tx_chrom = "chr15", tx_strand = "+"))
length(GR)
## [1] 1732
unique(strand(GR))
## [1] +
## Levels: + - *

The promoters function computes a GRanges object that spans the promoter region around the transcription start site for the transcripts in a TxDb object. The upstream and downstream arguments define the number of bases upstream and downstream from the transcription start site that make up the promoter region.

PR <- promoters(txdb, upstream=2000, downstream=400)
PR
## GRanges object with 3337 ranges and 2 metadata columns:
##              seqnames              ranges strand |     tx_id     tx_name
##                 <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <character>
##   uc001yte.1    chr15   20360688-20363087      + |     53552  uc001yte.1
##   uc001ytf.1    chr15   20485997-20488396      + |     53553  uc001ytf.1
##   uc001ytj.3    chr15   20721929-20724328      + |     53554  uc001ytj.3
##   uc021sex.1    chr15   20737312-20739711      + |     53555  uc021sex.1
##   uc010tzb.1    chr15   20740235-20742634      + |     53556  uc010tzb.1
##          ...      ...                 ...    ... .       ...         ...
##   uc021syy.1    chr15 102302656-102305055      - |     56884  uc021syy.1
##   uc002cdf.1    chr15 102462863-102465262      - |     56885  uc002cdf.1
##   uc002cds.2    chr15 102518897-102521296      - |     56886  uc002cds.2
##   uc010utv.1    chr15 102518897-102521296      - |     56887  uc010utv.1
##   uc010utw.1    chr15 102518897-102521296      - |     56888  uc010utw.1
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from hg19 genome

The exons and cds functions can also be used in a similar fashion to retrive genomic coordinates for exons and coding sequences.

\begin{Exercise} Use exonsto retrieve all the exons from chromosome 15. How does the length of this compare to the value returned bytranscripts? \end{Exercise} `;N\begin{Solution}

EX <- exons(txdb)
EX[1:4]
## GRanges object with 4 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |   exon_id
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer>
##   [1]    chr15 20362688-20362858      + |    192986
##   [2]    chr15 20362943-20363123      + |    192987
##   [3]    chr15 20364397-20364420      + |    192988
##   [4]    chr15 20487997-20488227      + |    192989
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from hg19 genome
length(EX)
## [1] 10771
length(GR)
## [1] 1732

\end{Solution};N`

Working with Grouped Features

Often one is interested in how particular genomic features relate to each other, and not just their location. For example, it might be of interest to group transcripts by gene or to group exons by transcript. Such groupings are supported by the transcriptsBy, exonsBy, and cdsBy functions.

The following call can be used to group transcripts by genes:

GRList <- transcriptsBy(txdb, by = "gene")
length(GRList)
## [1] 799
names(GRList)[10:13]
## [1] "100033424" "100033425" "100033427" "100033428"
GRList[11:12]
## GRangesList object of length 2:
## $`100033425`
## GRanges object with 1 range and 2 metadata columns:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |     tx_id     tx_name
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <character>
##   [1]    chr15 25324204-25325381      + |     53638  uc001yxw.4
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from hg19 genome
## 
## $`100033427`
## GRanges object with 1 range and 2 metadata columns:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |     tx_id     tx_name
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <character>
##   [1]    chr15 25326433-25326526      + |     53640  uc001yxz.3
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from hg19 genome

The transcriptsBy function returns a GRangesList class object. As with GRanges objects, you can learn more about these objects by reading the GenomicRanges introductory vignette. The show method for a GRangesList object will display as a list of GRanges objects. And, at the bottom the seqinfo will be displayed once for the entire list.

For each of these three functions, there is a limited set of options that can be passed into the by argument to allow grouping. For the transcriptsBy function, you can group by gene, exon or cds, whereas for the exonsBy and cdsBy functions can only be grouped by transcript (tx) or gene.

So as a further example, to extract all the exons for each transcript you can call:

GRList <- exonsBy(txdb, by = "tx")
length(GRList)
## [1] 3337
names(GRList)[10:13]
## [1] "53561" "53562" "53563" "53564"
GRList[[12]]
## GRanges object with 1 range and 3 metadata columns:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |   exon_id   exon_name exon_rank
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <character> <integer>
##   [1]    chr15 22043463-22043502      + |    193028        <NA>         1
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from hg19 genome

As you can see, the GRangesList objects returned from each function contain locations and identifiers grouped into a list like object according to the type of feature specified in the by argument. The object returned can then be used by functions like findOverlaps to contextualize alignments from high-throughput sequencing.

