Genome: Difference between revisions

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= Visualization =
= Visualization =
See also [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/BiocViews.html#___Visualization Bioconductor > BiocViews > Visualization]. Search 'genom' as the keyword.
* [https://github.com/cmdcolin/awesome-genome-visualization Awesome genome visualization]
* [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/BiocViews.html#___Visualization Bioconductor > BiocViews > Visualization]. Search 'genom' as the keyword.


== [http://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/ IGV] ==
== Ten simple rules ==
* [http://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/QuickStart Quick start]
[https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371%2Fjournal.pcbi.1010622 Ten simple rules for developing visualization tools in genomics]
* [http://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/UserGuide UserGuide]
 
== [http://software.broadinstitute.org/software/igv/ IGV] ==
* [http://software.broadinstitute.org/software/igv/UserGuide UserGuide]
* [[Anders2013#Inspect_alignments_with_IGV|Inspect alignments with IGV in Anders2013]]
* [[Anders2013#Inspect_alignments_with_IGV|Inspect alignments with IGV in Anders2013]]
* For paired data we will see two reads (one is -> and the other is <- direction) from the same fragment.


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
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~/binary/IGV_2.3.52/igv.sh
~/binary/IGV_2.3.52/igv.sh
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
=== Simulated DNA-Seq ===
The following shows 3 simulated DNA-Seq data; the top has 8 insertions (purple '|') per read, the middle has 8 deletions (black '-') per read and the bottom has 8 snps per read.
[[:File:Igv dna simul.png]]
=== Whole genome ===
[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=ERP002259 PRJEB1486]
[[:File:Igv prjeb1486 wgs.png]]
=== Whole exome ===
* (Left) GSE48215, UCSC hg19. '''It is seen there is a good coverage on all exons'''.
* (Right) 1 of 3 whole exome data from [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra?term=SRP066363 SRP066363], UCSC hg19. 
[[:File:Igv gse48215.png]] [[:File:Igv srp066363.png]]
=== RNA-Seq ===
* (Left) [[Anders2013]], Drosophila_melanogaster/Ensembl/BDGP5. '''It is seen there are no coverages on some exons'''.
* (Right) [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE46876 GSE46876], UCSC/hg19.
[[:File:Igv anders2013 rna.png]] [[:File:Igv gse46876 rna.png]]
=== Tell DNA or RNA ===
* DNA: no matter it is whole genome or whole exome, the coverage is more even. For whole exome, there is no splicing.
* RNA: focusing on expression so the coverage changes a lot. The base name still A,C,G,T (not A,C,G,U).
=== ChromoMap ===
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-021-04556-z ChromoMap]: an R package for interactive visualization of multi-omics data and annotation of chromosomes
== RNA-seq DRaMA ==
https://hssgenomics.shinyapps.io/RNAseq_DRaMA/ from [https://blog.rstudio.com/2020/07/13/winners-of-the-2nd-shiny-contest/ 2nd Annual Shiny Contest]


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Gviz.html Gviz] ==
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Gviz.html Gviz] ==
== [https://zhong-lab-ucsd.github.io/GIVE_homepage/ GIVE]: Genomic Interactive Visualization Engine ==
Build your own genome browser


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/ChromHeatMap.html ChromHeatMap] ==
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/ChromHeatMap.html ChromHeatMap] ==
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== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/ggbio.html ggbio] ==
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/ggbio.html ggbio] ==
[https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9152800/ Wondering how to look at the reads of a gene in samples to check if it was knocked out?]


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/NOISeq.html NOISeq] package ==
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/NOISeq.html NOISeq] package ==
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See fig on p22 of [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/Sushi/inst/doc/Sushi.pdf Sushi vignette] where genes with different strands are shown with different directions when plotGenes() was used. plotGenes() can be used to plot gene structures that are stored in bed format.
See fig on p22 of [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/Sushi/inst/doc/Sushi.pdf Sushi vignette] where genes with different strands are shown with different directions when plotGenes() was used. plotGenes() can be used to plot gene structures that are stored in bed format.


== [http://www.cbioportal.org/ cBioPortal] ==
== [http://www.cbioportal.org/ cBioPortal], TCGA, PanCanAtlas ==
The cBioPortal for Cancer Genomics provides visualization, analysis and download of large-scale cancer genomics data sets.
See [[Tcga|TCGA]].
 
== TCPA ==
[https://www.tcpaportal.org/tcpa/download.html Download]. Level 4.
 
== [http://qualimap.bioinfo.cipf.es/ Qualimap] ==
Qualimap 2 is a platform-independent application written in Java and R that provides both a Graphical User Inteface (GUI) and a command-line interface to facilitate the quality control of alignment sequencing data and its derivatives like feature counts.
 
== [http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/seqmonk/ SeqMonk] ==
SeqMonk is a program to enable the visualisation and analysis of mapped sequence data.
 
== dittoSeq ==
[https://rna-seqblog.com/dittoseq-universal-user-friendly-single-cell-and-bulk-rna-sequencing-visualization-toolkit-bioinformatics/ dittoSeq] – universal user-friendly single-cell and bulk RNA sequencing visualization toolkit, bioinformatics


https://github.com/cBioPortal/cbioportal
== SeqCVIBE ==
[https://www.rna-seqblog.com/seqcvibe-interactive-analysis-exploration-and-visualization-of-rna-seq-data/ SeqCVIBE – interactive analysis, exploration, and visualization of RNA-Seq data]
 
== ggcoverage ==
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-023-05438-2 ggcoverage: an R package to visualize and annotate genome coverage for various NGS data] 2023


= Copy Number =
= Copy Number =
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* http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/15/661
* http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/15/661
* http://www.blog.biodiscovery.com/2014/06/16/comparison-of-cnv-detection-from-whole-exome-sequencing-wes-as-compared-with-snp-microarray/
* http://www.blog.biodiscovery.com/2014/06/16/comparison-of-cnv-detection-from-whole-exome-sequencing-wes-as-compared-with-snp-microarray/
* exomeCopy package
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/BiocViews.html#___CopyNumberVariation Bioconductor - CopyNumberVariation]
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/exomeCopy.html exomeCopy] package
* [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/ExomeCNV/index.html exomeCNV] package and [http://bcb.dfci.harvard.edu/~aedin/courses/Bioconductor/ more info] including slides by Fah Sathirapongsasuti.
* [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/ExomeCNV/index.html exomeCNV] package and [http://bcb.dfci.harvard.edu/~aedin/courses/Bioconductor/ more info] including slides by Fah Sathirapongsasuti.
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/02/06/260927 ximmer] and [https://github.com/ssadedin/ximmer source]
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/657361v1 dudeML]: A Simple Deep Learning Approach for Detecting Duplications and Deletions in Next-Generation Sequencing Data


== Whole [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exome_sequencing exome sequencing] != [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whole_genome_sequencing whole genome sequencing] ==
== Whole [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exome_sequencing exome sequencing] != [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whole_genome_sequencing whole genome sequencing] ==
* http://www.nature.com/nrn/journal/v13/n7/fig_tab/nrn3271_F3.html
* http://www.nature.com/nrn/journal/v13/n7/fig_tab/nrn3271_F3.html


= NGS =
==  Consensus CDS/CCDS ==
[[File:CentralDogmaMolecular.png|300px]]
* [http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgGateway UCSC]
* http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgTrackUi?hgsid=573539327_9Ga3TjKR7LNFYJ2JIMZKDNZfl9eF&c=chr1&g=ccdsGene
* [http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgTables?db=hg19&hgta_group=genes&hgta_track=ccdsGene&hgta_table=ccdsGene&hgta_doSchema=describe+table+schema Schema/Example]
* The [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenomicFeatures.html GenomicFeatures] package can download the CCDS regions.
* ''The CCDS regions are convenient to use as genomic ranges for CNV detection in exome sequencing data, as they are often in the center of the targeted region in exome enrichment protocols and tend to have less variable coverage then the flanking regions'' -- exomeCopy package vignette.


== Introduction to Sequence Data Analysis ==
== DBS segmentation algorithm ==
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/review-of-rna-seq-data-analysis-tools/ Review of RNA-Seq Data Analysis Tools]
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-018-2565-8 DBS: a fast and informative segmentation algorithm for DNA copy number analysis]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hksQlJLwKqo&feature=youtu.be RNA-Seq workshop] from NYU
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/modern-rna-seq-differential-expression-analyses-transcript-level-or-gene-level/ Modern RNA-seq differential expression analyses: transcript-level or gene-level]
* http://www.pasteur.fr/~tekaia/BCGA2014/TALKS/Pabinger_Tools4VariantAnalysisOfNGS_EMBO2014.pdf (QC, duplicates, SAM, BAM, picard, variant calling, somatic variant, structural variants, CNV, variant filter, variant annotation, tools for vcf, visualization, pipeline). The source code is available on [https://github.com/tadKeys/BioinformaticsAndGenomesAnalyses2014 github].
* https://en.wiki2.org/wiki/List_of_RNA-Seq_bioinformatics_tools
* http://www.rnaseq.wiki/ or https://github.com/griffithlab/rnaseq_tutorial/wiki from The Griffith Lab. It has a [http://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004393 paper] too at PLOS.
* http://bioinformatics.ca/workshops/2015/high-throughput-biology-sequence-networks-2015#material
* http://www.cbcb.umd.edu/~hcorrada/CMSC858B/
* http://watson.nci.nih.gov/~sdavis/tutorials/biowulf-2011/
* http://cbsu.tc.cornell.edu/ngw2010/Day3_lecture1.pdf
* http://static.msi.umn.edu/tutorial/lifescience/RNA-Seq-Module-1.pdf
* http://www.rna-seqblog.com/introduction-to-rna-seq-analysis/ (focus on statistical part)
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ojy82R86Bm4 BroadE: GATK/Mapping and processing RNAseq] from youtube.
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/researchers-at-kansas-state-university-suggest-reconsidering-your-standard-rna-seq-data-management-pipeline/ Low-count transcripts] in RNA-Seq analysis pipeline
* [http://tv.qiagenbioinformatics.com/video/14353472/rna-seq-analysis-of-human-breast-cancer-data RNA-seq analysis of human breast cancer data] from QIAGEN. Biomedical Genomics Workbench 3.0.1 is used.
* [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjiXAZO27elABzLA0aHKS9chVA2TldoPF RNA-seq Chipster tutorials]
* [https://discoveringthegenome.org/ Discovering the Genome]


NIH only
== modSaRa2 ==
* [https://helix.nih.gov/About_Us/training.html Some training material from NIH]:
[https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/35/17/2891/5288773 An accurate and powerful method for copy number variation detection]
* [http://biowulf.nih.gov/biowulf-seminar-3feb2015.pdf Biowulf seminar] by Steven Fellini  & Susan Chacko.
* [https://helix.nih.gov/Documentation/Talks/BashScripting_LinuxCommands.pdf Bash Scripting and Linux commands]


=== Why Do You Need To Use Cdna For Rna-Seq? ===
== Visualization ==
https://www.biostars.org/p/54969/
[https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/37/8/1164/5895301 reconCNV: interactive visualization of copy number data from high-throughput sequencing] 2021


=== Workshops ===
= NGS =
* [http://bioinformatics.ucdavis.edu/training/documentation/ UC Davis] Bioinformatics Core.
[[:File:CentralDogmaMolecular.png]]


== Automation ==
See [[NGS|NGS]].
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/implementation-of-an-open-source-software-solution-for-laboratory-information-management-and-automated-rna-seq-data-analysis/ Implementation of an Open Source Software solution for Laboratory Information Management and automated RNA-seq data analysis]
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/trapline-a-standardized-and-automated-pipeline-for-rna-sequencing-data-analysis-evaluation-and-annotation/ TRAPLINE – a standardized and automated pipeline for RNA sequencing data analysis, evaluation and annotation]


== Quality control ==
== mNGS ==
For base quality score, the quality value, Q(sanger) = - 10log10(prob) where prob = probability that the call at base b is correct. Sanger ('''Phred quality scores''') is between 0 and 93. In practice the maximum quality score is ~40. Quality values below 20 are typically considered low.  
[https://www.top1health.com/Article/93836 找出病原菌的新武器 :總基因體次世代定序是什麼?]


=== Phred quality score and scales ===
= R and Bioconductor packages =
* http://blog.nextgenetics.net/?e=33
== Resources ==
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FASTQ_format#Encoding
* [https://cran.r-project.org/web/views/Omics.html CRAN Task View: Genomics, Proteomics, Metabolomics, Transcriptomics, and Other Omics]
* http://wiki.bits.vib.be/index.php/Identify_the_Phred_scale_of_quality_scores_used_in_fastQ contains a link to a python script to guess the encoding format
* [http://rafalab.github.io/pages/harvardx.html HarvardX Biomedical Data Science Open Online Training], [https://hbctraining.github.io/main/ Bioinformatics Training at the Harvard Chan Bioinformatics Core]
 
* [https://liulab-dfci.github.io/bioinfo-combio/ Introduction to Bioinformatics and Computational Biology] Xiaole Shirley Liu (ebook & videos)
The original Phred scaling of '''33-126''' (representing scores '''0-93''') is also called the '''Sanger''' scale. There are also 2 other scales used by Illumina that shifts the range up:
* [https://bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2017/CSAMA/ CSAMA 2017: Statistical Data Analysis for Genome-Scale Biology]
 
* [https://nsaunders.wordpress.com/2015/04/28/some-basics-of-biomart/ Some basics of biomaRt] (and GenomicRanges)
* '''Illumina 1.0''' format uses ASCII 59 - 126 representing scores '''-5 - 62'''.
* [http://master.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/annotation/AnnotatingRanges/ Annotating Ranges] Represent common sequence data types (e.g., from BAM, gff, bed, and wig files) as genomic ranges for simple and advanced range-based queries.
* '''Illumina 1.3+''' format uses ASCII 64 - 126 representing scores '''0 - 62'''.
<pre>
* '''Illumina 1.8''', the quality scores have basically returned to the use of the Sanger format (Phred+33).
library(VariantAnnotation)
 
library(AnnotationHub)
=== FastQC ===
library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene)
One problem is the reads in trimmed fastq files from one end may not appear in other end for paired data. So consider Trimmomatic.
library(TxDb.Mmusculus.UCSC.mm10.ensGene)
library(org.Hs.eg.db)
library(org.Mm.eg.db)
library(BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19)
</pre>
* [http://faculty.ucr.edu/~tgirke/HTML_Presentations/Manuals/Workshop_Dec_6_10_2012/Rrnaseq/Rrnaseq.pdf Analysis of RNA-Seq Data with R/Bioconductor] by Girke in UC Riverside
* [http://ivory.idyll.org/dibsi/index.html 2018 Data Intensive Biology Summer Institute at UC Davis]
* [http://www.ebi.ac.uk/training/sites/ebi.ac.uk.training/files/materials/2012/121029_HTS/martin_morgan1_nicolas_delhomme2_embo2012_rbioconductor.pdf R / Bioconductor for High-Throughput Sequence Analysis 2012] by Martin Morgan1 and Nicolas Delhomme
* [http://www-huber.embl.de/pub/pdf/nprot.2013.099.pdf Count-based differential expression analysis of RNA sequencing data using R and Bioconductor] by Simon Anders
* [http://www.ebi.ac.uk/training/sites/ebi.ac.uk.training/files/materials/2013/131021_HTS/genesandgenomes.pdf Sequences, Genomes, and Genes in R / Bioconductor] by Martin Morgan 2013.  
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4509590/ Orchestrating high-throughput genomic analysis with Bioconductor] by Wolfgang Huber et al 2015.
* [https://rpubs.com/achitsaz/97976 RNA-seq Analysis Example] This is a script that will do differential gene expression (DGE) analysis for RNA-seq experiments using the bioconductor package edgeR. RPKMs were calculated for bar plots.
* [https://github.com/pgpmartin/BioC_For_NGS/blob/master/BioC_for_NGS_PMartin.pdf An introduction to R and Bioconductor for the analysis of high-throughput sequencing data] by Pascal MARTIN Oct 2018
* [https://morphoscape.wordpress.com/2022/07/28/bioinformatics-analysis-of-omics-data-with-the-shell-r/ Bioinformatics Analysis of Omics Data with the Shell & R]


=== [http://www.usadellab.org/cms/index.php?page=trimmomatic Trimmomatic] ===
=== Docker ===
https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/trimmomatic.html
[https://github.com/jhuanglab/bioinstaller Bioinstaller]: A comprehensive R package to construct interactive and reproducible biological data analysis applications based on the R platform. Package on [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/BioInstaller/ CRAN].


