Gene expression is regulated by binding of transcription factors (TF) to genomic DNA. However, many binding sites are in distal regulatory regions, such as enhancers, that are hundreds of kilobases apart from genes. These regulatory regions can physically interact with promoters of regulated genes by chromatin looping interactions. These looping interaction can be measured genome-wide by chromatin conformation capture techniques such as Hi-C or ChIA-PET [@Rao2014; @Tang2015]. Despite many exciting insights into the three-dimensional organization of genomes, these experimental methods are not only elaborate and expansive but also have limited resolution and are only available for a limited number of cell types and conditions. In contrast, the binding sites of TFs can be detected genome-wide by ChIP-seq experiment with high resolution and are available for hundreds of TFs in many cell type and conditions. However, classical analysis of ChIP-seq gives only the direct binding sites of targeted TFs (ChIP-seq peaks) and it is not trivial to associate them to the regulated gene without chromatin looping information. Therefore, we provide a computational method to predict chromatin interactions from only genomic sequence features and ChIP-seq data. The predicted looping interactions can be used to associate TF binding sites (ChIP-seq peaks) or enhancers to regulated genes and thereby improve functional downstream analysis on the level of genes.
In this vignette, we show how to use the R package r Biocpkg("sevenC")
to
predict chromatin looping interactions between CTCF motifs by using only
ChIP-seq data form a single experiment. Furthermore, we show how to train the
prediction model using custom data.
A more detailed explanation of the sevenC method together with prediction performance analysis is available in the associated preprint [@Ibn-Salem2018].
To install the sevenC package, start R and enter:
# install.packages("BiocManager") BiocManager::install("sevenC")
Here we show how to use the r Biocpkg("sevenC")
package with
default options to predict chromatin looping interactions among CTCF motif
locations on the human chromosome 22. As input, we only use CTCF motif locations
and a single bigWig file from a STAT1 ChIP-seq experiment in human GM12878 cells
[@Dunham2012].
library(sevenC) # load provided CTCF motifs in human genome motifs <- motif.hg19.CTCF.chr22 # get motifs pairs gi <- prepareCisPairs(motifs)
# use example ChIP-seq bigWig file bigWigFile <- system.file("extdata", "GM12878_Stat1.chr22_1-30000000.bigWig", package = "sevenC") # add ChIP-seq coverage and compute correaltion at motif pairs gi <- addCor(gi, bigWigFile)
# check if on windows to prevent bigWig reading errors from rtracklayer if (.Platform$OS.type == 'windows') { # use motif data with ChIP-seq coverage motifs <- motif.hg19.CTCF.chr22.cov gi <- prepareCisPairs(motifs) gi <- addCovCor(gi) } else { # use example ChIP-seq bigWig file bigWigFile <- system.file("extdata", "GM12878_Stat1.chr22_1-30000000.bigWig", package = "sevenC") # add ChIP-seq coverage and compute correaltion at motif pairs gi <- addCor(gi, bigWigFile) }
# predict looping interactions among all motif pairs loops <- predLoops(gi)
Here we show in more detail each step of the loop prediction process. Again, we want to predict chromatin looping interactions among CTCF motif locations on chromosome 22 using a ChIP-seq for STAT1 in human GM12878 cells.
First, we need to prepare CTCF motif pairs as candidate anchors for chromatin
loop interactions. We use CTCF motif hits in human chromosome 22 as provide by
r Biocpkg("sevenC")
package. In general, any CTCF motifs can be
used if provided as GRanges
.
To use the motif similarity score as a predictive feature, the motif data should
contain -log~10~ transformed p-values describing the significance of each motif
hit.
Here, we use CTCF motif sites as provided from the JASPAR genome browser tracks
[@Khan2018]. The objedt motif.hg19.CTCF.chr22
in the r
BiocStyle::Biocpkg("sevenC")
package contains CTCF motif locations on
chromosome 22. For more information on the motif data set, see
?motif.hg19.CTCF
.
library(sevenC) # load provided CTCF motifs motifs <- motif.hg19.CTCF.chr22
The CTCF motif are represented as GRanges
object from the r
BiocStyle::Biocpkg("GenomicRanges")
package. There are r length(motifs)
CTCF
motif locations on chromosome 22. The genome assembly is hg19. one metadata
column named score
shows motif match similarity as -log~10~ transformed
p-value.
