_SummarizedExperiment_ for Coordinating Experimental Assays, Samples, and Regions of Interest

BiocStyle::markdown()

Introduction

The SummarizedExperiment class is used to store rectangular matrices of experimental results, which are commonly produced by sequencing and microarray experiments. Each object stores observations of one or more samples, along with additional meta-data describing both the observations (features) and samples (phenotypes).

A key aspect of the SummarizedExperiment class is the coordination of the meta-data and assays when subsetting. For example, if you want to exclude a given sample you can do for both the meta-data and assay in one operation, which ensures the meta-data and observed data will remain in sync. Improperly accounting for meta and observational data has resulted in a number of incorrect results and retractions so this is a very desirable property.

SummarizedExperiment is in many ways similar to the historical ExpressionSet, the main distinction being that SummarizedExperiment is more flexible in it's row information, allowing both GRanges based as well as those described by arbitrary DataFrames. This makes it ideally suited to a variety of experiments, particularly sequencing based experiments such as RNA-Seq and ChIp-Seq.

Anatomy of a SummarizedExperiment

The SummarizedExperiment package contains two classes: SummarizedExperiment and RangedSummarizedExperiment.

SummarizedExperiment is a matrix-like container where rows represent features of interest (e.g. genes, transcripts, exons, etc.) and columns represent samples. The objects contain one or more assays, each represented by a matrix-like object of numeric or other mode. The rows of a SummarizedExperiment object represent features of interest. Information about these features is stored in a DataFrame object, accessible using the function rowData(). Each row of the DataFrame provides information on the feature in the corresponding row of the SummarizedExperiment object. Columns of the DataFrame represent different attributes of the features of interest, e.g., gene or transcript IDs, etc.

RangedSummarizedExperiment is the child of the SummarizedExperiment class which means that all the methods on SummarizedExperiment also work on a RangedSummarizedExperiment.

The fundamental difference between the two classes is that the rows of a RangedSummarizedExperiment object represent genomic ranges of interest instead of a DataFrame of features. The RangedSummarizedExperiment ranges are described by a GRanges or a GRangesList object, accessible using the rowRanges() function.

The following graphic displays the class geometry and highlights the vertical (column) and horizontal (row) relationships.

Summarized Experiment

Assays

The airway package contains an example dataset from an RNA-Seq experiment of read counts per gene for airway smooth muscles. These data are stored in a RangedSummarizedExperiment object which contains 8 different experimental and assays 64,102 gene transcripts.

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(SummarizedExperiment))
suppressPackageStartupMessages(data(airway, package="airway"))
library(SummarizedExperiment)
data(airway, package="airway")
se <- airway
se

To retrieve the experiment data from a SummarizedExperiment object one can use the assays() accessor. An object can have multiple assay datasets each of which can be accessed using the $ operator. The airway dataset contains only one assay (counts). Here each row represents a gene transcript and each column one of the samples.

assays(se)$counts
knitr::kable(assays(se)$counts[1:10,])

'Row' (regions-of-interest) data

The rowRanges() accessor is used to view the range information for a RangedSummarizedExperiment. (Note if this were the parent SummarizedExperiment class we'd use rowData()). The data are stored in a GRangesList object, where each list element corresponds to one gene transcript and the ranges in each GRanges correspond to the exons in the transcript.

rowRanges(se)

'Column' (sample) data

Sample meta-data describing the samples can be accessed using colData(), and is a DataFrame that can store any number of descriptive columns for each sample row.

colData(se)

This sample metadata can be accessed using the $ accessor which makes it easy to subset the entire object by a given phenotype.

# subset for only those samples treated with dexamethasone
se[, se$dex == "trt"]

Experiment-wide metadata

Meta-data describing the experimental methods and publication references can be accessed using metadata().

metadata(se)

Note that metadata() is just a simple list, so it is appropriate for any experiment wide metadata the user wishes to save, such as storing model formulas.

metadata(se)$formula <- counts ~ dex + albut

metadata(se)

Constructing a SummarizedExperiment

Often, SummarizedExperiment or RangedSummarizedExperiment objects are returned by functions written by other packages. However it is possible to create them by hand with a call to the SummarizedExperiment() constructor.

Constructing a RangedSummarizedExperiment with a GRanges as the rowRanges argument:

nrows <- 200
ncols <- 6
counts <- matrix(runif(nrows * ncols, 1, 1e4), nrows)
rowRanges <- GRanges(rep(c("chr1", "chr2"), c(50, 150)),
                     IRanges(floor(runif(200, 1e5, 1e6)), width=100),
                     strand=sample(c("+", "-"), 200, TRUE),
                     feature_id=sprintf("ID%03d", 1:200))
colData <- DataFrame(Treatment=rep(c("ChIP", "Input"), 3),
                     row.names=LETTERS[1:6])

SummarizedExperiment(assays=list(counts=counts),
                     rowRanges=rowRanges, colData=colData)

A SummarizedExperiment can be constructed with or without supplying a DataFrame for the rowData argument:

SummarizedExperiment(assays=list(counts=counts), colData=colData)

Common operations on SummarizedExperiment

Subsetting

# subset the first five transcripts and first three samples
se[1:5, 1:3]
se[, se$cell == "N61311"]

Getters and setters

counts <- matrix(1:15, 5, 3, dimnames=list(LETTERS[1:5], LETTERS[1:3]))

dates <- SummarizedExperiment(assays=list(counts=counts),
                              rowData=DataFrame(month=month.name[1:5], day=1:5))

# Subset all January assays
dates[rowData(dates)$month == "January", ]
assays(se)

assays(se)[[1]][1:5, 1:5]

# assay defaults to the first assay if no i is given
assay(se)[1:5, 1:5]

assay(se, 1)[1:5, 1:5]

Range-based operations

# Subset for only rows which are in the interval 100,000 to 110,000 of
# chromosome 1
roi <- GRanges(seqnames="1", ranges=100000:1100000)
subsetByOverlaps(se, roi)

Session information

sessionInfo()


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SummarizedExperiment documentation built on Nov. 8, 2020, 8:28 p.m.