=== [http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/trim_galore/ Trim Galore!] ===
== Some workflows ==
=== RNA-Seq workflow ===
Gene-level exploratory analysis and differential expression. A non stranded-specific and paired-end rna-seq experiment was used for the tutorial.
<pre>
      STAR      Samtools        Rsamtools
fastq -----> sam ----------> bam  ----------> bamfiles  -|
                                                          \  GenomicAlignments      DESeq2
                                                          --------------------> se --------> dds
      GenomicFeatures        GenomicFeatures            /        (SummarizedExperiment) (DESeqDataSet)
  gtf ----------------> txdb ---------------> genes -----|
</pre>
* https://bioconductor.org/packages/3.12/workflows/
* [http://www.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/rnaseqGene/ RNA-Seq workflow]
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/workflows/html/RnaSeqGeneEdgeRQL.html RnaSeqGeneEdgeRQL]
* [http://www.sthda.com/english/wiki/rna-seq-differential-expression-work-flow-using-deseq2 RNA-Seq differential expression work flow using DESeq2]
* [https://docs.gdc.cancer.gov/Data/Bioinformatics_Pipelines/Expression_mRNA_Pipeline/ mRNA Analysis Pipeline] from NIC GDC


=== [http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/16/224 QoRTs] ===
=== rnaseqGene ===
A comprehensive toolset for quality control and data processing of RNA-Seq experiments.
[http://master.bioconductor.org/packages/release/workflows/html/rnaseqGene.html rnaseqGene] - RNA-seq workflow: gene-level exploratory analysis and differential expression


== Alignment and Indexing ==
[http://master.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/tximport.html tximport]
* https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Next_Generation_Sequencing_(NGS)/Alignment
* [http://www.nature.com/nmeth/journal/vaop/ncurrent/pdf/nmeth.4106.pdf Simulation-based comprehensive benchmarking of RNA-seq aligners]
* [http://www.nature.com/nmeth/journal/v10/n12/full/nmeth.2722.html Systematic evaluation of spliced alignment programs for RNA-seq data]
* (Video) http://bioinformatics.ca//files/public/RNA-seq_2014_Montreal_Module2.mp4, http://www.rna-seqblog.com/rna-seq-alignment-and-visualization/
* (Video) https://youtu.be/n77EAk8C1es RNA-SEQ: Mapping to a Reference Genome


=== SAM file format ===
[https://codeocean.com/capsule/2296412/tree/v1 CodeOcean] - Differential analyses for RNA-seq: transcript-level estimates improve gene-level inferences (version: 1.17.5). [https://codeocean.com/pricing Plan].
[[Anders2013#sam.2Fbam.2C_.22samtools_view.22_and_Rsamtools|SAM format]]


Here are some important fields
=== [http://master.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/high-throughput-sequencing/ Sequence analysis] ===
 
* Col 1: Read name
* Col 2: FLAG
* Col 3: Chrom
* Col 4: Pos
* Col 5: MAPQ
* Col 6: CIGAR
* Col 11: QUAL
* Col 14 (not fixed): AS
 
Note pair-end data,
<pre>
<pre>
1. Fastq files
library(ShortRead) or library(Biostrings) (QA)
  A_1.fastq  A_2.fastq
gtf + library(GenomicFeatures) or directly library(TxDb.Scerevisiae.UCSC.sacCer2.sgdGene) (gene information)
  read1      read1
GenomicRanges::summarizeOverlaps or GenomicRanges::countOverlaps(count)
  read2      read2
edgeR or DESeq2 (gene expression analysis)
  ...        ...
library(org.Sc.sgd.db) or library(biomaRt)
 
2. SAM files (sorted by read name)
  read1
  read1
  read2
  read2
  ...
</pre>
</pre>


=== Bowtie2 ===
=== [http://master.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/annotation/annotation/ Accessing Annotation Data] ===
Extremely fast, general purpose short read aligner.
Use microarray probe, gene, pathway, gene ontology, homology and other annotations. Access GO, KEGG, NCBI, Biomart, UCSC, vendor, and other sources.
<source lang="rsplus">
library(org.Hs.eg.db)  # Sample OrgDb Workflow
library("hgu95av2.db") # Sample ChipDb Workflow
library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene) # Sample TxDb Workflow
library(Homo.sapiens)  # Sample OrganismDb Workflow
library(AnnotationHub) # Sample AnnotationHub Workflow
library("biomaRt")    # Using biomaRt
library(BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19) # BSgenome packages
</source>


==== Create index files ====
{| class="wikitable"
bowtie needs to have an '''index''' of the genome in order to perform its alignment functionality. For example, to build a bowtie index against UCSC hg19 (See [http://bowtie-bio.sourceforge.net/bowtie2/manual.shtml#indexing-a-reference-genome Getting started with Bowtie 2 -> Indexing a reference genome])
! Object type
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
! example package name
bowtie2-build /data/ngs/public/sequences/hg19/genome.fa hg19
! contents
</syntaxhighlight>
|-
 
| OrgDb
Even the index file can be directly downloaded without going through Bowtie program, Bowtie program is still needed by Tophat program where Tophat's job is to align the RNA-seq data to reference genome.  
| org.Hs.eg.db
 
| gene based information for Homo sapiens
==== Mapping ====
|-
To run alignment,
| TxDb
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
| TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene
bowtie2 -p 4 -x /data/ngs/public/sequences/hg19 XXX.fastq -S XXX.bt2.sam
| transcriptome ranges for Homo sapiens
</syntaxhighlight>
|-
At the end of alignment, it will show how many (and percent) of reads are aligned 0 times, exactly 1 time, and >1 times.
| OrganismDb
| Homo.sapiens
| composite information for Homo sapiens
|-
| BSgenome
| BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19
| genome sequence for Homo sapiens
|-
|
| [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/refGenome/index.html refGenome]
|
|}


We can transform them into a bam format
== RNA-Seq Data Analysis using R/Bioconductor ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* https://github.com/datacarpentry/rnaseq-data-analysis by Stephen Turner.
samtools view -dT XXX.fa XXX.bt2.sam > XXX.bt2.bam
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/69677/ Tutorial: Introduction to Bioconductor for high-throughput sequence analysis] by UseR 2015
</syntaxhighlight>
* [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/systemPipeR.html systemPipeR] Building end-to-end analysis pipelines with automated report generation for next generation sequence (NGS) applications such as RNA-Seq, ChIP-Seq, VAR-Seq and Ribo-Seq. An important feature is support for running command-line software, such as NGS aligners, on both single machines or compute clusters.
and view the bam file
** http://girke.bioinformatics.ucr.edu/GEN242/mydoc_systemPipeVARseq_05.html
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [http://bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2015/BioC2015/ BioC2015]
samtools view XXX.bt2.bam
</syntaxhighlight>


=== BWA ===
=== recount2 ===
* BWA MEM Algorithm https://www.biostars.org/p/140502/
* https://github.com/leekgroup/recount
* https://www.broadinstitute.org/files/shared/mpg/nextgen2010/nextgen_li.pdf By Heng Li
* [https://jhubiostatistics.shinyapps.io/recount/ recount2] - A multi-experiment resource of analysis-ready RNA-seq gene and exon count datasets.
* http://schatzlab.cshl.edu/teaching/2010/Lecture%202%20-%20Sequence%20Alignment.pdf
* [https://github.com/LieberInstitute/recountWorkshop2020 Human RNA-seq data from recount2 and related packages] from [https://bioc2020.bioconductor.org/workshops BioC 2020 Workshop]
* https://bioinformatics.cancer.gov/sites/default/files/course_material/Data%20Analysis%20for%20Exome%20Sequencing%20Data_0318.ppt
** recount2 works with DESeq2, edgeR and limma-voom


Used by whole-exome sequencing. For example, http://bib.oxfordjournals.org/content/15/2/256.full and http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3865592/. [https://igor.sbgenomics.com/public/pipelines/534522f6d79f0049c0c9444e/ Whole Exome Analysis].
=== recount3 ===
==== Creating index file ====
* [https://lcolladotor-github-io.translate.goog/rnaseq_LCG-UNAM_2022/datos-de-rna-seq-a-trav%C3%A9s-de-recount3.html?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=wapp Intro RNA-seq LCG-UNAM 2022] (Spanish)
Without creating index files, we will get an error ''[E::bwa_idx_load_from_disk] fail to locate the index files'' when we run the 'bwa mem' command (though the command only requires fa file in its arguments).
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9152538/ Recount3: PCR duplicates].  
** [https://www.khanacademy.org/science/ap-biology/gene-expression-and-regulation/biotechnology/a/polymerase-chain-reaction-pcr PCR duplication] can refer to two different things. It can mean the process of making many copies of a specific DNA region using a technique called Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR). PCR relies on a thermostable DNA polymerase and requires DNA primers designed specifically for the DNA region of interest.
** On the other hand, [https://www.nature.com/articles/nmeth.4268 PCR duplication] can also refer to a problem that occurs when the same DNA fragment is amplified and sequenced multiple times, resulting in identical reads that can bias many types of high-throughput-sequencing experiments. These identical reads are called [https://bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12864-018-4933-1 PCR duplicates] and can be eliminated using various methods such as removing all but one read of identical sequences or using '''unique molecular identifiers (UMIs)''' to enable accurate counting and tracking of molecules.
** '''UMI''' stands for Unique Molecular Identifier. [https://dnatech.genomecenter.ucdavis.edu/faqs/what-are-umis-and-why-are-they-used-in-high-throughput-sequencing/ It is a complex index added to sequencing libraries before any PCR amplification steps, enabling the accurate bioinformatic identification of PCR duplicates]. UMIs are also known as '''Molecular Barcodes''' or '''Random Barcodes'''. UMIs are valuable tools for both quantitative sequencing applications and also for genomic variant detection, especially the detection of rare mutations. UMI sequence information in conjunction with alignment coordinates enables grouping of sequencing data into read families representing individual sample DNA or RNA fragments.
** [https://umi-tools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/reference/dedup.html '''dedup'''] - Deduplicate reads using UMI and mapping coordinates
** UMIs can be extracted from a fastq file using awk. For example '''awk 'NR % 4 == 1 {split($0,a,":"); print a[6]}' input.fastq > umis.txt''' . Here we assume the read header is '''@SEQ_ID:LANE:TILE:X:Y:UMI, then the UMI sequence is in the 6th field, following the 5th colon.'''


[http://gatkforums.broadinstitute.org/wdl/discussion/2798/howto-prepare-a-reference-for-use-with-bwa-and-gatk Prepare a reference for use with BWA and GATK]
== dbGap ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/36/4/1305/5556117 dbgap2x: an R package to explore and extract data from the database of Genotypes and Phenotypes (dbGaP)]
bwa index genome.fa          # generate 4 new files amb, ann, pac and bwt (not enough for running 'bwa mem')
 
bwa index -a bwtsw genome.fa # generate 5 new files amb, ann, pac, bwt and sa (right thing to do)
== eQTL ==
</syntaxhighlight>
[https://www.coursera.org/lecture/statistical-genomics/combining-data-types-eqtl-6-04-NkorV Statistics for Genomic Data Science] (Coursera) and [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/MatrixEQTL/index.html MatrixEQTL] from CRAN
where '''-a bwtsw''' specifies that we want to use the indexing algorithm that is capable of handling the whole human genome.
 
== [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenomicDataCommons.html GenomicDataCommons] package ==
* Genomic Data Commons
** https://gdc.cancer.gov/
** https://www.cancer.gov/about-nci/organization/ccg/research/computational-genomics/gdc
** [https://portal.gdc.cancer.gov/ Data Portal]. A list of [https://portal.gdc.cancer.gov/projects Projects]
* Use the GenomicDataCommons package to find and download variants from TCGA (NCI Genomic Data Commons Access) dataset and maftools package for analysis and visualization. See  https://seandavi.github.io/talk/2018/02/08/bioconductor-a-potential-hub-in-the-cancer-biomarker-data-ecosystem/
* https://seandavi.github.io/post/2018/03/extracting-clinical-information-using-the-genomicdatacommons-package/
* [https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1bjnW67aemW90kFcq_S5rGorX96Xjrp9jt3tM4PpNuHI The Cancer Data Ecosystem: Data and cloud resources for cancer data science]
* [https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1z0fgKWQrshn9rB2HJ4oiNd4V2tZUeomvre4p3usw6hc The GenomicDataCommons and GEOquery Bioconductor Packages]


Note that another index file '''fai''' is created by samtools
Note:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# The TCGA data such as [https://portal.gdc.cancer.gov/projects/TCGA-LUAD TCGA-LUAD] are not part of clinical trials (described [https://wiki.cancerimagingarchive.net/display/Public/TCGA-LUAD here]).
samtools faidx genome.fa
# Each patient has 4 categories data and the 'case_id' is common to them:
</syntaxhighlight>
#* demographic: gender, race, year_of_birth, year_of_death
#* diagnoses: tumor_stage, age_at_diagnosis, tumor_grade
#* exposures: cigarettes_per_day, alcohol_history, years_smoked, bmi, alcohol_intensity, weight, height
#* main: disease_type, primary_site
# The original download (clinical.tsv file) data contains a column 'treatment_or_therapy' but it has missing values for all patients.


For example, the BWAIndex folder contains the following files
== Visualization ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
=== [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenVisR.html GenVisR] ===
$ ls -l ~/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Sequence/BWAIndex/
total 12
lrwxrwxrwx 1 brb brb  22 Mar 10 03:40 genome.fa -> version0.6.0/genome.fa
lrwxrwxrwx 1 brb brb  26 Mar 10 03:37 genome.fa.amb -> version0.6.0/genome.fa.amb
lrwxrwxrwx 1 brb brb  26 Mar 10 03:40 genome.fa.ann -> version0.6.0/genome.fa.ann
lrwxrwxrwx 1 brb brb  26 Mar 10 03:40 genome.fa.bwt -> version0.6.0/genome.fa.bwt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  783 Apr 12 14:46 genome.fa.fai
lrwxrwxrwx 1 brb brb  26 Mar 10 03:40 genome.fa.pac -> version0.6.0/genome.fa.pac
lrwxrwxrwx 1 brb brb  25 Mar 10 03:37 genome.fa.sa -> version0.6.0/genome.fa.sa
drwxrwxr-x 2 brb brb 4096 Mar 15  2012 version0.5.x
drwxrwxr-x 2 brb brb 4096 Mar 15  2012 version0.6.0
</syntaxhighlight>


==== Mapping ====
=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/ComplexHeatmap.html ComplexHeatmap] ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
bwa mem  # display the help
bwa mem -t 4 XXX.fa XXX.fastq > XXX.sam
more XXX.sam
samtools view -dT XXX.fa XXX.sam > XXX.bam # transform to bam format
samtools view XXX.bam | more
</syntaxhighlight>


And [https://github.com/ekg/alignment-and-variant-calling-tutorial this is a tutorial] to use bwa and freebayes to do variant calling by Freebayes's author.
== Read counts ==
=== Read, fragment ===
* [https://biology.stackexchange.com/a/30150 Meaning of the "reads" keyword in terms of RNA-seq or next generation sequencing]. A read refers to the sequence of a cluster that is obtained after the end of the sequencing process which is ultimately the sequence of a section of a unique fragment.
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/106291/ What is the difference between a Read and a Fragment in RNA-seq?]. Diagram , Pair-end, single-end.
* In the context of RNA-seq, "read" and "fragment" may refer to slightly different things, but they are related concepts.
** A '''read''' is a short sequence of nucleotides that has been generated by a sequencing machine. These reads are typically around 100-150 bases long. RNA-seq experiments generate millions or billions of reads, and these reads are aligned to a reference genome or transcriptome to determine which reads came from which genes or transcripts, this information is used to quantify gene and transcript expression levels.
** A '''fragment''' is a piece of RNA that has been broken up and converted into a read. In RNA-seq, the first step is to convert the RNA into a library of fragments. To do this, the RNA is typically broken up into smaller pieces using a process called fragmentation. Then, '''adapters''' are added to the ends of the fragments to allow them to be sequenced. The fragments are then converted into a library of reads that can be sequenced using a next-generation sequencing platform.
** In summary, a read is a short sequence of nucleotides that has been generated by a sequencing machine, whereas a fragment is a piece of RNA that has been broken up and converted into a read. The process of fragmentation creates a library of fragments that are then converted into reads that can be sequenced.
* Does one fragment contain 1 read or multiple reads?
** One fragment in RNA-seq can contain multiple reads, depending on the sequencing technology and library preparation protocol used.
** In the process of library preparation, RNA is first fragmented into smaller pieces, then adapters are ligated to the ends of the fragments. The fragments are then amplified using PCR, generating multiple copies of the original fragment. These amplified fragments are then sequenced using a next-generation sequencing platform, generating multiple reads per fragment.
** For example, in '''Illumina''' sequencing, fragments are ligated with adapters, then they are clonally amplified using bridge amplification. This allows for the creation of '''clusters''' of identical copies of the original fragment on a sequencing flow cell. Then, each '''cluster''' is sequenced, generating a large number of reads per fragment.
** In other technologies like '''PacBio''' or '''Nanopore''', the sequencing of a fragment generates only one read, as the technology can read long stretches of DNA, therefore it doesn't need to fragment the RNA prior to sequencing.
** In summary, one fragment in RNA-seq can contain multiple reads, depending on the sequencing technology and library preparation protocol used. '''The number of reads per fragment can vary from one to several thousands.'''
* How many reads in a fragment on average in illumination sequencing?
** The number of reads per fragment in Illumina sequencing can vary depending on the sequencing platform and library preparation protocol used, as well as the sequencing depth and the complexity of the sample. However, on average, one fragment can generate several hundred to several thousand reads in Illumina sequencing.
** When sequencing is performed on the Illumina platform, the process of library preparation includes fragmenting the RNA into smaller pieces, ligating adapters to the ends of the fragments, and then amplifying the fragments using bridge amplification. This allows for the creation of clusters of identical copies of the original fragment on a sequencing flow cell. Then, each cluster is sequenced, generating multiple reads per fragment.
** The number of reads per fragment can also be affected by the sequencing depth, which refers to the total number of reads generated by the sequencing machine. A higher sequencing depth will result in more reads per fragment, while a lower sequencing depth will result in fewer reads per fragment.
** In summary, the number of reads per fragment in Illumina sequencing can vary, but on average, one fragment can generate several hundred to several thousand reads. The number of reads per fragment can be influenced by the sequencing platform, library preparation protocol, sequencing depth, and the complexity of the sample.


[https://wikis.utexas.edu/display/bioiteam/Variant+calling+tutorial#Variantcallingtutorial-CallingvariantsinreadsmappedbyBWAorBowtie2 This tutorial] is using a whole genome data [http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?run=SRR030257 SRR030257] from [http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?study=SRP001369 SRP001369]
=== [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Rsubread.html Rsubread] ===
* See [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/65604/ this post] for about C version of the [http://bioinf.wehi.edu.au/featureCounts/ featureCounts] program.
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/96176/ featureCounts vs HTSeq-count]
* [http://bioinformatics.cvr.ac.uk/blog/featurecounts-or-htseq-count/ featureCounts or htseq-count?]
* [https://www.jianshu.com/p/9cc4e8657d62 featurecounts的使用说明]
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE62944 GSE62944] TCGA data processed by Rahman M.