To predict loops, we need the ChIP-seq signals at all motif sites. Therefore, we read an example bigWig file with ChIP-seq signals.
An example file with only data on a subset of chromosome 22 is provided as part
of the r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("sevenC")
package. The full file can be downloaded
from ENCODE [@Dunham2012]
here.
The file contains for each position in the genome the log-fold-change of
ChIP-seq signals versus input control.
# use example ChIP-seq bigWig file bigWigFile <- system.file("extdata", "GM12878_Stat1.chr22_1-30000000.bigWig", package = "sevenC")
We add ChIP-seq signals to all motifs in a window of 1000 bp using the function
addCovToGR()
as follows.
# read ChIP-seq coverage motifs <- addCovToGR(motifs, bigWigFile)
# check if OS is windows if (.Platform$OS.type == 'windows') { motifs <- motif.hg19.CTCF.chr22.cov } else { # read ChIP-seq coverage motifs <- addCovToGR(motifs, bigWigFile) }
This adds a new metadata column to motifs
holding a NumericList
with
ChIP-seq signals for each motif location.
motifs$chip
Please note, on Windows systems, reading of bigWig files is currently not
supported. See help(rtracklayer::import.bw)
for more information. Users on
Windows need to get ChIP-seq signals around motif sites as a NumierList
object. A NumericList
l
with ChIP-signal counts around each motif list can
be added by motifs$chip <- l
.
Now we build a dataset with all pairs of CTCF motif within 1 Mb and annotate it with distance, motif orientation, and motif score.
gi <- prepareCisPairs(motifs, maxDist = 10^6) gi
The function prepareCisPairs()
returns a GInteractoin
object from the r
BiocStyle::Biocpkg("InteractonSet")
package, representing all motif pairs
within the defined distance. The metadata columns of the GInteractoin
object
hold the genomic distance between motifs in bp (dist
), the orientation of
motifs (strandOrientation
), and the motif score as -log~10~ of the motif hit
p-value (score_1
, score_2
, and score_min
). Note, that the function
prepareCisPairs()
is a wrapper for three individual functions that perform
each step separately and allow more options. First, getCisPairs()
is used to
builds the GInteractoin
object. Than addStrandCombination()
adds the four
possible strand combinations of motifs pairs. Finally, addMotifScore()
adds
the minimum motif score for each pair. These genomic features are used later as
predictive variables.
Now, we compute the similarity of ChIP-seq signals for all motif pairs as the
correlation of signals across positions around motif centers. Thereby, for two
motifs the corresponding ChIP-seq signal vectors that were added to motifs
before, are compared by Pearson correlation. A high correlation of ChIP-seq
signals at two motifs indicates a similar ChIP-seq coverage profile at the two
motifs. This, in turn, is characteristic for physical interaction via chromatin
looping, where ChIP signals are found on both sides with a similar distance to
motif centers [@Ibn-Salem2018]. The correlation coefficient is added as
additional metadata column to gi
.
# add ChIP-seq coverage and compute correaltion at motif pairs gi <- addCovCor(gi)
Now we can predict chromatin loops integrating from the ChIP-seq correlation and
other genomic features in a logistic regression model. This is implemented in
the predLoops()
function.
loops <- predLoops(gi) loops
The predLoops()
function returns a subset of motif pairs that are predicted to
interact. The interactions are annotated with ChIP-seq correlation in column
cor_chip
. The column pred
holds the predicted interaction probability
according to the logistic regression model.
Note, that without specifying further options, the function predLoops()
uses a
default model that was optimized for several transcription factor ChIP-seq
datasets by using experimental chromatin loops from Hi-C and ChIA-PET for
validations [@Ibn-Salem2018]. However, users can specify custom features using
the formula
argument and provide custom parameters using the betas
argument.
Furthermore, per default the predLoops()
function report only looping
interactions that reach a minimal prediction score threshold. The fraction of
reported loops can be modified using the cutoff
argument.
