knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>", tidy = TRUE) knitr::knit_hooks$set(small.mar = function(before, options, envir) { if (before) par(mar = c(0, 0, 0, 0)) # no margin })
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dearseq
dearseq
is an R
package that performs Differential Expression
Analysis of RNA-seq data, while guaranteeing a sound control of
false positives (Gauthier et al., 2019). It relies on variance component
score test accounting for data heteroscedasticity through precision weights,
not unlike voom
(Law et al., 2014). It can perform either
In addition, dearseq
can deal with various and complex experimental designs
such as:
More details are provided in this bioRxiv preprint 635714.
dearseq
for a gene-wise analysisdear_seq()
2 inputs are required to run dear_seq()
:
Both can be supplied in the formed of a SummarizedExperiment
object for
instance.
A third optional input is the covariates that will be adjusted on (such as
age for instance).
Tuberculosis (TB) is a disease caused by a bacterium called Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Bacteria typically infect the lungs, but they can also affect other parts of the body. Tuberculosis can remain in a quiescent state in the body. It is called latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI). It is an infection without clinical signs, bacteriological and radiological disease.
Berry et al. first identified a whole blood 393 transcript signature for active TB using microarray analysis. Then, Singhania et al. found a 373-genes signature of active tuberculosis using RNA-Seq, confirming microarray results, that discriminates active tuberculosis from latently infected and healthy individuals.
We sought to investigate how many of the 373 genes Singhania et al. found using edgeR might actually be false positives. As a quick example, we propose a partial re-analysis (see Gauthier et al. for the complete analysis) of the Singhania et al. dataset: we proceed to the Differential Expression Analysis (DEA) of the Active TB group against the Control one, omitting LTBI/Control and ActiveTB/LTBI comparisons. We focused on the Berry London dataset.
It results in 54 patients of whom 21 are active TB patients, 21 are latent TB patients and 12 are healthy control particiants.
For more details, check the article from Berry et al., 2010 here.
Data from Singhania et al. inverstigating active TB are publicly available on GEO website with GEO access number 'GSE107995'. Thanks to the GEOquery
package to get the data files from GEO website (see appendix for more details on GEOquery
)
library(GEOquery) GSE107991_metadata <- GEOquery::getGEO("GSE107991", GSEMatrix = FALSE) get_info <- function(i){ name <- GEOquery::Meta(GSMList(GSE107991_metadata)[[i]])$source_name_ch1 name <- gsub("Active_TB", "ActiveTB", name) name <- gsub("Test_set", "TestSet", name) c(unlist(strsplit(name, split="_")), GEOquery::Meta(GSMList(GSE107991_metadata)[[i]])$title) } infos <- vapply(X = 1:length(GSMList(GSE107991_metadata)), FUN = get_info, FUN.VALUE = c("a", "b", "c", "d", "e")) infos_df <- cbind.data.frame("SampleID" = names(GSMList(GSE107991_metadata)), t(infos), stringsAsFactors=TRUE) rownames(infos_df) <- names(GEOquery::GSMList(GSE107991_metadata)) colnames(infos_df)[-1] <- c("Cohort", "Location", "Set", "Status", "SampleTitle")
This matrix contains the gene expression (in cells) for each gene (in rows) of each sample (in columns) gathered from RNA-seq measurements. The gene expression could already be normalized, or not (e.g. raw counts or pseudo-counts straight from the alignment). In the latter case, the gene expression is normalized then into log(counts) per million (i.e. log-cpm).
The gene expression matrix (called London
) is including in the package dearseq
.
It was extracted from one of the GEO supplementary files (namely the
"GSE107991_edgeR_normalized_Berry_London.xlsx" file).
NB: These expression data have already been already normalized using edgeR
library(readxl) GEOquery::getGEOSuppFiles('GSE107991', filter_regex="edgeR_normalized_Berry_London") London <- readxl::read_excel("GSE107991/GSE107991_edgeR_normalized_Berry_London.xlsx") genes <- London$Genes London <- as.matrix(London[, -c(1:3)]) rownames(London) <- genes
We have nrow(London)
genes in rows and ncol(London)
samples in columns
* rownames are Ensembl IDs ENSGxxxxxxxxxxx
for each gene (saved in genes
)
* colnames are the name of each sample Berry_London_Samplex
* each data-cell contains the normalized gene expression
The vector genes
contains all the gene identifiers.
dearseq
variance component score testThe main arguments to the dear_seq()
function are:
exprmat
: a numeric matrix containing the raw RNA-seq counts or preprocessed expressionscovariates
: a numeric matrix containing the model covariates that needs to be adjusted. Usually, its first column is the intercept (full of 1s).variables2test
: a numeric design matrix containing the variables of interest (with whom the expression association is tested)which_test
: a character string indicating which method to use to approximate the variance component score test, either "permutation" or "asymptotic".preprocessed
: a logical flag indicating whether the expression data have already been preprocessed (e.g. log2 transformed). Default is FALSE, in which case y is assumed to contain raw counts and is normalized into log(counts) per million.We use the permutation test because of the relatively small sample size ($n=33$).