[http://gatkforums.broadinstitute.org/wdl/discussion/2798/howto-prepare-a-reference-for-use-with-bwa-and-gatk BWA for whole genome and GATK]
=== RSEM ===
<ul>
<li>[http://deweylab.github.io/RSEM/ RSEM], [https://deweylab.github.io/RSEM/rsem-calculate-expression.html  rsem-calculate-expression] </li>
<li>[https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/rsem.html RSEM on Biowulf]
<syntaxhighlight lang='sh'>
$ mkdir SeqTestdata/RNASeqFibroblast/output
$ sinteractive --cpus-per-task=2 --mem=10g
$ module load rsem bowtie STAR
$ rsem-calculate-expression -p 2 --paired-end --star \
../test.SRR493366_1.fastq ../test.SRR493366_2.fastq \
/fdb/rsem/ref_from_genome/hg19 Sample1 # 12 seconds
$ ls -lthog
total 5.8M
-rw-r----- 1 1.6M Nov 24 13:39 Sample1.genes.results
-rw-r----- 1 2.5M Nov 24 13:39 Sample1.isoforms.results
-rw-r----- 1 1.6M Nov 24 13:39 Sample1.transcript.bam
drwxr-x--- 2 4.0K Nov 24 13:39 Sample1.stat


Best pipeline for human whole exome sequencing
$ wc -l Sample1.genes.results
* https://www.biostars.org/p/1268/
26335 Sample1.genes.results
$ wc -l Sample1.isoforms.results
51399 Sample1.isoforms.results


==== Summary report of a BAM file: samtools flagstat ====
$ head -2 Sample1.genes.results
Unlike Tophat and STAR, BWA mem does not provide a summary report of percentage of mapped reads. To get the percentage of mapped reads, use [https://www.biostars.org/p/14709/ samtoolss flagstat] command
gene_id transcript_id(s) length effective_length expected_count TPM FPKM
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
A1BG NM_130786 1766.00 1589.99 0.00 0.00 0.00
$ export PATH=$PATH:/opt/SeqTools/bin/samtools-1.3
$ head -2 Sample1.isoforms.results
transcript_id gene_id length effective_length expected_count TPM FPKM IsoPct
NM_130786 A1BG 1766 1589.99 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
$ head -1 /fdb/rsem/ref_from_genome/hg19.transcripts.fa
>NM_130786
$ grep NM_130786 /fdb/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/transcriptInfo.tab
NM_130786 2721192635 2721199328 2721188175 2 8 431185
</syntaxhighlight>
</li>
</ul>
* [http://cshprotocols.cshlp.org/content/2019/6/pdb.prot098368.full An RNA-Seq Protocol for Differential Expression Analysis] Owens 2019
* [https://www.cbioportal.org/ Cbioportal] -> [https://www.cbioportal.org/study/summary?id=brca_tcga_pan_can_atlas_2018 Breast Invasive Carcinoma (TCGA, PanCancer Atlas)] -> Explore selected study -> Original data -> [https://gdc.cancer.gov/about-data/publications/pancanatlas PanCanAtlas Publications] -> RNA (Final) - EBPlusPlusAdjustPANCAN_IlluminaHiSeq_RNASeqV2.geneExp.tsv
* [https://bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12864-017-4002-1 Evaluation and comparison of computational tools for RNA-seq isoform quantification] 2017
* [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/the-concepts-of-mean-fragment-length-and-effective-length-in-rna-sequencing/ The Concepts of Mean Fragment Length and Effective Length in RNA Sequencing]
<ul>
<li>RSEM gene level result file (see [[#tximport|here for an example]]) contains 5 essential columns (and the element saved by '''tximport'''() function) excluding transcript_id
<ul>
<li>[https://groups.google.com/g/rsem-users/c/IaZmviqghJc Effective length] &rarr; length. This is different across samples. This is much shorter than Length (e.g. 105 vs 1). </li>
<li>[http://deweylab.biostat.wisc.edu/rsem/rsem-calculate-expression.html Expected count] &rarr; count. This is the sum of the posterior probability of each read comes from this transcript over all reads. </li>
<li>TPM &rarr; abundance. The sum of all transcripts' TPM is 1 million. </li>
<li>FPKM (not kept?). FPKM_i = 10^3 / l_bar * TPM_i for gene i. So for each sample FPKM is a scaling of TPM. </li>
</ul>
<pre>
R> dfpkm[1:5, 1:3] / txi.rsem$abundance[1:5, 1:3]
          144126_210-T_JKQFX5 144126_210-T_JKQFX6 144126_210-T_JKQFX8
5S_rRNA            0.7563603            1.118008          0.8485292
5_8S_rRNA                NaN                NaN                NaN
6M1-18                    NaN                NaN                NaN
7M1-2                    NaN                NaN                NaN
7SK                0.7563751            1.118029          0.8485281
</pre>
<li>An example using [https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/tximport/versions/1.0.3/topics/tximport tximport::tximport()] and [https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/DESeq2/versions/1.12.3/topics/DESeqDataSet-class DESeq2::DESeqDataSetFromTximport]. <span style="color: red">Note it directly uses round(expected_count) to get the integer-value counts.</span> See the source of DESeqDataSetFromTximport() [https://github.com/mikelove/DESeq2/blob/6aa81f9906e192eea1fb21cdc492b26ee4a472f1/R/AllClasses.R#L405 here]. The [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/tximport/inst/doc/tximport.html tximport vignette] has discussed two suggested ways of importing estimates for use with differential gene expression (DGE) methods in the section of "Downstream DGE in Bioconductor". The vignette does not say anything about "expected_count" from RSEM output.
<pre>
txi.rsem <- tximport(files, type = "rsem", txIn = F, txOut = F)
txi.rsem$length[txi.rsem$length == 0] <- 1
names(txi.rsem) # a list,
                # length = effective_length (matrix)
                # counts = expected counts column (matrix), non-integer
                # abundance = TPM (matrix)
                # countsFromAbundance = "no"
# [1] "abundance"          "counts"              "length"           
# [4] "countsFromAbundance"


# fastq files from ExomeLungCancer/test.SRR2923335_*.fastq
sampleTable <- pheno[, c("EXPID", "PatientID")]
# 'bwa mem' and 'samtools fixmate' have been run to generate <accepted_hits.bam>
rownames(sampleTable) <- colnames(txi.rsem$counts)


$ wc -l ../test.SRR2923335_1.fastq  # 5000 reads in each of PAIRED end fastq files
dds <- DESeq2::DESeqDataSetFromTximport(txi.rsem, sampleTable, ~ PatientID)
20000 ../test.SRR2923335_1.fastq
# using counts and average transcript lengths from tximport
#
# The DESeqDataSet class enforces non-negative integer values in the "counts"
#    matrix stored as the first element in the assay list.
dds@assays@data@listData$counts[1:5, 1:3] # integer values. How to compute?
                              # https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9134840/
dds@assays@data@listData$avgTxLength[1:5, 1:3] # effective_length


$ samtools flagstat accepted_hits.bam
plot(txi.rsem$counts[,1], dds@assays@data@listData$counts[,1])
10006 + 0 in total (QC-passed reads + QC-failed reads)
abline(0, 1, col = 'red')     # compare expected counts vs integer-value counts
6 + 0 secondary
                              # a straight line
0 + 0 supplementary
0 + 0 duplicates
9971 + 0 mapped (99.65% : N/A)
10000 + 0 paired in sequencing
5000 + 0 read1
5000 + 0 read2
8502 + 0 properly paired (85.02% : N/A)
9934 + 0 with itself and mate mapped
31 + 0 singletons (0.31% : N/A)
1302 + 0 with mate mapped to a different chr
1231 + 0 with mate mapped to a different chr (mapQ>=5)
</syntaxhighlight>


See also https://wikis.utexas.edu/display/CoreNGSTools/Alignment#Alignment-Exercise#4:BWA-MEM-HumanmRNA-seq for alignment (including BWA mem and samtools flagstat).
ddsColl1 <- DESeq2::estimateSizeFactors(dds)
# using 'avgTxLength' from assays(dds), correcting for library size
# Question: how does the function correct for library size?


==== Stringent criterion ====
ddsColl2 <- DESeq2::estimateDispersions(ddsColl1)
* https://sourceforge.net/p/bio-bwa/mailman/message/31968535/
# gene-wise dispersion estimates
* http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?p=186581
# mean-dispersion relationship
# final dispersion estimates
# Note: it seems estimateDispersions is not required
#      if we only want to get the normalized count (still need estimateSizeFactors())
# See ArrayTools/R/FilterAndNormalize.R


=== [http://ccb.jhu.edu/software/tophat/index.shtml Tophat] ===
cnts2 <- DESeq2::counts(ddsColl2, normalized = FALSE)
Aligns RNA-Seq reads to the genome using '''Bowtie'''/Discovers splice sites. It does so by splitting longer reads into small sections and aligning those to the genome. It then looks for potential splice sites between pairs of sections to construct a final alignment.
all(dds@assays@data@listData$counts == cnts2)
# [1] TRUE


Linux part.
all(round(txi.rsem$counts) == cnts2 )
# [1] TRUE.    So in this case round(expected values) = integer-value counts
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
* [https://informatics.fas.harvard.edu/rsem-example-on-odyssey.html RSEM example on Odyssey]
* [https://github.com/bli25broad/RSEM_tutorial A Short Tutorial for RSEM]
* [https://ycl6.gitbook.io/rna-seq-data-analysis/ Hands-on Training in RNA-Seq Data Analysis*] which includes Quantification using RSEM and Perform DE analysis. Note the expected count column was used in edgeR.
* [https://biowize.wordpress.com/2014/03/04/understanding-rsem-raw-read-counts-vs-expected-counts/ Understanding RSEM: raw read counts vs expected counts]. These '''“expected counts”''' can then be provided as a matrix (rows = mRNAs, columns = samples) to programs such as EBSeq, DESeq, or edgeR to identify differentially expressed genes.
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2105-12-323 RSEM: accurate transcript quantification from RNA-Seq data with or without a reference genome]. Abundance estimates are given in terms of two measures. The output file (XXX_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results) contains 7 columns: '''gene_id, transcript_id(s), length,  effective_length, expected_count, TPM, FPKM'''.
** Expected counts: The is an estimate of the number of fragments that are derived from a given isoform or gene.  '''This count is generally a non-integer value''' and is the expectation of the number of alignable and unfiltered fragments that are derived from a isoform or gene given the ML abundances. These (possibly rounded) counts may be used by a differential expression method such as edgeR or DESeq.
** TPM: This is the estimated fraction of transcripts made up by a given isoform or gene. The transcript fraction measure is preferred over the popular RPKM/FPKM measures because '''it is independent of the mean expressed transcript length''' and is thus more comparable across samples and species.
<ul>
<li>The ''length'' or ''effective_length'' are different (though similar) for different samples for the same gene </li>
<li>A scatter plot and correlation shows the expected_count and TPM are different
<pre>
<pre>
$ type -a tophat # Find out which command the shell executes:
x <- read.delim("144126_210-T_JKQFX5_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results")
tophat is /home/mli/binary/tophat
colnames(x)
$ ls -l ~/binary
# [1] "gene_id"          "transcript_id.s." "length"          "effective_length"
# [5] "expected_count"  "TPM"              "FPKM"
plot(x[, "TPM"], x[, "expected_count"])
cor(x[, "TPM"], x[, "expected_count"])
# [1] 0.4902708
cor(x[, "TPM"], x[, "expected_count"], method = 'spearman')
# [1] 0.9886384
x[1:5, "length"]
[1] 105.01 161.00 473.00  68.00 304.47
 
x2 <- read.delim("144126_210-T_JKQFX6_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results")
x2[1:5, "length"]
# [1] 105.00 161.00 473.00  68.00 305.27
x[1:5, "effective_length"]
# [1]  1.03  16.65 293.88  0.00 129.00
x2[1:5, "effective_length"]
# [1]  1.58  17.82 293.05  0.00 128.86
</pre>
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
* [https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-016-0940-1 A benchmark for RNA-seq quantification pipelines]. 2016 They compare the STAR, TopHat2, and Bowtie2 '''mapping methods''' and the Cufflinks, eXpress , Flux Capacitor, kallisto, RSEM, Sailfish, and Salmon '''quantification methods'''. '''RSEM slightly outperforming the rest.'''
* [https://github.com/qianhuiSenn/scRNA_cell_deconv_benchmark/blob/master/Scripts/Downsample/downsample_read_pancreas_code.txt Downsample reads] from '' Evaluation of Cell Type Annotation R Packages on Single Cell RNA-seq Data'' 2020.
==== Expected_count ====
Number of reads mapping to that transcript


Quick test of Tophat program
<ul>
<li>[https://biowize.wordpress.com/2014/03/04/understanding-rsem-raw-read-counts-vs-expected-counts/ Understanding RSEM: raw read counts vs expected counts] In the ideal case, the expected count estimated by RSEM will be precisely the number of reads mapping to that transcript. However, when counting the number of reads mapped for all transcripts, multireads get counted multiple times, so we can expect that this number will be slightly larger than the expected count for many transcripts.
<pre>
<pre>
$ wget http://tophat.cbcb.umd.edu/downloads/test_data.tar.gz
R> x <- read.delim("41samples/165739~295-R~AM1I30~RNASEQ.genes.results")
$ tar xzvf test_data.tar.gz
R> summary(x$expected_count)    # Larger than TPM, contradict to the above statement
$ cd ~/tophat_test_data/test_data
  Min. 1st Qu. Median    Mean 3rd Qu.   Max.
$ PATH=$PATH:/home/mli/bowtie-0.12.8
      0      0      10    1346    556  533634
$ export PATH
R> summary(x$TPM)
$ ls
    Min1st Qu.   Median    Mean 3rd Qu.     Max.
reads_1.fq      test_ref.1.ebwt test_ref.3.bt2 test_ref.rev.1.bt2  test_ref.rev.2.ebwt
    0.00    0.00    0.16    35.58    7.50 70091.93
reads_2.fq      test_ref.2.bt2  test_ref.4.bt2  test_ref.rev.1.ebwt
R> x[1:5, c("expected_count", "TPM")]
test_ref.1.bt2  test_ref.2.ebwt  test_ref.fa     test_ref.rev.2.bt2
  expected_count      TPM
$ tophat -r 20 test_ref reads_1.fq reads_2.fq
1       6190.00 70091.93
$ # This will generate a new folder <tophat_out>
2           0.00     0.00
$ ls tophat_out
3          0.00    0.00
accepted_hits.bam  deletions.bed  insertions.bed  junctions.bed  logs  prep_reads.info  unmapped.bam
4          0.00    0.00
5        795.01  171.67
</pre>
</pre>
</li>


TopHat accepts FASTQ and FASTA files of sequencing reads as input. Alignments are reported in BAM files. BAM is the compressed, binary version of SAM43, a flexible and general purpose read alignment format. SAM and BAM files are produced by most next-generation sequence alignment tools as output, and many downstream analysis tools accept SAM and BAM as input. There are also numerous utilities for viewing and manipulating SAM and BAM files. Perhaps most popular among these are the SAM tools (http://samtools.sourceforge.net/) and the Picard tools (http://picard.sourceforge.net/).
<li>[https://support.bioconductor.org/p/90672/ Expected counts from RSEM in DESeq2?] Yes, RSEM expected counts can be used with DESeq2. Don't use TPM or FPKM because they are already normalized. ''It seems there is no need to do rounding before calling the '''tximport()''' function.''
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
# adding
txi$length[txi$length <= 0] <- 1
# before
dds <- DESeqDataSetFromTximport(txi, sampleTable, ~condition)
</syntaxhighlight>


Note that if the data is DNA-Seq, we can merely use Bowtie2 or BWA tools since we don't have to worry about splicing.
<li>[https://www.bioinfo-scrounger.com/archives/482/ Alignment-based的转录本定量-RSEM]/ '''the sum of the posterior probability of each read comes from this transcript over all reads'''
</ul>


An example of using Tophat2 (paired end in this case, 5 threads) is
==== Examples ====
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
{{Pre}}
tophat2  --no-coverage-search -p 5 \
$ wc -l 144126_210-T_JKQFX5_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results
      -o "Sample1" \
  28110 144126_210-T_JKQFX5_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results
      -G ~/iGenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Annotation/Genes/genes.gtf \
      --transcriptome-index=transcriptome_data/known \
      ~/iGenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Sequence/Bowtie2Index/genome \
      myfastq_R1.fastq.gz myfastq_R2.fastq.gz
</syntaxhighlight>


To find out the alignment rate for ALL bam files (eg we have ctrl1, ctrl2, test1, test2 directories and each of them have align_summary.txt file),
$ head -n 4 144126_210-T_JKQFX5_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results | cut -f1,3,4,5,6,7
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
grep "overall read mapping rate" */align_summary.txt
</syntaxhighlight>


==== Novel transcripts ====
gene_id   length  effective_length  expected_count TPM   FPKM
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/current-limitations-of-rna-seq-analysis-for-detection-of-novel-transcripts/ The identification and characterization of novel transcripts from RNA-seq data]
5S_rRNA   105.01  1.03             1513.66   31450.7 23788.06
5_8S_rRNA 161   16.65             0           0   0
6M1-18   473   293.88     0           0   0
</pre>


=== [https://code.google.com/p/rna-star/ STAR] (Spliced Transcripts Alignment to a Reference) ===
Second example
{{Pre}}
$ wc -l Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.genes.results
28110
$ head -1 Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.genes.results
gene_id transcript_id.s. length effective_length expected_count TPM FPKM
$ tail -4Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.genes.results
septin 9/TNRC6C fusion uc010wto.1 41 0 0 0 0
svRNAa uc022bxg.1 22 0 0 0 0
tRNA Pro uc022bqx.1 65 0 0 0 0
unknown uc002afm.3 1117 922.85 0 0 0


[http://sci-hub.cc/10.1007/978-1-4939-3572-7_13 Optimizing RNA-Seq Mapping with STAR] by  Alexander Dobin and Thomas R. Gingeras
$ wc -l Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.isoforms.results
78376
$ head -1 Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.isoforms.results
transcript_id gene_id length effective_length expected_count TPM FPKM IsoPct
$ tail -4 Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.isoforms.results
uc010wto.1 septin 9/TNRC6C fusion 41 0 0 0 0 0
uc022bxg.1 svRNAa 22 0 0 0 0 0
uc022bqx.1 tRNA Pro 65 0 0 0 0 0
uc002afm.3 unknown 1117 922.85 0 0 0 0
</pre>


Its manual is on [https://github.com/alexdobin/STAR github]. The [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/0471250953.bi1114s51/full 2015 paper] includes scripts to run STAR.  
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/limma.html limma] ==
* [http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/01/20/nar.gkv007.long Differential expression analyses for RNA-sequencing and microarray studies]
* [http://bioinf.wehi.edu.au/RNAseqCaseStudy/ Case Study] using a Bioconductor R pipeline to analyze RNA-seq data (this is linked from limma package user guide). ''Here we illustrate how to use two Bioconductor packages - '''Rsubread''' and '''limma''' - to perform a complete RNA-seq analysis, including '''Subread''''''Bold text''' read mapping, '''featureCounts''' read summarization, '''voom''' normalization and '''limma''' differential expresssion analysis.''
* Unbalanced data, non-normal data, Bartlett's test for equal variance across groups and SAM tests (assumes equal variances just like limma). See [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/47217/ this post].