The identifiers used to label the GRanges objects depend upon the data source used to create the TxDb object. So the list identifiers will not always be Entrez Gene IDs, as they were in the first example. Furthermore, some data sources do not provide a unique identifier for all features. In this situation, the group label will be a synthetic ID created by GenomicFeatures to keep the relations between features consistent in the database this was the case in the 2nd example. Even though the results will sometimes have to come back to you as synthetic IDs, you can still always retrieve the original IDs.

\begin{Exercise} Starting with the tx_ids that are the names of the GRList object we just made, use selectto retrieve that matching transcript names. Remember that the list used aby argument = "tx", so the list is grouped by transcript IDs. \end{Exercise} `;N\begin{Solution}

GRList <- exonsBy(txdb, by = "tx")
tx_ids <- names(GRList)
head(select(txdb, keys=tx_ids, columns="TXNAME", keytype="TXID"))
## 'select()' returned 1:1 mapping between keys and columns
##    TXID     TXNAME
## 1 53552 uc001yte.1
## 2 53553 uc001ytf.1
## 3 53554 uc001ytj.3
## 4 53555 uc021sex.1
## 5 53556 uc010tzb.1
## 6 53557 uc021sey.1

\end{Solution};N`

Finally, the order of the results in a GRangesList object can vary with the way in which things were grouped. In most cases the grouped elements of the GRangesList object will be listed in the order that they occurred along the chromosome. However, when exons or CDS are grouped by transcript, they will instead be grouped according to their position along the transcript itself. This is important because alternative splicing can mean that the order along the transcript can be different from that along the chromosome.

Predefined grouping functions

The intronsByTranscript, fiveUTRsByTranscript and threeUTRsByTranscript are convenience functions that provide behavior equivalent to the grouping functions, but in prespecified form. These functions return a GRangesList object grouped by transcript for introns, 5’ UTR’s, and 3’ UTR’s, respectively. Below are examples of how you can call these methods.

length(intronsByTranscript(txdb))
## [1] 3337
length(fiveUTRsByTranscript(txdb))
## [1] 1825
length(threeUTRsByTranscript(txdb))
## [1] 1803

Getting the actual sequence data

The GenomicFeatures package also provides provides functions for converting from ranges to actual sequence (when paired with an appropriate BSgenome package).

library(BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19)
## Loading required package: BSgenome
## Loading required package: Biostrings
## Loading required package: XVector
## 
## Attaching package: 'Biostrings'
## The following object is masked from 'package:base':
## 
##     strsplit
## Loading required package: rtracklayer
tx_seqs1 <- extractTranscriptSeqs(Hsapiens, TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene,
                                  use.names=TRUE)

And, once these sequences have been extracted, you can translate them into proteins with translate:

suppressWarnings(translate(tx_seqs1))
## AAStringSet object of length 3337:
##        width seq                                            names               
##    [1]   125 EDQDDEARVQYEGFRPGMYVRV...YTPQHMHCGAAFWA*FSDSCH uc001yte.1
##    [2]   288 RIAS*GRAEFSSAQTSEIQRRR...ESVFYSVYFNYGNNCFFTVTD uc001ytf.1
##    [3]   588 RSGQRLPEQPEAEGGDPGKQRR...RDLLENETHLYLCSIKICFSS uc001ytj.3
##    [4]    10 HHLNCRPQTG                                     uc021sex.1
##    [5]     9 STVTLPHSQ                                      uc010tzb.1
##    ...   ... ...
## [3333]    10 QVPMRVQVGQ                                     uc021syy.1
## [3334]   306 MVTEFIFLGLSDSQELQTFLFM...DMKTAIRRLRKWDAHSSVKF* uc002cdf.1
## [3335]   550 LAVSLFFDLFFLFMCICCLLAQ...TPRRLHPAQLEILY*KHTVGF uc002cds.2
## [3336]   496 LAVSLFFDLFFLFMCICCLLAQ...PETFASCTARDPLLKAHCWFL uc010utv.1
## [3337]   531 LAVSLFFDLFFLFMCICCLLAQ...TPRRLHPAQLEILY*KHTVGF uc010utw.1

\begin{Exercise} But of course this is not a meaningful translation, because the call to extractTranscriptSeqswill have extracted all the transcribed regions of the genome regardless of whether or not they are translated. Look at the manual page forextractTranscriptSeqs and see how you can use cdsBy to only translate only the coding regions. \end{Exercise} `;N\begin{Solution}