library(dearseq) library(SummarizedExperiment) col_data <- data.frame("Status" = infos_df$Status) col_data$Status <- stats::relevel(col_data$Status, ref="Control") rownames(col_data) <- infos_df$SampleTitle se <- SummarizedExperiment(assays = London, colData = col_data) res_dearseq <- dearseq::dear_seq(object = se[, se$Status != "LTBI"], variables2test = "Status", which_test='asymptotic', preprocessed=TRUE)
res_dearseq
is a list containing:
which_test
, nperm
and preprocessed
NB: We excluded the LTBI patients to focus on the comparison between Active TB versus Control patients.
dearseq
for gene-set analysisHere we will use a subsample of the RNA-seq data from Baduel et al. (2016)
studying Arabidopsis Arenosa physiology, that is included in the dearseq
package.
We investigates 2 gene sets that were derived in a data-driven manner By Baduel et al. (2016).
library(dearseq) library(SummarizedExperiment) library(BiocSet) data('baduel_5gs') se2 <- SummarizedExperiment(assay = log2(expr_norm_corr+1), colData = design) genes_non0var_ind <- which(matrixStats::rowVars(expr_norm_corr)!=0) KAvsTBG <- dearseq::dgsa_seq(object = se2[genes_non0var_ind, ], covariates=c('Vernalized', 'AgeWeeks', 'Vernalized_Population', 'AgeWeeks_Population'), variables2test = 'PopulationKA', genesets=baduel_gmt$genesets[c(3,5)], which_test = 'permutation', which_weights = 'loclin', n_perm=1000, preprocessed = TRUE, verbose = FALSE, parallel_comp = FALSE) KAvsTBG$pvals Cold <- dearseq::dgsa_seq(object = se2[genes_non0var_ind, ], covariates = c('AgeWeeks', 'PopulationKA', 'AgeWeeks_Population'), variables2test = c('Vernalized', 'Vernalized_Population'), genesets = baduel_gmt$genesets[c(3,5)], which_test = 'permutation', which_weights = 'loclin', n_perm = 1000, preprocessed = TRUE, verbose = FALSE, parallel_comp = FALSE) Cold$pvals
Agniel D & Hejblum BP (2017). Variance component score test for time-course gene set analysis of longitudinal RNA-seq data. Biostatistics 18(4):589-604. DOI: 10.1093/biostatistics/kxx005.
Baduel P, Arnold B, Weisman CM, Hunter B & Bomblies K (2016). Habitat-Associated Life History and Stress-Tolerance Variation in Arabidopsis Arenosa. Plant Physiology, 171(1):437-51. DOI: 10.1104/pp.15.01875.
Berry MP, Graham CM, McNab FW, Xu Z, Bloch SAA, Oni T, Wilkinson KA, Banchereau R, Skinner J, Wilkinson RJ, Quinn C, Blankenship D, Dhawan R, Cush JJ, Mejias A, Ramilo O, Kon OM, Pascual V, Banchereau J, Chaussabel D & O’Garra A (2010). An interferon-inducible neutrophil-driven blood transcriptional signature in human tuberculosis. Nature 466:973–977. DOI: 10.1038/nature09247
Gauthier M, Agniel D, Thiébaut R & Hejblum BP (2019). dearseq: a variance component score test for RNA-Seq differential analysis that effectively controls the false discovery rate. bioRxiv 635714. DOI: 10.1101/635714v1.
Singhania A, Verma R, Graham CM, Lee J, Tran T, Richardson M, Lecine P, Leissner P, Berry MPR, Wilkinson RJ, Kaiser K, Rodrigue M, Woltmann G, Haldar P, O’Garra A, (2018). A modular transcriptional signature identifies phenotypic heterogeneity of human tuberculosis infection. Nature communications 9(1):2308. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04579-w
GEOquery
packageIn case the data you want to analyze is publicly available through Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO), you can access it with the GEOquery
package, that can be installed with the following commands:
if (!requireNamespace("GEOquery", quietly = TRUE)) { if (!requireNamespace("BiocManager", quietly = TRUE)){ install.packages("BiocManager") } BiocManager::install("GEOquery") }
readxl
The readxl
package allows to easily imports data from Excel format and can be similarly installed with the following commands:
if (!requireNamespace("readxl", quietly = TRUE)) { install.packages("readxl") }
More details can be found on Bioconductor and in Davis S, Meltzer P, (2007) GEOquery: a bridge between the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) and Bioconductor Bioinformatics 14:1846-1847.
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