Note that the readme file says HARDWARE/SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS:
=== RSEM ===
* x86-64 compatible processors
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/84749/ RSEM expected counts to limma-voom]. Choice 1: '''tximport'''. Choice 2: If you are working with '''RSEM gene-level expected counts''', then you can just pass them to limma as if they were counts. That's what we do.
* 64 bit Linux or Mac OS X
* [https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/bioconductor/2013-November/056309.html Differential expression of RNA-seq data using limma and voom()]
* '''30GB of RAM for human genome'''


See the blog on [http://www.gettinggeneticsdone.com/2012/11/star-ultrafast-universal-rna-seq-aligner.html gettinggeneticsdone.com] for a comparison of speed and memory requirement.
=== Within-subject correlation ===
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9152932/ Does this RNAseq experiment require a repeated measures approach?]
** Solution 1: 9.7 Multi-level Experiments of LIMMA user guide. '''duplicateCorrelation()''', '''lmFit()''', '''makeContrasts()''', '''contrasts.fit()''' and '''eBayes()'''
** Solution 2: Section 3.5 "Comparisons both between and within subjects" in edgeR. model.matrix(), glmQLFit(), glmQLFTtest(), topTags().  


In short, the notable increase in speed comes at the price of a larger memory requirement.
=== Time Course Experiments ===
* See Limma's [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/limma/inst/doc/usersguide.pdf#page=48 vignette] on Section 9.6
** Few time points (ANOVA, contrast)
*** Which genes respond at either the 6 hour or 24 hour times in the wild-type?
*** Which genes respond (i.e., change over time) in the mutant?
*** Which genes respond differently over time in the mutant relative to the wild-type?
** Many time points (regression such as cubic spline,  moderated F-test)
*** Detect genes with different time trends for treatment vs control.


To build STAR on Ubuntu (14.04)
== [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/easyRNASeq.html easyRNASeq] ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
Calculates the coverage of high-throughput short-reads against a genome of reference and summarizes it per feature of interest (e.g. exon, gene, transcript). The data can be normalized as 'RPKM' or by the 'DESeq' or 'edgeR' package.
wget https://github.com/alexdobin/STAR/archive/STAR_2.4.2a.tar.gz
sudo tar -xzf STAR_2.4.2a.tar.gz -C /opt/RNA-Seq/bin


cd /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/STAR-STAR_2.4.2a
== ShortRead ==
cd source
Base classes, functions, and methods for representation of high-throughput, short-read sequencing data.
sudo make STAR
</syntaxhighlight>


==== Create index folder ====
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Rsamtools.html Rsamtools] ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
The Rsamtools package provides an interface to BAM files.  
STAR --runMode genomeGenerate --runThreadN 11 \
    --genomeDir STARindex \
    --genomeFastaFiles genome.fa \
    --sjdbGTFfile genes.gtf \
    --sjdbOverhang 100
</syntaxhighlight>
where 100 = read length (one side) -1 = 101 - 100.  


==== STARindex folder ====
The main purpose of the Rsamtools package is to import BAM files into R. Rsamtools also provides some facility for file access such as record counting, index file creation, and filtering to create new files containing subsets of the original. An important use case for Rsamtools is as a starting point for creating R objects suitable for a diversity of work flows, e.g., AlignedRead objects in the ShortRead package (for quality assessment and read manipulation), or GAlignments objects in GenomicAlignments package (for RNA-seq and other applications). Those desiring more functionality are encouraged to explore samtools and related software efforts
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
brb@T3600 ~/SRP050992 $ ls ~/SRP012607/STARindex/
chrLength.txt      chrStart.txt      geneInfo.tab          SA            sjdbList.fromGTF.out.tab
chrNameLength.txt  exonGeTrInfo.tab  Genome                SAindex      sjdbList.out.tab
chrName.txt        exonInfo.tab      genomeParameters.txt  sjdbInfo.txt  transcriptInfo.tab
brb@T3600 ~/SRP050992 $ cat ~/SRP012607/STARindex/genomeParameters.txt
### STAR  --runMode genomeGenerate  --runThreadN 11  --genomeDir STARindex  --genomeFastaFiles /home/brb/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg38/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa      --sjdbGTFfile /home/brb/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg38/Annotation/Genes/genes.gtf  --sjdbOverhang 100
versionGenome  20201
genomeFastaFiles        /home/brb/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg38/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa
genomeSAindexNbases    14
genomeChrBinNbits      18
genomeSAsparseD 1
sjdbOverhang    100
sjdbFileChrStartEnd    -
sjdbGTFfile    /home/brb/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg38/Annotation/Genes/genes.gtf
sjdbGTFchrPrefix        -
sjdbGTFfeatureExon      exon
sjdbGTFtagExonParentTranscript  transcript_id
sjdbGTFtagExonParentGene        gene_id
sjdbInsertSave  Basic
</pre>


==== Splice junction ====
This package provides an interface to the 'samtools', 'bcftools', and 'tabix' utilities (see 'LICENCE') for manipulating SAM (Sequence Alignment / Map), FASTA, binary variant call (BCF) and compressed indexed tab-delimited (tabix) files.
* [https://github.com/alexdobin/STAR/blob/master/doc/STARmanual.pdf Manual]. Search 'sjdbOverhang' (length of the donor/acceptor sequence on each side of the junctions). The --sjdbOverhang is used only at the genome generation step, and tells STAR how many bases to concatenate from donor and acceptor sides of the junctions. If you have 100b reads, the ideal value of --sjdbOverhang is 99, which allows the 100b read to map 99b on one side, 1b on the other side. One can think of --sjdbOverhang as the maximum possible overhang for your reads. See [https://www.biostars.org/p/93883/ A post].
* For the <SJ.out.tab> format see section 4.4 of STAR manual. The first few lines of the file looks like (It is strange that the values in column 7, 8 are so large)
<pre>
$ head SJ.out.tab
chrM    711    764    1      1      1      2      1      44
chrM    717    1968    1      1      1      1      0      43
chrM    759    1189    0      0      1      11      3      30
chrM    795    830    2      2      1      335    344    30
chrM    822    874    1      1      1      1      1      17
chrM    831    917    2      2      1      733    81      38
chrM    831    3135    2      2      1      1      0      30
chrM    846    1126    0      0      1      4      0      50
chrM    876    922    1      1      1      26      9      31
chrM    962    1052    2      2      1      3      0      30
^      ^      ^      ^      ^      ^      ^      ^        ^
|      |      |      |      |      |      |      |        |
chrom  start  end    strand  intron annotated  |    # of      |
                      0=undef  motif          # of  multi mapped|
                      1=+                  uniquely mapped    max spliced alignment overhang 
                      2=-                      reads
</pre>
* [https://ccb.jhu.edu/software/tophat/manual.shtml Tophat]. Search overhang, donor/acceptor keywords. Check out <junctions.bed>. Tophat suggest users use this second option (--coverage-search)  for short reads (< 45bp) and with a small number of reads (<= 10 million).
* [http://www.ccb.jhu.edu/software/hisat/manual.shtml HiSAT] comes with a python script that can extract splice sites from a GTF file. See [https://www.biostars.org/p/146700/ this post].
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ cd /tmp
$ /opt/SeqTools/bin/hisat2-2.0.4/hisat2_extract_splice_sites.py \
  ~/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Annotation/Genes/genes.gtf > splicesites.txt
$ head splicesites.txt
chr1    12226  12612  +
chr1    12720  13220  +
chr1    14828  14969  -
chr1    15037  15795  -
chr1    15946  16606  -
chr1    16764  16857  -
chr1    17054  17232  -
chr1    17367  17605  -
chr1    17741  17914  -
chr1    18060  18267  -
</syntaxhighlight>
* To extract the splice alignment from bam files using '''samtools''', see [https://www.biostars.org/p/12626/ this] and [https://www.biostars.org/p/89581/ this] posts.


==== Log.final.out ====
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/IRanges.html IRanges] ==
An example of the Log.final.out file
IRanges is a fundamental package (see how many packages depend on it) to other packages like '''GenomicRanges''', '''GenomicFeatures''' and '''GenomicAlignments'''. The package defines the IRanges class.  
<pre>
$ cat Log.final.out
                                Started job on |      Jul 21 13:12:11
                            Started mapping on |      Jul 21 13:35:06
                                    Finished on |      Jul 21 13:57:42
      Mapping speed, Million of reads per hour |      248.01


                          Number of input reads |      93418927
The '''plotRanges'''() function given in the 'An Introduction to IRanges' vignette shows how to draw an IRanges object.
                      Average input read length |      202
                                    UNIQUE READS:
                  Uniquely mapped reads number |      61537064
                        Uniquely mapped reads % |      65.87%
                          Average mapped length |      192.62
                      Number of splices: Total |      15658546
            Number of splices: Annotated (sjdb) |      15590438
                      Number of splices: GT/AG |      15400163
                      Number of splices: GC/AG |      178602
                      Number of splices: AT/AC |      14658
              Number of splices: Non-canonical |      65123
                      Mismatch rate per base, % |      0.86%
                        Deletion rate per base |      0.02%
                        Deletion average length |      1.61
                        Insertion rate per base |      0.03%
                      Insertion average length |      1.40
                            MULTI-MAPPING READS:
        Number of reads mapped to multiple loci |      4962849
            % of reads mapped to multiple loci |      5.31%
        Number of reads mapped to too many loci |      62555
            % of reads mapped to too many loci |      0.07%
                                  UNMAPPED READS:
      % of reads unmapped: too many mismatches |      0.00%
                % of reads unmapped: too short |      28.70%
                    % of reads unmapped: other |      0.05%
                                  CHIMERIC READS:
                      Number of chimeric reads |      0
                            % of chimeric reads |      0.00%
</pre>
Note that 65.87 (uniquely mapped) + 5.31 (mapped to multiple loci) + 0.07 (mapped too many loci) + 28.70 (unmapped too short) + 0.05 (unmapped other) = 100


By default, STAR only outputs reads that map to <=10 loci, others are considered "mapped to too many loci". You can increase this threshold by increasing --outFilterMultimapNmax. See [https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/rna-star/sgVFpzSVFyY here].
If we want to make the same plot using the ggplot2 package, we can follow the example in [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/21506724/how-to-plot-overlapping-ranges-with-ggplot2 this post]. Note that disjointBins() returns a vector the bin number for each bins counting on the y-axis.


=== RNASequel ===
=== flank ===
[http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/06/16/nar.gkv594.full RNASequel: accurate and repeat tolerant realignment of RNA-seq reads]
The example is obtained from ?IRanges::flank.
<pre>
ir3 <- IRanges(c(2,5,1), c(3,7,3))
# IRanges of length 3
#    start end width
# [1]    2  3    2
# [2]    5  7    3
# [3]     1  3    3


=== Lessons ===
flank(ir3, 2)
* Tophat and STAR needs index files. So if we want to run the alignment using multiple nodes, we want to first run the alignment on a single sample first. Then we can run alignment on others samples using multiple nodes.
#    start end width
* The index files of Tophat only depends on the reference genome. However the index files of STAR depends on both the reference genome and the read length of the data.
# [1]    0  1    2
* BWA does not require index files. So we can directly run alignment on all samples using multiple nodes.
# [2]    3  4    2
# [3]    -1  0    2
# Note: by default flank(ir3, 2) = flank(ir3, 2, start = TRUE, both=FALSE)
# For example, [2,3] => [2,X] => (..., 0, 1, 2) => [0, 1]
#                                    == ==


== SAMtools ==
flank(ir3, 2, start=FALSE)
'''SAMtools''' bundle include '''samtools''', '''bcftools''', '''bgzip''', '''tabix''', ''' wgsim''' and '''htslib'''. samtools and bcftools are based on htslib.
#    start end width
# [1]    4  5    2
# [2]    8  9    2
# [3]    4  5    2
# For example, [2,3] => [X,3] => (..., 3, 4, 5) => [4,5]
#                                        == ==


* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAMtools
flank(ir3, 2, start=c(FALSE, TRUE, FALSE))
* http://www.htslib.org/doc/samtools.html
#    start end width
* http://www.htslib.org/doc/samtools-1.2.html (it is strange bam2fq appears in v1.2 but not in v1.3 documentation)
# [1]    4  5    2
* [http://biobits.org/samtools_primer.html SAMtools: Primer / Tutorial] by Ethan Cerami. It covers installing samtools, bcftools, generating simulated reads, align reads, convert sam to bam, sorting & indexing, identifying genomic variants, understand vcf format, visualize reads on a command line.
# [2]    3   4    2
* http://davetang.org/wiki/tiki-index.php?page=SAMTools contains many recipes like counting number of mapped reads
# [3]     4  5    2
 
# Combine the ideas of the previous 2 cases.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ /opt/SeqTools/bin/samtools-1.3/samtools


Program: samtools (Tools for alignments in the SAM format)
flank(ir3, c(2, -2, 2))
Version: 1.3 (using htslib 1.3)
#    start end width
# [1]    0  1    2
# [2]    5  6    2
# [3]    -1  0    2
# The original statement is the same as flank(ir3, c(2, -2, 2), start=T, both=F)
# For example, [5, 7] => [5, X] => ( 5, 6) => [5, 6]
#                                  == ==


Usage:   samtools <command> [options]
flank(ir3, -2, start=F)
#    start end width
# [1]    2  3    2
# [2]    6  7    2
# [3]    2   3    2
# For example, [5, 7] => [X, 7] => (..., 6, 7) => [6, 7]
#                                      == ==


Commands:
flank(ir3, 2, both = TRUE)
  -- Indexing
#    start end width
    dict          create a sequence dictionary file
# [1]    0   3    4
    faidx          index/extract FASTA
# [2]    3   6    4
    index          index alignment
# [3]    -1  2     4
 
# The original statement is equivalent to flank(ir3, 2, start=T, both=T)
  -- Editing
# (From the manual) If both = TRUE, extends the flanking region width positions into the range.
    calmd          recalculate MD/NM tags and '=' bases
#        The resulting range thus straddles the end point, with width positions on either side.
    fixmate        fix mate information
# For example, [2, 3] => [2, X] => (..., 0, 1, 2, 3) => [0, 3]
    reheader      replace BAM header
#                                            ==
    rmdup          remove PCR duplicates
#                                      == == == ==
    targetcut      cut fosmid regions (for fosmid pool only)
    addreplacerg   adds or replaces RG tags
 
   -- File operations
    collate        shuffle and group alignments by name
    cat            concatenate BAMs
    merge          merge sorted alignments
    mpileup        multi-way pileup
    sort          sort alignment file
    split          splits a file by read group
    quickcheck     quickly check if SAM/BAM/CRAM file appears intact
    fastq          converts a BAM to a FASTQ
    fasta          converts a BAM to a FASTA
 
  -- Statistics
    bedcov        read depth per BED region
    depth          compute the depth
    flagstat      simple stats
    idxstats      BAM index stats
    phase          phase heterozygotes
    stats          generate stats (former bamcheck)


   -- Viewing
flank(ir3, 2, start=FALSE, both=TRUE)
    flags          explain BAM flags
#    start end width
    tview          text alignment viewer
# [1]    2   5    4
    view          SAM<->BAM<->CRAM conversion
# [2]    6  9    4
    depad          convert padded BAM to unpadded BAM
# [3]    2  5    4
</syntaxhighlight>
# For example, [2, 3] => [X, 3] => (..., 2, 3, 4, 5) => [4, 5]
#                                          ==
#                                      == == == ==


To compile the new version (v1.x) of samtools,
</pre>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
git clone https://github.com/samtools/samtools.git
git clone https://github.com/samtools/htslib.git
cd samtools
make
</syntaxhighlight>


=== samtools flagstat: Know how many alignment a bam file contains ===
Both IRanges and GenomicRanges packages provide the '''flank''' function.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
brb@brb-T3500:~/GSE11209$ /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/samtools-0.1.19/samtools flagstat dT_bio_s.bam
1393561 + 0 in total (QC-passed reads + QC-failed reads)
0 + 0 duplicates
1393561 + 0 mapped (100.00%:-nan%)
0 + 0 paired in sequencing
0 + 0 read1
0 + 0 read2
0 + 0 properly paired (-nan%:-nan%)
0 + 0 with itself and mate mapped
0 + 0 singletons (-nan%:-nan%)
0 + 0 with mate mapped to a different chr
0 + 0 with mate mapped to a different chr (mapQ>=5)
</syntaxhighlight>


We can see how many reads have multiple alignments by comparing the number of reads and the number of alignments output from '''samtools flagstat'''.  
'''Flanking region''' is also a common term in High-throughput sequencing. The [http://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/book/export/html/6 IGV] user guide also has some option related to flanking.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* General tab: '''Feature flanking regions (base pairs)'''. IGV adds the flank before and after a feature locus when you zoom to a feature, or when you view gene/loci lists in multiple panels.
brb@brb-T3500:~/GSE11209$ wc -l SRR002062.fastq
* Alignments tab: '''Splice junction track options'''. The minimum amount of nucleotide coverage required on both sides of a junction for a read to be associated with the junction. This affects the coverage of displayed junctions, and the display of junctions covered only by reads with small flanking regions.
13778616 SRR002062.fastq
</syntaxhighlight>


=== samtools view ===
== [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Biostrings.html Biostrings] ==
See also [[Anders2013#sam.2Fbam.2C_.22samtools_view.22_and_Rsamtools|Anders2013-sam/bam]] and http://genome.sph.umich.edu/wiki/SAM
* [http://www.r-exercises.com/2017/05/21/manipulate-biological-data-using-biostrings-package-part-1/ Manipulate Biological Data Using Biostrings Package Exercises (Part 1)]
* [http://www.r-exercises.com/2017/05/28/manipulate-biological-data-using-biostrings-package-exercises-part-2/ Manipulate Biological Data Using Biostrings Package Exercises (Part 2)] - it covers global, local & overlap alignments.


'''View bam files''':
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenomicRanges.html GenomicRanges] ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
GenomicRanges depends on [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/IRanges.html IRanges] package. See the dependency diagram below.
samtools view XXX.bam    # No header
<pre>
samtools view -h XXX.bam # include header in SAM output
GenomicFeatues ------- GenomicRanges -+- IRanges -- BioGenomics
samtools view -H xxx.bam # See the header only. The header may contains the reference genome fasta information.
                        |            +
</syntaxhighlight>
                  +-----+            +- GenomeInfoDb
Note that according to [http://samtools.github.io/hts-specs/SAMv1.pdf SAM pdf], the header is optional.
                  |                      |
GenomicAlignments  +--- Rsamtools --+-----+
                                    +--- Biostrings
</pre>


'''Sam and bam files conversion''':
The package defines some classes
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* GRanges
/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/samtools-0.1.19/samtools view --help
* GRangesList
* GAlignments
* SummarizedExperiment: it has the following slots - expData, rowData, colData, and assays. Accessors include assays(), assay(), colData(), expData(), mcols(), ... The mcols() method is defined in the S4Vectors package.


