To install this package, start R and enter:

## try http:// if https:// URLs are not supported
source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("QuartPAC")

In most cases, you don't need to download the package archive at all.

QuartPAC

   

Identification of mutational clusters in protein quaternary structures.

Bioconductor version: 3.2

Identifies clustering of somatic mutations in proteins over the entire quaternary structure.

Author: Gregory Ryslik, Yuwei Cheng, Hongyu Zhao

Maintainer: Gregory Ryslik <gregory.ryslik at yale.edu>

Citation (from within R, enter citation("QuartPAC")):

Installation

To install this package, start R and enter:

## try http:// if https:// URLs are not supported
source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("QuartPAC")

Documentation

To view documentation for the version of this package installed in your system, start R and enter:

browseVignettes("QuartPAC")

 

PDF SpacePAC: Identifying mutational clusters in 3D protein space using simulation
PDF   Reference Manual
Text   NEWS

Details

biocViews Clustering, Proteomics, Software, SomaticMutation
Version 1.2.0
In Bioconductor since BioC 3.1 (R-3.2) (1 year)
License GPL-2
Depends iPAC, GraphPAC, SpacePAC, data.table
Imports
LinkingTo
Suggests RUnit, BiocGenerics, rgl
SystemRequirements
Enhances
URL
Depends On Me
Imports Me
Suggests Me
Build Report  

Package Archives

Follow Installation instructions to use this package in your R session.

Package Source QuartPAC_1.2.0.tar.gz
Windows Binary QuartPAC_1.2.0.zip
Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) QuartPAC_1.2.0.tgz
Mac OS X 10.9 (Mavericks) QuartPAC_1.2.0.tgz
Subversion source (username/password: readonly)
Git source https://github.com/Bioconductor-mirror/QuartPAC/tree/release-3.2
Package Short Url http://bioconductor.org/packages/QuartPAC/
Package Downloads Report Download Stats

Documentation »

Bioconductor

R / CRAN packages and documentation

Support »

Please read the posting guide. Post questions about Bioconductor to one of the following locations:

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center