cds_seqs <- extractTranscriptSeqs(Hsapiens,
                                  cdsBy(txdb, by="tx", use.names=TRUE))
translate(cds_seqs)
## AAStringSet object of length 1875:
##        width seq                                            names               
##    [1]   102 MYVRVEIENVPCEFVQNIDPHY...RQRLLKYTPQHMHCGAAFWA* uc001yte.1
##    [2]   435 MEWKLEQSMREQALLKAQLTQL...LGSNCCVPFFCWAWPPRRRR* uc010tzc.1
##    [3]   317 MKIANNTVVTEFILLGLTQSQD...SMKRLLSRHVVCQVDFIIRN* uc001yuc.1
##    [4]   314 METANYTKVTEFVLTGLSQTPE...KEVKAAMRKLVTKYILCKEK* uc010tzu.2
##    [5]   317 MKIANNTVVTEFILLGLTQSQD...SMKRLLSRHVVCQVDFIIRN* uc010tzv.2
##    ...   ... ...
## [1871]   186 MAGGVLPLRGLRALCRVLLFLS...CLGRSEFKDICQQNVFLQVY* uc010ush.1
## [1872]   258 MYNSKLWEASGHWQHYSENMFT...PVNFLKKDLWLTLTWITVVH* uc002bxl.3
## [1873]   803 MAAEALAAEAVASRLERQEEDI...AIDKLKNLRKTRTLNAEEAF* uc002bxm.3
## [1874]   306 MVTEFIFLGLSDSQELQTFLFM...DMKTAIRRLRKWDAHSSVKF* uc002cdf.1
## [1875]   134 MSESINFSHNLGQLLSPPRCVV...KGETQESVESRVLPGPRHRH* uc010utv.1

\end{Solution};N`

Creating New TxDb Objects or Packages

The GenomicFeatures package provides functions to create TxDb objects based on data downloaded from UCSC Genome Bioinformatics or BioMart. The following subsections demonstrate the use of these functions. There is also support for creating TxDb objects from custom data sources using makeTxDb; see the help page for this function for details.

Using makeTxDbFromUCSC

The function makeTxDbFromUCSC downloads UCSC Genome Bioinformatics transcript tables (e.g. knownGene, refGene, ensGene) for a genome build (e.g. mm9, hg19). Use the supportedUCSCtables utility function to get the list of tables known to work with makeTxDbFromUCSC.

supportedUCSCtables(genome="mm9")
##         tablename          track           subtrack
## 1       knownGene     UCSC Genes               <NA>
## 2  knownGeneOld11 Old UCSC Genes               <NA>
## 3   knownGeneOld8 Old UCSC Genes               <NA>
## 4   knownGeneOld7 Old UCSC Genes               <NA>
## 5   knownGeneOld6 Old UCSC Genes               <NA>
## 6   knownGeneOld4 Old UCSC Genes               <NA>
## 7   knownGeneOld3 Old UCSC Genes               <NA>
## 8        ccdsGene           CCDS               <NA>
## 9         refGene   RefSeq Genes               <NA>
## 10    xenoRefGene   Other RefSeq               <NA>
## 11       vegaGene     Vega Genes Vega Protein Genes
## 12 vegaPseudoGene     Vega Genes   Vega Pseudogenes
## 13        ensGene  Ensembl Genes               <NA>
## 14        acembly  AceView Genes               <NA>
## 15  nscanPasaGene         N-SCAN    N-SCAN PASA-EST
## 16      nscanGene         N-SCAN             N-SCAN
## 17        sgpGene      SGP Genes               <NA>
## 18         geneid   Geneid Genes               <NA>
## 19        genscan  Genscan Genes               <NA>
## 20       exoniphy       Exoniphy               <NA>
## 21   augustusGene       AUGUSTUS               <NA>
mm9KG_txdb <- makeTxDbFromUCSC(genome="mm9", tablename="knownGene")

Using makeTxDbFromBiomart

Retrieve data from BioMart by specifying the mart and the data set to the makeTxDbFromBiomart function (not all BioMart data sets are currently supported):

mmusculusEnsembl <- makeTxDbFromBiomart(dataset="mmusculus_gene_ensembl")

As with the makeTxDbFromUCSC function, the makeTxDbFromBiomart function also has a circ_seqs argument that will default to using the contents of the DEFAULT_CIRC_SEQS vector. And just like those UCSC sources, there is also a helper function called getChromInfoFromBiomart that can show what the different chromosomes are called for a given source.

Using the makeTxDbFromBiomart makeTxDbFromUCSC functions can take a while and may also require some bandwidth as these methods have to download and then assemble a database from their respective sources. It is not expected that most users will want to do this step every time. Instead, we suggest that you save your annotation objects and label them with an appropriate time stamp so as to facilitate reproducible research.

Using makeTxDbFromEnsembl

The makeTxDbFromEnsembl function creates a TxDb object for a given organism by importing the genomic locations of its transcripts, exons, CDS, and genes from an Ensembl database.

See ?makeTxDbFromEnsembl for more information.

Using makeTxDbFromGFF

You can also extract transcript information from either GFF3 or GTF files by using the makeTxDbFromGFF function. Usage is similar to makeTxDbFromBiomart and makeTxDbFromUCSC.