# sam -> bam (need reference genome file)
(As of Jan 6, 2015) The introduction in GenomicRanges vignette mentions the ''GAlignments'' object created from a 'BAM' file discarding some information such as SEQ field, QNAME field, QUAL, MAPQ and any other information that is not needed in its document. This means that multi-reads don't receive any special treatment. Also pair-end reads will be treated as single-end reads and the pairing information will be lost. This might change in the future.
samtools view -bT XXX.fa XXX.bt2.sam > XXX.bt2.bam


# bam -> sam
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenomicAlignments.html GenomicAlignments] ==
samtools view -h -o out.sam in.bam
=== Counting reads with summarizeOverlaps vignette ===
</syntaxhighlight>
<pre>
library(GenomicAlignments)
library(DESeq)
library(edgeR)


'''Subset''':
fls <- list.files(system.file("extdata", package="GenomicAlignments"),
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
    recursive=TRUE, pattern="*bam$", full=TRUE)
# assuming bam file is sorted & indexed
samtools view XXX.bam "chr22:24000000-25000000" | more
</syntaxhighlight>


=== '''less''' bam files ===
features <- GRanges(
http://martinghunt.github.io/2016/01/25/less-foo.bam.html
    seqnames = c(rep("chr2L", 4), rep("chr2R", 5), rep("chr3L", 2)),
    ranges = IRanges(c(1000, 3000, 4000, 7000, 2000, 3000, 3600, 4000,
        7500, 5000, 5400), width=c(rep(500, 3), 600, 900, 500, 300, 900,
        300, 500, 500)), "-",
    group_id=c(rep("A", 4), rep("B", 5), rep("C", 2)))
features


=== Convert BAM to SAM ===
# GRanges object with 11 ranges and 1 metadata column:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
#      seqnames      ranges strand  |    group_id
samtools view -h input.bam -o output.sam
#          <Rle>    <IRanges> <Rle>  | <character>
</syntaxhighlight>
#  [1]    chr2L [1000, 1499]      -  |          A
where '-h' is to ensure the converted SAM file contains the header information. Generally, it is useful to store only sorted BAM files as they use much less disk space and are faster to process.
#  [2]    chr2L [3000, 3499]      -   |          A
 
#  [3]    chr2L [4000, 4499]      -   |          A
=== Convert BAM to FASTQ ===
#  [4]    chr2L [7000, 7599]      -  |          A
* http://www.metagenomics.wiki/tools/samtools/converting-bam-to-fastq
#  [5]    chr2R [2000, 2899]      -   |          B
* http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=7061
#  ...     ...          ...    ... ...         ...
 
#  [7]    chr2R [3600, 3899]      -   |          B
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
#  [8]    chr2R [4000, 4899]      -   |          B
# Method 1: samtools
#  [9]    chr2R [7500, 7799]      -   |          B
samtools bam2fq SAMPLE.bam > SAMPLE.fastq
#  [10]    chr3L [5000, 5499]      -   |          C
cat SAMPLE.fastq | grep '^@.*/1$' -A 3 --no-group-separator > SAMPLE_r1.fastq
#  [11]    chr3L [5400, 5899]      -   |          C
cat SAMPLE.fastq | grep '^@.*/2$' -A 3 --no-group-separator > SAMPLE_r2.fastq
#  -------
 
# seqinfo: 3 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
# Method 2: picard
olap
java -Xmx2g -jar Picard/SamToFastq.jar I=SAMPLE.bam F=SAMPLE_r1.fastq F2=SAMPLE_r2.fastq
# class: SummarizedExperiment
 
# dim: 11 2
# Method 3: bam2fastx
# exptData(0):
# http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/quantal/man1/bam2fastx.1.html
# assays(1): counts
 
# rownames: NULL
# Method 4: Bedtools - bamtofastq
# rowData metadata column names(1): group_id
# http://bedtools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/content/tools/bamtofastq.html
# colnames(2): sm_treated1.bam sm_untreated1.bam
# Single fastq
# colData names(0):
bedtools bamtofastq -i input.bam -fq output.fastq
# BAM should be sorted by query name (samtools sort -n aln.bam aln.qsort) if creating paired FASTQ
samtools sort -n input.bam -o input_sorted.bam  # sort by read namem (-n)
bedtools bamtofastq -i input_sorted.bam -fq output_r1.fastq -fq2 output_r2.fastq
 
# Method 5: Bamtools
# http://github.com/pezmaster31/bamtools
</syntaxhighlight>


Consider the ExomeLungCancer example
assays(olap)$counts
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
#       sm_treated1.bam sm_untreated1.bam
# ExomeLungCancer/test.SRR2923335_*.fastq
# [1,]              0                0
 
#  [2,]              0                0
$ # Method 1
#  [3,]              0                0
$ samtools bam2fq bwa.sam > SAMPLE.fastq
#  [4,]              0                0
$ cat SAMPLE.fastq | grep '^@.*/1$' -A 3 --no-group-separator > SAMPLE_r1.fastq
# [5,]              5                1
$ cat SAMPLE.fastq | grep '^@.*/2$' -A 3 --no-group-separator > SAMPLE_r2.fastq
# [6,]              5                 0
$ head -n 4 SAMPLE_r1.fastq
# [7,]              2                0
@SRR2923335.1/1
# [8,]            376              104
NGCAAGTAGAGGGGCGCACACCTACCCGCAGTTGTTCACAGCCATGAGGTCGCCAACTAGCAGGAAGGGGTAGGTCAGCATGCTCACTGCAATCTGAAAC
# [9,]              0                0
+
# [10,]              0                0
#1=DDFDFHHHHHJIJJJJIJJJJJJJJIJJJJJIJIHHHHHFFFFFEECEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD>BDDACCDDDDDDDDDDDDDDCCDDEDDDC
# [11,]              0                 0
$ head -n 4 output_r2.fastq
</pre>
@SRR2923335.1/2
AACCCTGGTAATGGCTGGAGGCAGNNCTTGGTACAGNGTGTNNGCGTGGTGTGTCNNTGCTNNCTGGGCCGGGGTGGGTCACTGGCACTCAGGCCTCTCT
+
CCCFFFFFFHHGHJJJJJEHJIJI##11CCG?DFGI#0)88##0/77CF=@FDDG##--;?##,,5=BABBDDD)9@D59ADCDDBDDDDDDDCDDDDC>
 
$ # Method 4
$ samtools sort -n accepted_hits.bam -o accepted_sortbyname.bam
$ /opt/SeqTools/bin/bedtools2/bin/bedtools bamtofastq -i accepted_sortbyname.bam -fq output_r1.fastq -fq2 output_r2.fastq
 
# Compare the first read
# Original fastq file
$ head -n 4 ../test.SRR2923335_1.fastq
@SRR2923335.1 1 length=100
NGCAAGTAGAGGGGCGCACACCTACCCGCAGTTGTTCACAGCCATGAGGTCGCCAACTAGCAGGAAGGGGTAGGTCAGCATGCTCACTGCAATCTGAAAC
+SRR2923335.1 1 length=100
#1=DDFDFHHHHHJIJJJJIJJJJJJJJIJJJJJIJIHHHHHFFFFFEECEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD>BDDACCDDDDDDDDDDDDDDCCDDEDDDC
$ head -n 4 ../test.SRR2923335_2.fastq
@SRR2923335.1 1 length=100
AACCCTGGTAATGGCTGGAGGCAGNNCTTGGTACAGNGTGTNNGCGTGGTGTGTCNNTGCTNNCTGGGCCGGGGTGGGTCACTGGCACTCAGGCCTCTCT
+SRR2923335.1 1 length=100
CCCFFFFFFHHGHJJJJJEHJIJI##11CCG?DFGI#0)88##0/77CF=@FDDG##--;?##,,5=BABBDDD)9@D59ADCDDBDDDDDDDCDDDDC>


$ ##################################################################################################
Pasilla data. Note that the bam files are not clear where to find them. According to the [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/50162/ message], we can download SAM files first and then convert them to BAM files by samtools (Not verify yet).
$ head -n 4 output_r1.fastq
@SRR2923335.1/1
NGCAAGTAGAGGGGCGCACACCTACCCGCAGTTGTTCACAGCCATGAGGTCGCCAACTAGCAGGAAGGGGTAGGTCAGCATGCTCACTGCAATCTGAAAC
+
#1=DDFDFHHHHHJIJJJJIJJJJJJJJIJJJJJIJIHHHHHFFFFFEECEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD>BDDACCDDDDDDDDDDDDDDCCDDEDDDC
$ head -n 4 output_r2.fastq
@SRR2923335.1/2
AACCCTGGTAATGGCTGGAGGCAGNNCTTGGTACAGNGTGTNNGCGTGGTGTGTCNNTGCTNNCTGGGCCGGGGTGGGTCACTGGCACTCAGGCCTCTCT
+
CCCFFFFFFHHGHJJJJJEHJIJI##11CCG?DFGI#0)88##0/77CF=@FDDG##--;?##,,5=BABBDDD)9@D59ADCDDBDDDDDDDCDDDDC>
</syntaxhighlight>
 
=== Extract single chromosome ===
https://www.biostars.org/p/46327/
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
samtools sort accepted_hits.bam -o accepted_hits_sorted.bam
samtools index accepted_hits_sorted.bam
samtools view -h accepted_hits_sorted.bam chr22 > accepted_hits_sub.sam
</syntaxhighlight>
 
=== Extract mapped/unmapped reads from BAM ===
http://www.htslib.org/doc/samtools.html
<pre>
<pre>
0x1 PAIRED         paired-end (or multiple-segment) sequencing technology
samtools view -h -o outputFile.bam inputFile.sam
0x2 PROPER_PAIR each segment properly aligned according to the aligner
0x4 UNMAP         segment unmapped
0x8 MUNMAP         next segment in the template unmapped
0x10 REVERSE         SEQ is reverse complemented
0x20 MREVERSE SEQ of the next segment in the template is reverse complemented
0x40 READ1         the first segment in the template
0x80 READ2         the last segment in the template
0x100 SECONDARY secondary alignment
0x200 QCFAIL         not passing quality controls
0x400 DUP         PCR or optical duplicate
0x800 SUPPLEMENTARY supplementary alignment
</pre>
</pre>
* https://www.biostars.org/p/59281/ & https://www.biostars.org/p/56246/
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# get the unmapped reads from a bam file use :
samtools view -f 4 file.bam > unmapped.sam


# get the output in bam use :
A modified R code that works is
samtools view -b -f 4 file.bam > unmapped.bam
<pre>
 
###################################################
# get only the mapped reads, the parameter 'F', which works like -v of grep
### code chunk number 11: gff (eval = FALSE)
samtools view -b -F 4 file.bam > mapped.bam
###################################################
</syntaxhighlight>
library(rtracklayer)
 
fl <- paste0("ftp://ftp.ensembl.org/pub/release-62/",
* https://www.biostars.org/p/14518/ So for all pair-end reads where one end is mapped and the other end isn't mapped, this should output all the mapped end entries:
            "gtf/drosophila_melanogaster/",
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
            "Drosophila_melanogaster.BDGP5.25.62.gtf.gz")
samtools view -u -f 8 -F 260 map.bam  > oneEndMapped.bam
gffFile <- file.path(tempdir(), basename(fl))
</syntaxhighlight>
download.file(fl, gffFile)
and this will output all the unmapped end entries:
gff0 <- import(gffFile, asRangedData=FALSE)
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
samtools view -u  -f 4 -F 264 map.bam  > oneEndUnmapped.bam
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Count number of mapped/unmapped reads from BAM - samtools idxstats ===
###################################################
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
### code chunk number 12: gff_parse (eval = FALSE)
# count the number of mapped reads
###################################################
samtools view -c -F0x4 accepted_hits.bam
idx <- mcols(gff0)$source == "protein_coding" &
9971
          mcols(gff0)$type == "exon" &
# count the number of unmapped reads
          seqnames(gff0) == "4"
samtools view -c -f0x4 accepted_hits.bam
gff <- gff0[idx]
35
## adjust seqnames to match Bam files
</syntaxhighlight>
seqlevels(gff) <- paste("chr", seqlevels(gff), sep="")
The result can be checked with samtools idxstats command. See https://pepebioinformatics.wordpress.com/2014/05/29/samtools-count-mapped-and-unmapped-reads-in-bam-file/
chr4genes <- split(gff, mcols(gff)$gene_id)
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ samtools sort accepted_hits.bam -o accepted_hits_sorted.bam
$ samtools index accepted_hits_sorted.bam accepted_hits_sorted.bai # BAI file is binary
$ ls -t
accepted_hits_sorted.bai  accepted_hits_sorted.bam  accepted_hits.bam
$ samtools idxstats accepted_hits_sorted.bam
1 249250621 949 1
2 243199373 807 0
3 198022430 764 0
4 191154276 371 1
5 180915260 527 0
6 171115067 411 3
7 159138663 888 5
8 146364022 434 0
9 141213431 409 2
10 135534747 408 1
11 135006516 490 2
12 133851895 326 1
13 115169878 149 1
14 107349540 399 3
15 102531392 249 1
16 90354753 401 4
17 81195210 466 1
18 78077248 99 0
19 59128983 503 1
20 63025520 275 1
21 48129895 87 0
22 51304566 228 2
X 155270560 315 1
Y 59373566 6 0
MT 16569 10 0
* 0 0 4
$ samtools idxstats accepted_hits_sorted.bam | awk '{s+=$3+$4} END {print s}'
10006
$ samtools idxstats accepted_hits_sorted.bam | awk '{s+=$3} END {print s}'
9971
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Find unmapped reads ===
###################################################
* http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=5787
### code chunk number 12: gff_parse (eval = FALSE)
###################################################
library(GenomicAlignments)


=== Find multi-mapped reads ===
# fls <- c("untreated1_chr4.bam", "untreated3_chr4.bam")
http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=16427
fls <- list.files(system.file("extdata", package="pasillaBamSubset"),
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
    recursive=TRUE, pattern="*bam$", full=TRUE)
samtools view -F 4 file.bam | awk '{printf $1"\n"}' | sort | uniq -d | wc -l
path <- system.file("extdata", package="pasillaBamSubset")
# uniq -d will only print duplicate lines
bamlst <- BamFileList(fls)
</syntaxhighlight>
genehits <- summarizeOverlaps(chr4genes, bamlst, mode="Union") # SummarizedExperiment object
assays(genehits)$counts


=== htslib ===
###################################################
Suppose we download a vcf.gz from [ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/snp/organisms/human_9606_b147_GRCh37p13/VCF/ NCBI] ftp site. We want to subset chromosome 1 and index the new file.
### code chunk number 15: pasilla_exoncountset (eval = FALSE)
###################################################
library(DESeq)


* '''tabix''' - subset a vcf.gz file or index a vcf.gz file
expdata = MIAME(
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
              name="pasilla knockdown",
tabix -h common_all_20160601.vcf.gz 1: > common_all_20160601_1.vcf
              lab="Genetics and Developmental Biology, University of
                  Connecticut Health Center",
              contact="Dr. Brenton Graveley",
              title="modENCODE Drosophila pasilla RNA Binding Protein RNAi
                  knockdown RNA-Seq Studies",
              pubMedIds="20921232",
              url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE18508",
              abstract="RNA-seq of 3 biological replicates of from the Drosophila
                  melanogaster S2-DRSC cells that have been RNAi depleted of mRNAs
                  encoding pasilla, a mRNA binding protein and 4 biological replicates
                  of the the untreated cell line.")


$ tabix -h
design <- data.frame(
 
              condition=c("untreated", "untreated"),
Version: 1.3
              replicate=c(1,1),
Usage:  tabix [OPTIONS] [FILE] [REGION [...]]
              type=rep("single-read", 2), stringsAsFactors=TRUE)
library(DESeq)
geneCDS <- newCountDataSet(
                  countData=assay(genehits),
                  conditions=design)


Indexing Options:
experimentData(geneCDS) <- expdata
  -0, --zero-based          coordinates are zero-based
sampleNames(geneCDS) = colnames(genehits)
  -b, --begin INT            column number for region start [4]
  -c, --comment CHAR        skip comment lines starting with CHAR [null]
  -C, --csi                  generate CSI index for VCF (default is TBI)
  -e, --end INT              column number for region end (if no end, set INT to -b) [5]
  -f, --force                overwrite existing index without asking
  -m, --min-shift INT        set minimal interval size for CSI indices to 2^INT [14]
  -p, --preset STR          gff, bed, sam, vcf
  -s, --sequence INT        column number for sequence names (suppressed by -p) [1]
  -S, --skip-lines INT      skip first INT lines [0]


Querying and other options:
###################################################
  -h, --print-header        print also the header lines
### code chunk number 16: pasilla_genes (eval = FALSE)
  -H, --only-header          print only the header lines
###################################################
  -l, --list-chroms          list chromosome names
chr4tx <- split(gff, mcols(gff)$transcript_id)
  -r, --reheader FILE        replace the header with the content of FILE
txhits <- summarizeOverlaps(chr4tx, bamlst)
  -R, --regions FILE        restrict to regions listed in the file
txCDS <- newCountDataSet(assay(txhits), design)
  -T, --targets FILE        similar to -R but streams rather than index-jumps
experimentData(txCDS) <- expdata
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
* '''bgzip''' - create a vcf.gz file from a vcf file
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
bgzip -c common_all_20160601_1.vcf > common_all_20160601_1.vcf.gz


# Indexing. Output is <common_all_20160601_1.vcf.gz.tbi>
We can also check out ?summarizeOverlaps to find some fake examples.
tabix -f -p vcf common_all_20160601_1.vcf.gz


$ bgzip -h
== tidybulk ==
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/tidybulk.html tidybulk]: an R tidy framework for modular transcriptomic data analysis, [https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-020-02233-7 paper]
* [https://stemangiola.github.io/bioc_2020_tidytranscriptomics/articles/tidytranscriptomics.html A Tidy Transcriptomics introduction to RNA-Seq analyses]


Version: 1.3
== Bisque ==
Usage:  bgzip [OPTIONS] [FILE] ...
[https://github.com/cozygene/bisque?s=09 Bisque]: An R toolkit for accurate and efficient estimation of cell composition ('decomposition') from bulk expression data with single-cell information.
Options:
  -b, --offset INT        decompress at virtual file pointer (0-based uncompressed offset)
  -c, --stdout            write on standard output, keep original files unchanged
  -d, --decompress        decompress
  -f, --force            overwrite files without asking
  -h, --help              give this help
  -i, --index            compress and create BGZF index
  -I, --index-name FILE  name of BGZF index file [file.gz.gzi]
  -r, --reindex          (re)index compressed file
  -s, --size INT          decompress INT bytes (uncompressed size)
  -@, --threads INT      number of compression threads to use [1]
</syntaxhighlight>


== [http://samstat.sourceforge.net/ SAMStat] ==
== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/chromoMap/ chromoMap] ==
Displaying sequence statistics for next generation sequencing. SAMStat reports nucleotide composition, length distribution, base quality distribution, mapping statistics, mismatch, insertion and deletion error profiles, di-nucleotide and 10-mer over-representation. The output is a single html5 page which can be interpreted by a non-specialist.


