Teffectr: an R Package for Studying the Potential Effects of Transposable Elements on Gene Expression With Linear Regression Model
Loading...
Files
Date
2019
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Peerj Inc
Open Access Color
GOLD
Green Open Access
Yes
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Introduction. Recent studies highlight the crucial regulatory roles of transposable elements (TEs) on proximal gene expression in distinct biological contexts such as disease and development. However, computational tools extracting potential TE - proximal gene expression associations from RNA-sequencing data are still missing. Implementation. Herein, we developed a novel R package, using a linear regression model, for studying the potential influence of TE species on proximal gene expression from a given RNA-sequencing data set. Our R package, namely TEffectR, makes use of publicly available RepeatMasker TE and Ensembl gene annotations as well as several functions of other R-packages. It calculates total read counts of TEs from sorted and indexed genome aligned BAM files provided by the user, and determines statistically significant relations between TE expression and the transcription of nearby genes under diverse biological conditions.
Description
Keywords
Transposable elements, Gene regulation, Gene expression, Regression, Linear model, R package, In-Situ, Breast, Dna, Transcriptome, Mutation, Cells, Fen1, QH301-705.5, Bioinformatics, Linear model, R package, R, Medicine, Gene expression, Biology (General), Transposable elements, Regression, Gene regulation
Fields of Science
0301 basic medicine, 03 medical and health sciences
Citation
WoS Q
Q2
Scopus Q
Q3

OpenCitations Citation Count
27
Source
Peerj
Volume
7
Issue
Start Page
End Page
PlumX Metrics
Citations
Scopus : 20
PubMed : 16
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 40
SCOPUS™ Citations
20
checked on Mar 22, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
21
checked on Mar 22, 2026
Page Views
7
checked on Mar 22, 2026
Downloads
16
checked on Mar 22, 2026
Google Scholar™