Predicted loops are represented as GInteraction
and can, therefore, be used
easily for downstream analysis with functions from the r
BiocStyle::Biocpkg("InteractonSet")
package. For example, linking two sets of
regions (like ChIP-seq peaks and genes) can be done using the linkOverlaps
function. See the
vignette
from the r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("InteractonSet")
package for more details and
examples on working with GInteraction
objects.
Since looping interactions are stored as GInteraction
objects, they can be
exported as
BEDPE
files using functions from r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("GenomicInteractions")
package. These files can be used for visualization in genome browsers or the
Juicebox tool.
library(GenomicInteractions) # export to output file export.bedpe(loops, "loop_interactions.bedpe", score = "pred")
Here, we show how to use r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("sevenC")
to build and train a
logistic regression model for loop prediction.
First, we need to build the pairs of motifs as candidates and add the ChIP-seq data as shown above.
# load provided CTCF motifs motifs <- motif.hg19.CTCF.chr22 # use example ChIP-seq coverage file bigWigFile <- system.file("extdata", "GM12878_Stat1.chr22_1-30000000.bigWig", package = "sevenC") # add ChIP-seq coverage motifs <- addCovToGR(motifs, bigWigFile) # build motif pairs gi <- prepareCisPairs(motifs, maxDist = 10^6) # add correaltion of ChIP-signal gi <- addCovCor(gi)
# check if OS is windows if (.Platform$OS.type == 'windows') { motifs <- motif.hg19.CTCF.chr22.cov } else { # load provided CTCF motifs motifs <- motif.hg19.CTCF.chr22 # use example ChIP-seq coverage file bigWigFile <- system.file("extdata", "GM12878_Stat1.chr22_1-30000000.bigWig", package = "sevenC") # add ChIP-seq coverage motifs <- addCovToGR(motifs, bigWigFile) } gi <- prepareCisPairs(motifs, maxDist = 10^6) # add correaltion of ChIP-signal gi <- addCovCor(gi)
We need to label true looping interactions by using experimental data of
chromatin interactions. Here, we use loops from high-resolution Hi-C experiments
in human GM12878 cells [@Rao2014]. An example file with loops on chromosome 22
is provided with the r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("sevenC")
package and the function
parseLoopsRao()
reads loops in the format provided by Rao et al. and returns a
GInteraction
object.
# parse known loops knownLoopFile <- system.file("extdata", "GM12878_HiCCUPS.chr22_1-30000000.loop.txt", package = "sevenC") knownLoops <- parseLoopsRao(knownLoopFile)
We can add a new metadata column to the motif pairs gi
, indicating whether the
pair is interacting in the experimental data using the function
addInteractionSupport()
.
# add known loops gi <- addInteractionSupport(gi, knownLoops)
The experimental support is added as factor with levels "Loop"
and "No loop"
as metadata column named loop
. The column name can be modified using the
colname
argument.
We can use the R function glm()
to fit a logistic regression model in which
the loop
column is the dependent variable and the ChIP-seq correlation,
distance, and strand orientation are the predictors.
fit <- glm( formula = loop ~ cor_chip + dist + strandOrientation, data = mcols(gi), family = binomial() )
Now, we can use this model to add predicted looping probabilities.
# add predict loops gi <- predLoops( gi, formula = loop ~ cor_chip + dist + strandOrientation, betas = coef(fit), cutoff = NULL )
Here, we have to use the same formula as argument as in the model fitting step
above. The betas
argument takes the coefficients of the logistic regression
model. Finally, the argument cutoff = NULL
ensures that no filtering is done
and all input candidates are reported. The prediction score is added as a new
metadata column to gi
.
gi
As a very simple validation, we can now compare the prediction score for looping and non-looping motif pairs using a boxplot.
boxplot(gi$pred ~ gi$loop, ylab = "Predicted interaction probability")
The plot shows higher prediction scores for truly looping motif pairs. However, this is an insufficient evaluation of prediction performance, since the prediction score is evaluated on the same data as it was trained. A more detailed evaluation of prediction performance using cross-validation and different cell types is described in the 7C paper [@Ibn-Salem2018].
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