Usage
== Inference ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/advance-article/doi/10.1093/bioinformatics/btz089/5307752 How well do RNA-Seq differential gene expression tools perform in a complex eukaryote? A case study in A. thaliana] Froussios, Bioinformatics 2019
samstat <file.sam>  <file.bam>  <file.fa>  <file.fq> ....
</syntaxhighlight>
For each input file SAMStat will create a single html page named after the input file name plus a dot html suffix.


== [http://broadinstitute.github.io/picard/ Picard] ==
=== tximport ===
A set of tools (in Java) for working with next generation sequencing data in the BAM (http://samtools.sourceforge.net) format.
* [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/tximport/inst/doc/tximport.html#Downstream_DGE_in_Bioconductor Vignette]. Search "offset".
* [https://f1000research.com/articles/4-1521 Differential analyses for RNA-seq: transcript-level estimates improve gene-level inferences] by Soneson, et al. [https://f1000research.com/gateways/bioconductor F1000Research]. Open peer review.
** [https://f1000researchdata.s3.amazonaws.com/datasets/7563/e22fa771-ee2b-486a-8cf4-31b645163d6b_gse64570_quantification.html#definition-of-gene-to-transcript-mapping GSE64570]
** [https://f1000researchdata.s3.amazonaws.com/datasets/7563/080b3afa-c02e-407a-b08b-3a1e84aff2db_gse69244_quantification.html GSE69244]
** [https://f1000researchdata.s3.amazonaws.com/datasets/7563/3ca97d58-f9bb-48e4-9e76-85d92f21f40a_GSE72165_quantification.html GSE72165]
<ul>
<li>http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/tximport.html
<pre>
$ head -5 quant.sf
Name Length EffectiveLength TPM NumReads
ENST00000456328.2 1657 1410.79 0.083908 2.46885
ENST00000450305.2 632 410.165 0 0
ENST00000488147.1 1351 1035.94 10.4174 225.073
ENST00000619216.1 68 24 0 0
ENST00000473358.1 712 453.766 0 0
</pre>
</li>
<li>Another real data from [https://pdmdb.cancer.gov/web/apex/f?p=101:34:::NO:34:: PDMR -> PDX]. Select Genomic Analysis -> RNASeq and TPM(genes) column. Consider Patient ID=114348, Specimen ID=004-R, Sample ID=ATHY22, CTEP SDC Code=10038045,
{{Pre}}
$ head -2 114348_004-R_ATHY22_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results
gene_id transcript_id.s. length effective_length  expected_count  TPM   FPKM
5S_rRNA uc021ofx.1 105.04 2.23           2039.99   49629.87 35353.97


https://github.com/broadinstitute/picard
$ R
x = read.delim("114348_004-R_ATHY22_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results")
dim(x)
# [1] 28109    7
names(x)
# [1] "gene_id"          "transcript_id.s." "length"          "effective_length"
# [5] "expected_count"  "TPM"              "FPKM"           
x[1:3, -2]
#    gene_id length effective_length expected_count      TPM    FPKM
# 1  5S_rRNA 105.04            2.23        2039.99 49629.87 35353.97
# 2 5_8S_rRNA 161.00            21.19          0.00    0.00    0.00
# 3    6M1-18 473.00          302.74          0.00    0.00    0.00


Note that As of version 2.0.1 (Nov. 2015) Picard requires Java 1.8 (jdk8u66). The last version to support Java 1.7 was release 1.141. Use the following to check your Java version
y <- read.delim("114348_004-R_ATHY22_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.isoforms.results")
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
dim(y)
brb@T3600 ~/github/picard $ java -version
# [1] 78375    8
java version "1.7.0_101"
names(y)
OpenJDK Runtime Environment (IcedTea 2.6.6) (7u101-2.6.6-0ubuntu0.14.04.1)
# [1] "transcript_id"    "gene_id"          "length"          "effective_length"
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 24.95-b01, mixed mode)
# [5] "expected_count"  "TPM"              "FPKM"            "IsoPct"
</syntaxhighlight>
y[1:3, -1]
#  gene_id length effective_length expected_count TPM FPKM IsoPct
# 1 5S_rRNA    110            3.06              0  0    0      0
# 2 5S_rRNA    133            9.08              0  0    0      0
# 3 5S_rRNA    92            0.00              0  0    0      0
</pre>
</li>
</ul>


See my [https://taichimd.us/mediawiki/index.php/Linux#JRE_and_JDK Linux -> JRE and JDK] page.
[[:File:RSEM PDX.png]]


Some people reported errors or complain about memory usage. See [http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=6204 this post] from seqanswers.com. And HTSeq python program is another option.
=== DESeq2 or edgeR ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [http://genomebiology.com/2014/15/12/550#sec4 DESeq2 method]
sudo apt-get install ant
* [https://biocorecrg.github.io/PHINDaccess_RNAseq_2020/differential_expression.html DESeq2 steps]
git clone https://github.com/broadinstitute/picard.git
** DESeq2 uses the median of ratio method for normalization: briefly, the counts are divided by sample-specific size factors.
cd picard
** Four steps: 1. '''Geometric mean''' is calculated for each gene across all samples (length=number of genes vector). 2. '''ratios''': The counts for a gene in each sample is then divided by this mean. 3. The '''median of these (gene) ratios''' (aka size factor) in a sample is the size factor for that sample (length=number of samples). 4. the raw counts data is divided by these size factors sample by sample.
git clone https://github.com/samtools/htsjdk.git
** [https://github.com/oxwang/fda_scRNA-seq/blob/master/3_Normalization/Code/HCC1395/10X_LLU.R#L148 Manual implementation]. The results (size factor values) are not the same as counts(dds, normalized = TRUE) returns? Ans: see the help of counts()
ant -lib lib/ant package-commands # We will see 'BUILD SUCCESSFUL'
** [https://rdrr.io/bioc/DESeq2/man/counts.html counts()]. '''normalization factors''' is used by default  (''normalization factors'' always preempt ''size factors'')
                                  # It will create <dist/picard.jar>
** [https://rdrr.io/bioc/DESeq2/man/sizeFactors.html sizeFactors()] - sample by sample (a vector)
</syntaxhighlight>
** [https://rdrr.io/bioc/DESeq2/man/normalizationFactors.html normalizationFactors()] - '''Gene-specific''' normalization factors for each sample (a matrix)
* DESeq2 with a large number of samples -> use DESEq2 to normalize the data and then use do a Wilcoxon rank-sum test on the normalized counts, for each gene separately, or, even better, use a permutation test. See [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/60432/ this post]. Or consider the limma-voom method instead, which will handle 1000 samples in a few seconds without the need for extra memory.
* edgeR normalization factor [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/65683/ post]. Normalization factors are computed using the trimmed mean of M-values (TMM) method; see the [http://genomebiology.com/2010/11/3/r25 paper by Robinson & Oshlack 2010] for more details. Briefly, M-values are defined as the library size-adjusted log-ratio of counts between two libraries. The most extreme 30% of M-values are trimmed away, and the mean of the remaining M-values is computed. This trimmed mean represents the log-normalization factor between the two libraries. The idea is to eliminate systematic differences in the counts between libraries, by assuming that most genes are not DE.
* edgeR [http://f1000research.com/articles/5-1438/v1 From reads to genes to pathways: differential expression analysis of RNA-Seq experiments using Rsubread and the edgeR quasi-likelihood pipeline]
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/65890/ Can I feed TCGA normalized count data to EdgeR?]
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/66067/ counts() function and normalized counts].
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/74572/ Why use Negative binomial distribution] in RNA-Seq data?] and the [http://www.bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2015/CSAMA2015/lect/L05-deseq2-anders.pdf Presentation] by Simon Anders.
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-017-1803-9 XBSeq2] – a fast and accurate quantification of differential expression and differential polyadenylation. By using simulated datasets, they demonstrated that, overall, XBSeq2 performs equally well as XBSeq in terms of several statistical metrics and both perform better than DESeq2 and edgeR.
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/08/27/399931 DEBrowser: Interactive Differential Expression Analysis and Visualization Tool for Count Data] Alper Kucukural 2018
* [https://genomespot.blogspot.com/2020/10/edger-or-deseq2-comparing-performance.html?s=09 EdgeR or DESeq2? Comparing the performance of differential expression tools]
* StatQuest:
** [https://youtu.be/Wdt6jdi-NQo edgeR, part 1, Library Normalization] (TMM),
** [https://youtu.be/UFB993xufUU DESeq2, part 1, Library Normalization]
** [https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s edgeR and DESeq2, part 2 - Independent Filtering]
* [https://bioinformatics.chat/deseq2?s=09 Differential gene expression and DESeq2 with Michael Love (#60)]
* [https://morphoscape.wordpress.com/2022/08/09/downstream-bioinformatics-analysis-of-omics-data-with-edger/ Downstream Bioinformatics Analysis of Omics Data with edgeR]


=== [http://broadinstitute.github.io/picard/command-line-overview.html#SamToFastq SamToFastq] ===
==== Shrinkage estimators ====
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<ul>
java jvm-args -jar picard.jar PicardCommandName OPTION1=value1 OPTION2=value2...
<li> The package uses a negative binomial statistical model to fit the count data, and can account for differences in sequencing depth across samples.
# For example
* Shrinkage is a technique used to '''regularize the estimates of the parameters''' of the negative binomial model.
cd ~/github/freebayes/test/tiny
* The idea behind shrinkage is to '''pull the estimated values of the parameters towards a prior distribution''', which can help to '''reduce the variability of the estimates''' and '''improve the stability of the results'''.  
java -Xmx2g -jar ~/github/picard/dist/picard.jar SamToFastq \
* The specific shrinkage method used in DESeq2 is called the "shrinkage prior for dispersion" method. This method involves '''adding a prior distribution on the dispersion parameter''' of the negative binomial model, which is used to control the degree of overdispersion in the data.  
  INPUT=NA12878.chr22.tiny.bam \
* This prior distribution is designed to '''shrink the estimated values of the dispersion parameter''' towards a common value across all the genes in the dataset, which can help to '''reduce the variance of the estimated log-fold changes'''.
  FASTQ=tmp_1.fq \
<li>More details:
  SECOND_END_FASTQ=tmp_2.fq \
* The negative binomial model is used to model the count data, y, as a function of the '''mean''', <math>\mu</math>, and the '''dispersion''', <math>\alpha</math>. The probability mass function of the negative binomial is given by:
  INCLUDE_NON_PF_READS=True \
: <math>
  VALIDATION_STRINGENCY=SILENT
\begin{align}
wc -l tmp_1.fq
P(y | \mu, \alpha) = (y + \alpha - 1)! / (y! * (\alpha - 1)!) * (\mu / (\mu + \alpha))^y * (\alpha / (\mu + \alpha))^\alpha
# 6532 tmp_1.fq
\end{align}
wc -l tmp_2.fq
</math>
# 6532 tmp_2.fq
* The likelihood of the data is given by:
</syntaxhighlight>
: <math>
\begin{align}
L(\mu, \alpha | y) = \prod_i [ P(y_i | \mu_i, \alpha) ]
\end{align}
</math>
* The log-likelihood is :
: <math>
\begin{align}
logL(\mu, \alpha | y) = \sum_i [ \log(P(y_i | \mu_i, \alpha)) ]
\end{align}
</math>
: In this model, <math>\mu</math> is the mean of the negative binomial for each gene and it is modeled as a linear function of the design matrix.
: <math>
\begin{align}
\mu_i = exp(X_i \beta)
\end{align}
</math>
: <math>\alpha</math> is the dispersion parameter and it's the same for all the genes, following the common practice in RNA-seq analysis
* '''The shrinkage prior is added on <math>\alpha</math>''', it assumes that <math>\alpha</math> is following a hyper-prior distribution like Gamma distribution
: <math>
\begin{align}
\alpha \sim \Gamma(a_0, b_0)
\end{align}
</math>
: This prior allows the shrinkage of <math>\alpha</math> estimates from the data towards a common value across all the genes, which can help to reduce the variance of the estimated log-fold changes.
* The goal is to find the values of mu and alpha that maximize the log-likelihood, this is done by using maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) or Bayesian approach where the prior are considered and integrated in the calculation and the result is the posterior probability.
<li>Dispersion parameter.
* In the context of the negative binomial model used in DESeq2, the dispersion parameter, alpha, is a measure of the degree of overdispersion in the data. In other words, it represents the variability of the data around the mean. A value of alpha greater than 1 indicates that the data is more dispersed (more variable) than would be expected if the data were following a Poisson distribution, which is a common distribution used to model count data. The Poisson distribution has a single parameter, the mean, which represents both the location and the scale of the distribution. In contrast, the negative binomial distribution has two parameters, the mean and the dispersion, which allows for more flexibility in fitting the data.
* The shrinkage method in DESeq2 involves shrinking the estimated values of the dispersion parameter towards a common value across all the genes in the dataset, which can help to reduce the '''variance''' of the '''estimated log-fold changes'''.


== [https://github.com/arq5x/bedtools2 BEDtools] ==
<li>What is the formula of the fold change estimator given by DESeq2?
The bed format is similar to gtf format but with more compact representation. We can use the apt-get method to install it on Linux environment.
* The fold change estimator given by the DESeq2 package is calculated as the ratio of the estimated mean expression levels in two conditions, with the log2 of this ratio being the log2 fold change. The mean expression levels are calculated using a negative binomial model, which accounts for both the mean and the overdispersion of the data.
 
* The estimated mean expression level for a gene i in condition j is given by:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
: <math>
bedtools intersect
\begin{align}
bedtools bamtobed
\log(\mu_{i,j}) = \beta_j + X_i \gamma
bedtools bedtobam
\end{align}
bedtools getfasta
</math>
bedtools bamtofastq [OPTIONS] -i <BAM> -fq <FASTQ>
: where <math>\beta_j</math> is the overall mean for condition <math>j</math>, <math>X_i</math> is the design matrix for gene <math>i</math> and <math>\gamma_i</math> is the gene-specific effect.
</syntaxhighlight>
* The log2 fold change is calculated as:
: <math>
\begin{align}
\log2(\mu_{i,j} / \mu_{i,k})
\end{align}
</math>
: where j and k are the two conditions being compared.
* So, you can see that the fold change estimator depends on the design matrix <math>X</math> and the parameters of the model, <math>\beta</math> and <math>\gamma</math>. The DESeq2 implementation also includes an estimation of the variance-covariance matrix of the parameters to compute the standard deviation (uncertainty) of these parameters, and therefore the standard deviation on the fold-change estimator. This can help to estimate the significance of the fold change between conditions.
* Hypothesis testing H0: log(FC)=0 using Wald test


For example,
<li>What is the variance of the estimated log-fold changes before and after applying DESeq2 method?
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
* In RNA-seq data analysis, the log-fold change is a measure of the relative difference in expression between two conditions. The log-fold change is calculated as the log2 of the ratio of the mean expression in one condition to the mean expression in another condition.
bedtools intersect -wo -a RefSeq.gtf -b XXX.bed | wc -l  # in this case every line is one exon
* Without using any methods like DESeq2, the variance of the estimated log-fold changes can be high, particularly for genes with low expression levels, which can lead to unreliable results. This high variance is due to the over-dispersion present in RNA-seq data, which results in a large variability in the estimated expression levels even for genes with similar means.
bedtools intersect -wo -a RefSeq.gtf -b XXX.bed | cut -f9 | cut -d ' ' -f2 | more
* When using the DESeq2 package, the shrinkage method is applied on dispersion parameter alpha, which helps to reduce the variance of the estimated log-fold changes. By applying a prior on alpha and by shrinking the estimates of alpha towards a common value across all the genes, the method reduces the variability of the estimates. This results in more stable and reliable estimates of the log-fold changes, which can improve the accuracy and robustness of the results of the differential expression analysis.
bedtools intersect -wo -a RefSeq.gtf -b XXX.bed | cut -f9 | cut -d ' ' -f2 | sort -u | wc -l
* Additionally, the DESeq2 package also accounts for differences in sequencing depth across samples, which can also help to reduce the variability of the estimated log-fold changes.


bedtools intersect -wo -a RefSeq.bed -b XXX.bed | more    # one gene is one line with multiple intervals
<li>how DESeq2 package accounts for differences in sequencing depth across samples
</syntaxhighlight>
* The DESeq2 package accounts for differences in sequencing depth across samples by using the raw count data to estimate the normalized expression levels for each gene in each sample. This normalization process is necessary because sequencing depth can vary widely between samples, leading to differences in the overall number of reads and the apparent expression levels of the genes.
* The package uses a method called regularized-logarithm (rlog) transformation to normalize the data, which is a variance stabilization method that is based on the logarithm of the counts, but also adjusts for the total library size and the mean expression level.
* The method starts by computing a weighted mean of the counts across all samples, which is used as a reference. Next, for each sample, the counts are divided by the library size and then multiplied by the weighted mean of the counts. This scaling step corrects for differences in sequencing depth by making the library sizes comparable between samples.
* Then, the regularized logarithm (rlog) transformation is applied to the scaled counts, which is given by :
: <math>
\begin{align}
vst = \log(counts/sizeFactor + c)
\end{align}
</math>
: where c is a small positive constant added to the counts to stabilize the variance, size_factor is the ratio of library size for each sample over the weighted mean of the library size.
* The rlog transformation can stabilize the variance of the data and make the mean expression levels more comparable between samples. This transformed data can then be used for downstream analysis like calculating the fold changes.
* In addition to rlog transformation the DESeq2 package uses a negative binomial distribution to model the count data, this distribution helps to account for over-dispersion in the data, and shrinkage method on the dispersion parameter is applied as well to improve the stability of results. All of these techniques work together to help correct for sequencing depth differences across samples, which can improve the accuracy of the estimated fold changes and provide more robust results in differential gene expression analysis.