Saving and Loading a TxDb Object

Once a TxDb object has been created, it can be saved to avoid the time and bandwidth costs of recreating it and to make it possible to reproduce results with identical genomic feature data at a later date. Since TxDb objects are backed by a SQLite database, the save format is a SQLite database file (which could be accessed from programs other than R if desired). Note that it is not possible to serialize a TxDb object using R’s save function.

saveDb(mm9KG_txdb, file="fileName.sqlite")

And as was mentioned earlier, a saved TxDb object can be initialized from a .sqlite file by simply using loadDb.

mm9KG_txdb <- loadDb("fileName.sqlite")

Using makeTxDbPackageFromUCSC and

`makeTxDbPackageFromBiomart`

It is often much more convenient to just make an annotation package out of your annotations. If you are finding that this is the case, then you should consider the convenience functions: makeTxDbPackageFromUCSC and makeTxDbPackageFromBiomart. These functions are similar to makeTxDbFromUCSC and makeTxDbFromBiomart except that they will take the extra step of actually wrapping the database up into an annotation package for you. This package can then be installed and used as of the standard TxDb packages found on in the Bioconductor repository.

Session Information

## R version 4.3.1 (2023-06-16)
## Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu (64-bit)
## Running under: Ubuntu 22.04.3 LTS
## 
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS:   /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.17-bioc/R/lib/libRblas.so 
## LAPACK: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/lapack/liblapack.so.3.10.0
## 
## locale:
##  [1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8       LC_NUMERIC=C              
##  [3] LC_TIME=en_GB              LC_COLLATE=C              
##  [5] LC_MONETARY=en_US.UTF-8    LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8   
##  [7] LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8       LC_NAME=C                 
##  [9] LC_ADDRESS=C               LC_TELEPHONE=C            
## [11] LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8 LC_IDENTIFICATION=C       
## 
## time zone: America/New_York
## tzcode source: system (glibc)
## 
## attached base packages:
## [1] stats4    stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets  methods  
## [8] base     
## 
## other attached packages:
##  [1] BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19_1.4.3      
##  [2] BSgenome_1.68.0                        
##  [3] rtracklayer_1.60.1                     
##  [4] Biostrings_2.68.1                      
##  [5] XVector_0.40.0                         
##  [6] TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene_3.2.2
##  [7] GenomicFeatures_1.52.2                 
##  [8] AnnotationDbi_1.62.2                   
##  [9] Biobase_2.60.0                         
## [10] GenomicRanges_1.52.0                   
## [11] GenomeInfoDb_1.36.2                    
## [12] IRanges_2.34.1                         
## [13] S4Vectors_0.38.1                       
## [14] BiocGenerics_0.46.0                    
## 
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
##  [1] KEGGREST_1.40.0             SummarizedExperiment_1.30.2
##  [3] rjson_0.2.21                xfun_0.40                  
##  [5] lattice_0.21-8              vctrs_0.6.3                
##  [7] tools_4.3.1                 bitops_1.0-7               
##  [9] generics_0.1.3              curl_5.0.2                 
## [11] parallel_4.3.1              tibble_3.2.1               
## [13] fansi_1.0.4                 RSQLite_2.3.1              
## [15] blob_1.2.4                  pkgconfig_2.0.3            
## [17] Matrix_1.6-1                dbplyr_2.3.3               
## [19] lifecycle_1.0.3             GenomeInfoDbData_1.2.10    
## [21] compiler_4.3.1              stringr_1.5.0              
## [23] Rsamtools_2.16.0            progress_1.2.2             
## [25] codetools_0.2-19            RCurl_1.98-1.12            
## [27] yaml_2.3.7                  pillar_1.9.0               
## [29] crayon_1.5.2                BiocParallel_1.34.2        
## [31] DelayedArray_0.26.7         cachem_1.0.8               
## [33] abind_1.4-5                 tidyselect_1.2.0           
## [35] digest_0.6.33               stringi_1.7.12             
## [37] dplyr_1.1.2                 restfulr_0.0.15            
## [39] grid_4.3.1                  biomaRt_2.56.1             
## [41] fastmap_1.1.1               cli_3.6.1                  
## [43] magrittr_2.0.3              S4Arrays_1.0.5             
## [45] XML_3.99-0.14               utf8_1.2.3                 
## [47] prettyunits_1.1.1           filelock_1.0.2             
## [49] rappdirs_0.3.3              bit64_4.0.5                
## [51] httr_1.4.7                  matrixStats_1.0.0          
## [53] bit_4.0.5                   png_0.1-8                  
## [55] hms_1.1.3                   memoise_2.0.1              
## [57] evaluate_0.21               knitr_1.43                 
## [59] BiocIO_1.10.0               BiocFileCache_2.8.0        
## [61] rlang_1.1.1                 glue_1.6.2                 
## [63] DBI_1.1.3                   xml2_1.3.5                 
## [65] R6_2.5.1                    MatrixGenerics_1.12.3      
## [67] GenomicAlignments_1.36.0    zlibbioc_1.46.0