IGB offers many options to customize the appearance of annotation tracks.
IGB remembers your customizations from session to session.
Some of the available customizations include:
You can change appearance of annotation tracks
You can also set the default values for newly opened tracks based on file type using the Track Defaults tab in the Preferences window.
In IGB you can modify the color schemes for annotation and graph tracks. Using controls in the Annotation and Track Preferences tabs, you can
Unless you change it, the track label font color always matches the foreground color.
The following images shows the Style settings from the Annotation tab for a selected track. Note that the track label outline is red, indicated the track is selected.
All annotation tracks have a track label in the panel on the left side of the display. You can change several aspects of how the label appears. You can
To change the text in a track label, select the track by clicking its track label and
To change the track label font size, select the track by clicking its track label and
You can also change the width of a track label. To increase or decrease track label width, drag the vertical bar that separates the labels from the data. The red arrow in the image below shows the 'grab point' which can be used to change the label column width.
If you use white or light gray shades for backgrounds, you may want to change the color of the Edge Match graphics so that it is easier to see.
To change the edge match color
Edge matching examples (click to enlarge)
Every annotation has a set of associated attributes, such as its ID, score, name, gene name, description, start and end positions, and so on.
You can configure IGB to display any one of these attributes next to an annotation.
To change what values are shown as the annotation label
Choose score field for junction BED files created by TopHat |
IGB can show plus and minus strand features in separate tracks or combined into one track. To combine plus and minus strand annotation into a single track
IGB can draw arrows within introns that indicate strand. To use arrows to indicate strand
IGB can indicate annotation strand using color. To turn this option on or off or choose colors to use for minus and plus strand feature
Collapsing a track merges all annotations in the track into a single row.
To collapse a track
The stack height setting controls the number of annotation rows that appear within a track. If there are more annotations than can be shown, IGB draws these in a single summary row in the top or bottom row of the track, depending on whether plus or minus strand features are being shown.
To change stack height, right-click the track label and
or
In the image below, the Stack Height is set to 10. The red arrow points to the summary row.
For annotation data that contains scores, IGB can display the data with color intensity reflective of the scores. The scores must have been included in the data when it was loaded. Files in GFF and BED format allow the specification of scores. To turn color-by-score on or off, right-click the track name and choose Color by Score.
The default range that IGB uses is 0 to 1000+. New for IGB 7.0, we have added the ability to Set Range of Color by Score. This allows the user to set both the top, as well as bottom scores to best display their data. You can set the lower value so that any data with a score below your threshold will be barely visible; you can set the upper score to the highest score in your data, or any other value. After setting the lower and upper values, IGB will scale the color intensity across the new range so that the highest values are most intense, and the lowest values are the least intense (see image below).
This function has no effect on data that doesn't contain scores.
In this image, exons are the scored value. Exons with the highest scores will display in the chosen foreground color (red arrows).Exons with the lowest scores will display in a color intensity that blends with the background color (blue arrows).All other scores will be displayed at color intensities associated with their numerical score, where mid range numbers will show with mid range color intensity (green arrows).