One good use of bedtools is to find the intersection of bam and bed files (to double check the insertion/deletion/junction reads in bed files are in accepted_hits.bam). See [http://bedtools.readthedocs.org/en/latest/content/tools/intersect.html this page]
<li>[https://www.biostars.org/p/448959/#484944 type='apeglm' shrinkage only for use with 'coef']
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
</ul>
$ bedtools --version
bedtools v2.17.0
$ bedtools intersect -abam accepted_hits.bam -b junctions.bed | samtools view - | head -n 3
</syntaxhighlight>


We can use bedtool to reverse bam files to fastq files. See https://www.biostars.org/p/152956/
==== Time course experiment ====
* [http://master.bioconductor.org/packages/release/workflows/vignettes/rnaseqGene/inst/doc/rnaseqGene.html#time-course-experiments RNA-seq workflow: gene-level exploratory analysis and differential expression] using DESeq2
** Genes with small p values from this test are those which at one or more time points after time 0 showed a strain-specific effect. Tested by '''LRT'''.
** '''Wald tests''' for the log2 fold changes at individual time points can be investigated using the test argument


=== [http://bedtools.readthedocs.org/en/latest/content/installation.html Installation] ===
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/vignettes/edgeR/inst/doc/edgeRUsersGuide.pdf Time course trend analysis] from the edgeR's vignette. '''glmQLFTest()'''
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
** Finds genes that respond to the treatment at either 1 hour or 2 hours versus the 0 hour baseline. This is analogous to an '''ANOVA''' F-test for a normal linear model.
git clone https://github.com/arq5x/bedtools2.git
** Assuming gene expression changes smoothly over time, we can use a '''polynomial''' or a '''cubic spline curve''' with a certain number of degrees of freedom to model gene expression along time.
cd bedtools2
** We are looking for genes that change expression level over time. We test for a trend by conducting F-tests for each gene. The ''topTags'' function lists the top set of genes with most significant time effects.
make
** The total number of genes with significant (5% FDR) changes at different time points can be examined with ''decideTests''.
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9150999/ RNA-seq data collected at different time points]. Identify differentially expressed genes associated with seasonal changes


=== bamtofastq ===
==== DESeq2 experimental design and interpretation ====
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
[https://rstudio-pubs-static.s3.amazonaws.com/329027_593046fb6d7a427da6b2c538caf601e1.html DESeq2 experimental design and interpretation]
cd ~/github/freebayes/test/tiny # Working directory


~/github/samtools/samtools sort -n NA12878.chr22.tiny.bam NA12878.chr22.tiny.qsort
==== Controlling for batch differences ====
The variable we are interested in ("condition") is placed after the batch variable.
<pre>
dds <- DESeqDataSetFromMatrix(countData = cts,
                              colData = coldata,
                              design= ~ batch + condition)
dds <- DESeq(dds)
</pre>
OR
<pre>
dds <- DESeq(dds, test="LRT", reduced=~batch)
res <- results(dds)
</pre>


~/github/bedtools2/bin/bamToFastq -i NA12878.chr22.tiny.qsort.bam \
==== DESeq2 diagnostic plot, MA plot ====
                      -fq aln.end1.fq \
* [http://www.sthda.com/english/wiki/rna-seq-differential-expression-work-flow-using-deseq2 RNA-Seq differential expression work flow using DESeq2]. MA plot, dispersion plot, histogram of p-values, rlog transoformation.
                      -fq2 aln.end2.fq  2> bamToFastq.warning.out
* [https://bioinformatics-core-shared-training.github.io/Bulk_RNAseq_Course_2021/Markdowns/11_Annotation_and_Visualisation.html RNA-seq Analysis in R Annotation and Visualisation of Differential Expression Results]. MA plot, Volcano plot, venn diagram, heatmap (ComplexHeatmap).
* R packages:
** [https://rpkgs.datanovia.com/ggpubr/reference/ggmaplot.html ggpubr::ggmaplot]. It can labels DE genes.
** [https://bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/vignettes/DESeq2/inst/doc/DESeq2.html#ma-plot DESeq2::plotMA]
** limma::plotMA
** edgeR::maPlot
** [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/Glimma/inst/doc/limma_edger.html Glimma::glimmaMA]
** [https://federicomarini.github.io/ideal/reference/plot_ma.html ideal::plot_ma]


## 60 warnings; see <bamToFastq.warning.out>
==== vst over rlog transformation ====
*****WARNING: Query ST-E00118:53:H02GVALXX:1:1102:1487:23724 is marked as paired, but its mate does not occur next to it in your BAM file.  Skipping.  
* https://twitter.com/mikelove/status/1420671546088173569. See [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/workflows/vignettes/rnaseqGene/inst/doc/rnaseqGene.html RNA-seq workflow: gene-level exploratory analysis and differential expression]. The transformed data can be used in computing sample distances, PCA, MDS, clustering, ....
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9150245/ normTransform() vs vst()]. [https://rdrr.io/bioc/DESeq2/man/normTransform.html ?normTransform]=log2(x+1). [https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/443966955 DESeq2除了差异分析还有什么要关注的?]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homoscedasticity Homoscedasticity] = homogeneity of variance
<pre>
Expected counts
    | round()
    v                              /-- vst transformation  ---\
Raw counts --> normalized counts  --                            -- Other analyses such as PCA, Hclust (sample distances).
                                    \-- rlog transformation ---/
</pre>


wc -l tmp.out  # 60
==== Simulate negative binomial distribution data ====
wc -l aln.end1.fq  # 6548
<ul>
wc -l aln.end2.fq  # 6548
<li>rnegbin() in [https://github.com/cran/ssizeRNA/blob/master/R/sim.counts.R#L114 sim.counts()] from the [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/ssizeRNA/index.html ssizeRNA] package
                  # recall tmp_1.fq is 6532
<pre>
rnegbin(10000 * 10, lambda, 1 / disp)
# 10000 genes, 20 samples
# lambda: mean counts from control group, a matrix.  
# disp: dispersion parameter, a matrix.
</pre>
</pre>
</li>
</ul>


== [http://cole-trapnell-lab.github.io/cufflinks/ Cufflinks package] ==
==== Reducing false positives in differential analyses of large RNA sequencing data sets ====
Transcriptome assembly and differential expression analysis for RNA-Seq.
* [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/reducing-false-positives-in-differential-analyses-of-large-rna-sequencing-data-sets/ Reducing false positives in differential analyses of large RNA sequencing data sets]
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/deseq2-and-edger-should-no-longer-be-the-default-choice-for-large-sample-differential-gene-8fdf008deae9 DESeq2 and edgeR should no longer be the default choices for large-sample differential gene expression analysis]


''Both Cufflinks and Cuffdiff accept SAM and BAM files as input. It is not uncommon for a single lane of Illumina HiSeq sequencing to produce FASTQ and BAM files with a combined size of 20 GB or larger. Laboratories planning to perform more than a small number of RNA-seq experiments should consider investing in robust storage infrastructure, either by purchasing their own hardware or through cloud storage services.''
=== edgeR vs DESeq2 vs limma ===
<ul>
<li>edgeR
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
library(edgeR)


=== Tuxedo protocol ===
# create DGEList object from count data
* [http://www.nature.com/nprot/journal/v7/n3/full/nprot.2012.016.html Differential gene and transcript expression analysis of RNA-seq experiments with TopHat and Cufflinks] by Trapnell, et al 2012.
counts <- matrix(c(20,30,25,50,45,55,15,20,10,5,10,8,100,120,110,80,90,95), nrow=3, ncol=6, byrow=TRUE)
* https://speakerdeck.com/stephenturner/rna-seq-qc-and-data-analysis-using-the-tuxedo-suite
rownames(counts) <- c("G1", "G2", "G3")
colnames(counts) <- c("A1", "A2", "A3", "B1", "B2", "B3")
counts
#    A1  A2  A3 B1 B2 B3
# G1  20  30  25 50 45 55
# G2  15  20  10  5 10  8
# G3 100 120 110 80 90 95
d <- DGEList(counts)


# bowtie2 - fast alignment
# perform normalization and differential expression analysis
# tophat2 - splice alignment (rna-seq reads, rna are spliced, introns are removed, some reads may span over 2 exons)
d <- calcNormFactors(d)
# cufflinks - transcript assembly & quantitation
design <- model.matrix(~0+factor(c(rep("A",3), rep("B",3))))
# cuffdiff2 - differential expression
d <- estimateDisp(d, design)
fit <- glmQLFit(d, design)
res <- glmQLFTest(fit, contrast=c(-1, 1))


=== [http://cole-trapnell-lab.github.io/cufflinks/getting_started/ Cufflinks - assemble reads into transcript] ===
# summarize the results and identify significant genes
Installation
summary(res)
res2 <- topTags(res); res2
# Coefficient: -1*factor(c(rep("A", 3), rep("B", 3)))A 1*factor(c(rep("A", 3), rep("B", 3)))B
#        logFC  logCPM          F      PValue          FDR
# G1  1.1683093 17.98614 146.579840 4.380158e-08 1.314048e-07
# G2 -0.7865080 16.41917  3.056504 1.059256e-01 1.588884e-01
# G3 -0.1437956 19.34279  40.852893 2.256279e-01 2.256279e-01
de_genes <- rownames(res2)[which(res2$FDR < 0.05 & abs(res2$log2FoldChange) > 1)]
</syntaxhighlight>
</li>
<li>DESeq2. The count data above will result in an error. The error can occur when there is very little variability in the count data, which can happen if the biological samples are very homogeneous or if the sequencing depth is very low. In such cases, it may be difficult to reliably identify differentially expressed genes using DESeq2.
<pre>
<pre>
# about 47MB on ver 2.2.1 for Linux binary version
library(DESeq2)
wget http://cole-trapnell-lab.github.io/cufflinks/assets/downloads/cufflinks-2.2.1.Linux_x86_64.tar.gz
sudo tar xzvf ~/Downloads/cufflinks-2.2.1.Linux_x86_64.tar.gz  -C /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/
export PATH=$PATH:/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/cufflinks-2.2.1.Linux_x86_64/


# test
col_data <- data.frame(condition = factor(rep(c("treated", "untreated"), c(3, 3))))
cufflinks -h
</pre>


Cufflinks uses this map (done from Tophat) against the genome to assemble the reads into '''transcripts'''.
# create a DESeq2 dataset object
* http://homer.salk.edu/homer/basicTutorial/rnaseqCufflinks.html
dds <- DESeqDataSetFromMatrix(countData = counts, colData = col_data, design = ~ condition)
<pre>
# Quantifying Known Transcripts using Cufflinks
cufflinks -o OutputDirectory/ -G refseq.gtf mappedReads.bam


# De novo Transcript Discovery using Cufflinks
# differential expression analysis
cufflinks -o OutputDirectory/  mappedReads.bam
dds <- DESeq(dds)
# estimating size factors
# estimating dispersions
# gene-wise dispersion estimates
# mean-dispersion relationship
# Error in estimateDispersionsFit(object, fitType = fitType, quiet = quiet) :
#  all gene-wise dispersion estimates are within 2 orders of magnitude
#  from the minimum value, and so the standard curve fitting techniques will not work.
#  One can instead use the gene-wise estimates as final estimates:
#  dds <- estimateDispersionsGeneEst(dds)
#  dispersions(dds) <- mcols(dds)$dispGeneEst
...then continue with testing using nbinomWaldTest or nbinomLRT
</pre>
</pre>
Try another data.
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
count_data <- matrix(c(100, 500, 200, 1000, 300,
                      200, 400, 150, 500, 300,
                      300, 300, 100, 1500, 300,
                      400, 200, 50, 2000, 300), nrow = 5, byrow = TRUE)


The output files are  genes.fpkm_tracking, isoforms.fpkm_tracking, skipped.gtf and '''transcripts.gtf'''.
colnames(count_data) <- paste0("sample", 1:4)
rownames(count_data) <- paste0("gene", 1:5)
col_data <- data.frame(condition = factor(rep(c("treated", "untreated"), c(2, 2))))


It can be used to calculate FPKM.
# create a DESeq2 dataset object
* https://www.biostars.org/p/11378/
dds <- DESeqDataSetFromMatrix(countData = count_data, colData = col_data, design = ~ condition)
* http://www.partek.com/Tutorials/microarray/User_Guides/UnderstandingReads.pdf
# estimating size factors
# estimating dispersions
# gene-wise dispersion estimates
# mean-dispersion relationship
# -- note: fitType='parametric', but the dispersion trend was not well captured by the
#    function: y = a/x + b, and a local regression fit was automatically substituted.
#    specify fitType='local' or 'mean' to avoid this message next time.
# final dispersion estimates
# fitting model and testing
# Warning message:
# In lfproc(x, y, weights = weights, cens = cens, base = base, geth = geth,  :
#  Estimated rdf < 1.0; not estimating variance


=== Cuffcompare - compares transcript assemblies to annotation ===
# differential expression analysis
dds <- DESeq(dds)


=== Cuffmerge - merges two or more transcript assemblies ===
# extract results
First create a text file <assemblies.txt>
res <- results(dds)
<pre>
res
./dT_bio/transcripts.gtf
# log2 fold change (MLE): condition untreated vs treated
./dT_ori/transcripts.gtf
# Wald test p-value: condition untreated vs treated
./dT_tech/transcripts.gtf
# DataFrame with 5 rows and 6 columns
./RH_bio/transcripts.gtf
#        baseMean log2FoldChange    lfcSE      stat    pvalue      padj
./RH_ori/transcripts.gtf
#      <numeric>      <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric>
./RH_tech/transcripts.gtf
# gene1  465.558      0.707313  1.243608  0.568758 0.5695201  0.711900
</pre>
# gene2  309.591      -0.119330  0.885551 -0.134752 0.8928081  0.892808
# gene3  413.959      -0.742921  0.513376 -1.447130 0.1478604  0.369651
# gene4  638.860      -1.372724  1.428977 -0.960634 0.3367360  0.561227
# gene5  721.470      2.928705  1.536174  1.906493 0.0565863  0.282931


Then run
# extract DE genes with adjusted p-value < 0.05 and |log2 fold change| > 1
<pre>
DESeq2_DE_genes <- subset(res, padj < 0.05 & abs(log2FoldChange) > 1)
cd GSE11209
cuffmerge -g genes.gtf -s genome.fa assemblies.txt
</pre>


=== Cuffdiff ===
# print the number of DE genes identified by DESeq2
Finds differentially expressed genes and transcripts/Detect differential splicing and promoter use.
cat("DESeq2 identified", nrow(DESeq2_DE_genes), "DE genes.\n")
</syntaxhighlight>
</li>


Cuffdiff takes the aligned reads from two or more conditions and reports genes and transcripts that are differentially expressed using a rigorous statistical analysis.
<li>limma-voom. voom is a function in the limma package that modifies RNA-Seq data for use with limma. [https://ucdavis-bioinformatics-training.github.io/2018-June-RNA-Seq-Workshop/thursday/DE.html Differential Expression with Limma-Voom].
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
library(limma)


Follow the [http://cufflinks.cbcb.umd.edu/tutorial.html tutorial], we can quickly test the cuffdiff program.
# Create a design matrix with the sample groups
<pre>
design_matrix <- model.matrix(~ condition, data = col_data)
$ wget http://cufflinks.cbcb.umd.edu/downloads/test_data.sam
$ cufflinks ./test_data.sam
$ ls -l
total 56
-rw-rw-r-- 1 mli mli  221 2013-03-05 15:51 genes.fpkm_tracking
-rw-rw-r-- 1 mli mli  231 2013-03-05 15:51 isoforms.fpkm_tracking
-rw-rw-r-- 1 mli mli    0 2013-03-05 15:51 skipped.gtf
-rw-rw-r-- 1 mli mli 41526 2009-09-26 19:15 test_data.sam
-rw-rw-r-- 1 mli mli  887 2013-03-05 15:51 transcripts.gtf
</pre>


In real data,
# filter out low-expressed genes
<pre>
if (FALSE) {
cd GSE11209
  keep <- rowSums(counts) >= 10
cuffdiff -p 5 -o cuffdiff_out -b genome.fa -L dT,RH \
  counts <- counts[keep,]
        -u merged_asm/merged.gtf \
}
        ./dT_bio/accepted_hits.bam,./dT_ori/accepted_hits.bam,./dT_tech/accepted_hits.bam \
        ./RH_bio/accepted_hits.bam,./RH_ori/accepted_hits.bam,./RH_tech/accepted_hits.bam
</pre>


'''N.B.''': the FPKM value (<genes.fpkm_tracking>) is generated per condition not per sample. If we want FPKM per sample, we want to specify one condition for each sample.
# normalization using voom
v <- voom(count_data, design_matrix)


=== Pipeline ===
# linear model fitting
* https://www.biostars.org/p/123993/
fit <- lmFit(v, design_matrix)


== [http://compbio.mit.edu/cummeRbund/ CummeRbund] ==
# Calculate the empirical Bayes statistics
Plots abundance and differential expression results from Cuffdiff. CummeRbund also handles the details of parsing Cufflinks output file formats to connect Cufflinks and the R statistical computing environment. CummeRbund transforms Cufflinks output files into R objects suitable for analysis with a wide variety of other packages available within the R environment and can also now be accessed through the Bioconductor website
fit <- eBayes(fit)


The tool appears on the paper [http://www.nature.com/nprot/journal/v7/n3/full/nprot.2012.016.html Differential gene and transcript expression analysis of RNA-seq experiments with TopHat and Cufflinks] by Trapnell, et al 2012.
top.table <- topTable(fit, sort.by = "P", n = Inf)
top.table
#            logFC  AveExpr          t    P.Value adj.P.Val        B
# gene3 -2.3242262 15.67787 -1.8229203 0.08330054 0.3153894 -4.249298
# gene5  2.0865122 16.34012  1.5960616 0.12615577 0.3153894 -4.376405
# gene1  0.5610761 16.69722  0.5079444 0.61704872 0.7551329 -4.834183
# gene2  0.2477959 18.69843  0.3829295 0.70581164 0.7551329 -5.150958
# gene4  0.2869870 17.11809  0.3161922 0.75513288 0.7551329 -4.963932


== Finding differentially expressed genes ==
# Perform hypothesis testing to identify DE genes
=== Big pictures ===
results <- decideTests(fit)
<pre>
  BWA/Bowtie    samtools       
fa ---------> sam ------> sam/bam (sorted indexed, short reads), vcf
  or tophat


Rsamtools    GenomeFeatures                  edgeR (normalization)
summary(results)
--------->  --------------> table of counts --------->
#        (Intercept) conditionuntreated
</pre>
# Down            0                  0
# NotSig          0                  5
# Up              5                  0


=== Readings ===
# Extract the DE genes
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/introduction-to-rna-sequencing-and-analysis/ Introduction to RNA Sequencing and Analysis] Kukurba KR, Montgomery SB. (2015) RNA Sequencing and Analysis. Cold Spring Harb Protoc
de_genes <- rownames(count_data)[which(results$all != 0)]
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2949280/?tool=pubmed RNA-Seq: a revolutionary tool for transcriptomics]
</syntaxhighlight>
* Alignment and visualization from [http://mygoblet.org/training-portal/materials/rna-seq-analysis-2014-module-2-alignment-and-visualization bioinformatics.ca].
</li>
* The [http://rnaseq.uoregon.edu/ RNA-seqlopedia] from the Cresko Lab of the University of Oregon.
</ul>
* [http://slideplayer.com/slide/4463815/ RNA-Seq Analysis] by Simon Andrews.


=== Technical replicate vs biological replicate ===
==== DESeq2 vs edgeR ====
We sequence more DNA from the same DNA "library", which is called a "technical replicate". If we perform a new experiment with a new organism/tissue/population of cells, which is called a "biological replicate".
D vs E?


=== Youtube videos ===
* One major difference is in the method used to estimate the '''dispersion''' parameter. DESeq2 uses a '''local regression''' method, whereas edgeR uses a '''Cox-Reid profile-adjusted likelihood''' method. The local regression method estimates the dispersion parameter for each gene independently, whereas the profile-adjusted likelihood method estimates a common dispersion parameter for all genes, with gene-specific scaling factors that depend on the mean expression levels.
* Analyze public dataset by using Galaxy and IGV [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTRZjXuQnYU&list=UULQ1j5ge-WYUE1iBEOGpK5A David Coil from UC Davis Genoem Center]
* Another difference is in the approach to '''normalization'''. DESeq2 uses a '''variance-stabilizing transformation''' to account for differences in library size and composition, whereas edgeR uses a '''trimmed mean of M-values (TMM)''' normalization method, which adjusts for library size differences by scaling the counts of each sample to a common effective library size.
Download the raw fastq data GSE19602 from [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE19602 GEO] and uncompress fastq.bz2 to fastq (~700MB) file. NOTE: the data downloaded from ncbi is actually sra file format. We can use fastq_dump program in SRA_toolkit to convert sra to fastq. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?view=software
* DESeq2 also uses a different '''statistical model''' for differential expression analysis. DESeq2 models the count data as a negative binomial distribution, but includes additional terms to account for batch effects and other sources of variation. It uses a '''shrinkage estimator''' to improve the estimation of fold changes and reduce false positives. EdgeR, on the other hand, uses a similar negative binomial model but applies an '''empirical Bayes''' method to estimate gene-specific dispersions and to borrow information across genes to improve the power of detection and reduce false positives.
<pre>
~/Downloads/sratoolkit.2.3.2-ubuntu64/bin/fastq-dump ~/Downloads/SRR034580.sra
</pre>


If we want to run Galaxy locally, we can install it simply by 2 command lines
When should I choose DESeq2 and when should I choose edgeR?
<pre>
* The choice between DESeq2 and edgeR for differential gene expression analysis depends on several factors, including the experimental design, sample size, and the nature of the biological question being investigated. Here are some general guidelines to help you choose between these two algorithms:
hg clone https://bitbucket.org/galaxy/galaxy-dist/
* Choose DESeq2 when:
cd galaxy-dist
** The experimental design includes multiple batches or covariates that may affect the gene expression levels
hg update stable
** The '''sample size is small''', typically fewer than 12 samples per group
</pre>
** The gene expression levels are highly variable across replicates, and the goal is to identify differentially expressed genes with a low false discovery rate (FDR)
** The focus is on the fold change rather than the statistical significance of differential expression
* Choose edgeR when:
** The experimental design includes several factors, such as treatment, time, and biological replicate, and the goal is to identify the main effects and interaction effects of these factors on gene expression
** The sample size is moderate to large, typically more than 12 samples per group
** The gene expression levels are less variable across replicates, and the goal is to achieve high statistical power to detect differentially expressed genes
** The focus is on both the fold change and the statistical significance of differential expression, and the researcher is interested in performing downstream analyses such as gene set enrichment analysis or pathway analysis.


To run Galaxy locally, we do
=== DESeq2 in Python ===
<pre>
[https://github.com/owkin/PyDESeq2 PyDESeq2], [https://twitter.com/mikelove/status/1651542670785781763 nice work]
cd galaxy-dist
sh run.sh --reload
</pre>
The command line will show ''Starting server in PID XXXX. serving on http://127.0.0.1:8080''. We can use Ctrl + C to stop the Galaxy process.


Note: One problem with this simple instruction is we have not created a user yet.
=== Generalized Linear Models and Plots with edgeR ===
[https://morphoscape.wordpress.com/2020/09/26/generalized-linear-models-and-plots-with-edger-advanced-differential-expression-analysis/ Generalized Linear Models and Plots with edgeR – Advanced Differential Expression Analysis]


# Upload one fastq data. Click 'refresh' icon on the history panel to ensure the data is uploaded. Don't use 'refresh' button on the browser; it will cause an error for the current process.
=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/EBSeq.html EBSeq] ===
# '''FASTQ Groomer'''. Convert the data to Galaxy needs. NGS: QC and manipulation => Illumina FASTQ. FASTQ quality scores type: Sanger. (~10 minutes). This part uses CPU not memory.
An R package for gene and isoform differential expression analysis of RNA-seq data
# Open a new browser tab and go to ftp://ftp.plantbiology.msu.edu/pub/data/Eukaryotic_Projects/o_sativa/annotation_dbs/pseudomolecules/version_6.1/all.dir/. Right click the file '''all.cDNA''' and copy link location. In Galaxy click 'Upload File from your computer' paste URL to URL/Text entry.
# Scroll down Galaxy and select NGS:Mapping -> '''Map with BWA'''. PS. for some reason, BWA is not available. So I use '''Bowtie2''' instead. The output of Bowtie2 is bam file.
## For reference genome, choose 'Use one from the history'. Galaxy automatically find the reference file 'ftp://ftp.plantbiology....' from history.
## Library mate-paired => Single-end.
## FASTQ file => 2: FASTQ Groomer on data 1.
## BWA settings to use => Commonly Used.
## Execute (~ 15 minutes)
# We can view the alignment file (sam format) created from BWA by using UCSV or IGV (input is bam or bai format). We now use '''NGS: SAM Tools''' to convert sam file to bam file. Click 'SAM-to-BAM converts SAM format to BAM format' tool.
## Choose the source for the reference list => History
## Converts SAM file => 4: Map with BWA on data 2 and data 3.
## Using reference file => 3:ftp://ftp.plantbiology.....
## Execute (~5 minutes)
# We want to create bai file which is a shortcut to IGV. It breaks the data into smaller accessible chunks. So when you pull up a certain cDNA, it goes straight to the subset. Go to the history, click the pencil icon (Edit Attributes) on the file '''SAM-to-BAM on data 3 and data 4'''.
## Look at 'Convert to new format' section. Go ahead and click 'Convert'. (< 1 minute).  This  will create another file.
## Use browser and go to ftp website to download '''all.cDNA''' file to desktop. The desktop should contain 3 files - all.cDNA, rice.bam and rice.bai files for IGV.
# Goto http://www.broadinstitute.org/software/igv/download to download IGV which is a java-based application. I need to install java machine first by install openjdk-7-jdk. IGV by default will launch 'Human hg18' genome. Launch IGV by '''cd IGV_2.2.13;java -Xmx750m -jar igv.jar'''. I found the IGV input requires sam+bai OR bam+bai. So we need to click the pencil icon to create bai file first before we want to upload sam or bam file to IGV.
## Goto File => Import Genome. Call it 'rice' and select 'all.cDNA' sequence file. Click 'Save' button.
## Goto File => Upload from File => rice.bam.
## Top right panel is cDNA
## Middle right panel has a lot of 'boxes' which is a read. If we zoom in, we can see some read points to left (backward) while some points to right (forward). On the top is a histogram. For example, a base may be covered by a lot of reads then the histogram will show the high frequence.
## If we keep zoom in, we can see color at the Bottom right panel. Keeping zoom in, we can see the base G, C, T, A themselves.
## Using IGV, we can 1. examine coverage.
## We can 2. check 'alternative splicing'. (not for this cDNA)
## We can 3. examine SNPs for base change. If we see gray color (dark gray is hight quality read, light gray means low quality read), it means they are perfect match. If we see color, it means there is a change. For example, a read is 'C' but in fact it should be 'A'. If a case has many high quality reads, and half of them are 'G' but the reference genome shows 'A'. This is most likely a SNP. This is heterogeisity.
# '''Tophat''' - align RNA seq data to genomic DNA
## Suppose we have use Galaxy to upload 2 data. One is SRR034580 and we have run FASTQ Groomer on data 1. The second data is SRR034584 and we also have run FASTQ Groomer on data 2. We also have uploaded reference genome sequence.
## Goto Galaxy and find NGS: RNA Analysis => Tophat.
## reference genome => Use one from the history
## RNA-Seq FASTQ file => 2; FASTQ Groomer on data 1.
## Execute. This will create 2 files. One is '''splice junctions''' and the other is '''accepted_hits'''. We queue the job and run another Tophat with the 2nd 'groomer'ed data file. We are going to work on '''accepted_hits''' file.
## While the queue are running, we can click on 'pencil' icon on 'accepted_hits' job and run the utlity 'Convert to new format' (Bam to Bai). We should do this for both 'accepted_hits' files.
## For some reason, the execution failed: An error occurred with this dataset: TopHat v2.0.7 TopHat v2.0.7 Error indexing reference sequence /bin/sh: 1: bowtie-build: not found.
# '''Cufflinks'''. We will estimate transcript abundance by using FPKM (RPKM).
## SAM or BAM file of alignmed RNA-Seq reads => tophat on data 2.. accepted_hits
## Use Reference Annotation - No (choose Yes if we want annotation. This requires GTF format. See http://genome.ucsc.edu/FAQ/FAQformat.html#format4. We don't have it for rice.)
## Execute. This will create 3 files. Gene expression, transcript expression and assembled transcripts.
## We also run Cufflinks for 2nd accepted_hits file. (~ 25 minutes)
# '''Cuffcompare'''. Compare one to each other.
## GTF file produced by Cufflinks => assembled transcript from the 1st data
## Use another GTF file produced by Cufflinks => Yes. It automatically find the other one.
## Execute. (< 10 minutes). This will create 7 files. Transcript accuracy, tmap file & refmap flie from each assembled transcripts, combined transcripts and transcript tracking.
## We are interested in combined transcripts file (to use in Cuffdiff).
# '''Cuffdiff'''.
## Transcripts => combined transcripts.
## SAM or BAM file of aligned RNA-Seq reads => 1st accepted_hits
## SAM or BAM file or aligned RNA-Seq reads => 2nd accepted_hits
## Execute. This will generate 11 files. Isoform expression, gene expression, TSS groups expression, CDS Expression FPKM Tracking, isoform FPKM tracking, gene FPKM tracking, TSS groups FPKM tracking, CDS FPKM tracking, splicing diff, promoters diff, CDS diff. We are interested in 'gene expression' file. We can save it and open it in Excel.
# IGV - 2 RNA-Seq datasets aligned to '''genomic''' DNA using Tophat
## Load the reference genome rice (see above)
## Upload from file => rice4.bam. Upload from file => rice5.bam.
## Alternative RNA splicing.


=== edX course ===
http://www.rna-seqblog.com/analysis-of-ebv-transcription-using-high-throughput-rna-sequencing/
PH525.5x Case Study: RNA-seq data analysis. The course notes are forming a book. Check out https://github.com/genomicsclass/labs and http://genomicsclass.github.io/book/.


== Variant calling ==
=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/prebs.html prebs] ===
=== Overview/papers ===
Probe region expression estimation for RNA-seq data for improved microarray comparability
* [http://www.nature.com/articles/srep17875 Systematic comparison of variant calling pipelines using gold standard personal exome variants] by Hwang 2015.
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3198575/ A statistical framework for SNP calling, mutation discovery, association mapping and population genetical parameter estimation from sequencing data] by Heng Li.
* http://www.slideshare.net/AustralianBioinformatics/introduction-to-nextgeneration
* http://www.slideshare.net/thomaskeane/overview-of-methods-for-variant-calling-from-nextgeneration-sequence-data-9608507
* http://www.slideshare.net/jandot/nextgeneration-sequencing-variation-discovery


=== Workflow ===
=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/DEXSeq.html DEXSeq] ===
* Sequence reads -> Quality control -> Mapping -> Variant calling -> Filtering & Annotation -> Querying.
Inference of differential exon usage in RNA-Seq
* [http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/supplementary/1756-0500-7-314-S1.pdf Galaxy workflow guide for variant detection]
* http://seqanswers.com/wiki/How-to/exome_analysis
** Alignment step includes
*** '''mark PCR duplicates''' some reads will be exact copies of each other. These reads are called PCR duplicates due to amplification biases in PCR. They share the same sequence and the same alignment position and could cause trouble during SNP calling as possibly some allele is overrepresented due to amplification biases.
*** '''local alignment around indels''' Indels within reads often lead to false positive SNPs at the end of sequence reads. To prevent this artifact, local realignment around indels is done using local realignment tools from the Genome Analysis Tool Kit.
*** '''quality recalibration'''
** SNP calling step includes producing raw SNP calls and filter SNPs
** Annotation
* WGS/WES Mapping to Variant Calls http://www.htslib.org/workflow/
Step 1: Mapping
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
bwa index <ref.fa>


bwa mem -R '@RG\tID:foo\tSM:bar\tLB:library1' <ref.fa> <read1.fa> <read1.fa> > lane.sam
=== [http://www-personal.umich.edu/~jianghui/rseqnp/ rSeqNP] ===  
samtools fixmate -O bam <lane.sam> <lane_fixmate.bam>
A non-parametric approach for detecting differential expression and splicing from RNA-Seq data
samtools sort -O bam -o <lane_sorted.bam> -T </tmp/lane_temp> <lane_fixmate.sam>
</syntaxhighlight>
Step 2: Improvement
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
java -Xmx2g -jar GenomeAnalysisTK.jar -T RealignerTargetCreator -R <ref.fa> -I <lane.bam> \
    -o <lane.intervals> --known <bundle/b38/Mills1000G.b38.vcf>
java -Xmx4g -jar GenomeAnalysisTK.jar -T IndelRealigner -R <ref.fa> -I <lane.bam> \
    -targetIntervals <lane.intervals> --known <bundle/b38/Mills1000G.b38.vcf> -o <lane_realigned.bam>


java -Xmx4g -jar GenomeAnalysisTK.jar -T BaseRecalibrator -R <ref.fa> \
=== [https://peerj.com/articles/3890/ voomDDA]: discovery of diagnostic biomarkers and classification of RNA-seq data ===
    -knownSites >bundle/b38/dbsnp_142.b38.vcf> -I <lane.bam> -o <lane_recal.table>
http://www.biosoft.hacettepe.edu.tr/voomDDA/
java -Xmx2g -jar GenomeAnalysisTK.jar -T PrintReads -R <ref.fa> -I <lane.bam> \
    --BSQR <lane_recal.table> -o <lane_recal.bam>


java -Xmx2g -jar MarkDuplicates.jar VALIDATION_STRINGENCY=LENIENT \
== Pathway analysis ==
    INPUT=<lane_1.bam> INPUT=<lane_2.bam> INPUT=<lane_3.bam> OUTPUT=<library.bam>


samtools merge <sample.bam> <library1.bam> <library2.bam> <library3.bam>
=== About the KEGG pathways ===
samtools index <sample.bam>
* [https://www.gsea-msigdb.org/gsea/msigdb/collections.jsp#C2 MSigDB] database or msigdbr package - seems to be old. It only has 186 KEGG pathways for human.
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/msigdb.html msigdb] from Bioconductor
Step 3: Variant calling
<ul>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<li>[http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/KEGGREST.html KEGGREST] package directly pull the data from kegg.jp. I can get 337 KEGG pathways for human ('hsa')
samtools mpileup -ugf <ref.fa> <sample1.bam> <sample2.bam> <sample3.bam> | \
<pre>
    bcftools call -vmO z -o <study.vcf.gz>
BiocManager::install("KEGGREST")
</syntaxhighlight>
library(KEGGREST)
res <- keggList("pathway", "hsa")
length(res) # 337
</pre>
</li>
</ul>


=== Non-R Software ===
=== GSOAP ===
Variant detector/discovery, genotyping
[https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/36/9/2923/5715574 GSOAP: a tool for visualization of gene set over-representation analysis]


* [http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/16/235# Evaluation of variant detection software for pooled next-generation sequence data]
=== clusterProfiler ===
* [http://bib.oxfordjournals.org/content/15/2/256.abstract A survey of tools for variant analysis of next-generation genome sequencing data]
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/clusterProfiler.html clusterProfiler]
* [http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/16/235 Evaluation of variant detection software for pooled next-generation sequence data]
* [http://yulab-smu.top/clusterProfiler-book/chapter6.html#kegg-gene-set-enrichment-analysis Chapter 6 KEGG analysis]
* [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002929713003832 Reliable Identification of Genomic Variants from RNA-Seq Data]
* [https://bioinf.comav.upv.es/courses/sequence_analysis/snp_calling.html Bioinformatics at COMAV]


==== Variant Identification ====
=== [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/fgsea.html fgsea:] Fast Gene Set Enrichment Analysis ===
* [http://samtools.sourceforge.net/ Samtools]
* [https://bioinformatics.stackexchange.com/a/166 Are fgsea and Broad Institute GSEA equivalent?]. Note that enrichment score are the same though the way of calculating p-values can be different.
** https://wikis.utexas.edu/display/bioiteam/Variant+calling+using+SAMtools
* [https://stephenturner.github.io/deseq-to-fgsea/ DESeq results to pathways in 60 Seconds with the fgsea package]
** http://petridishtalk.com/2013/02/01/variant-discovery-annotation-filtering-with-samtools-the-gatk/
* [https://mgrcbioinfo.github.io/my_GSEA_plot/ GSEA plot for multiple comparisons]
** http://lab.loman.net/2012/10/31/a-simple-guide-to-variant-calling-with-bwa-samtools-varscan2/
* [https://davetang.org/muse/2018/01/10/using-fast-preranked-gene-set-enrichment-analysis-fgsea-package/ Using the fast preranked gene set enrichment analysis (fgsea) package] 2018
** [http://ged.msu.edu/angus/tutorials-2013/snp_tutorial.html Samtools and GATK]
** [https://www.biostars.org/p/57149/ Difference Between Samtools And Gatk Algorithms]
* [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/ GATK] by BROAD Institute.
* [http://varscan.sourceforge.net/ varscan2]
* [https://github.com/chapmanb/bcbio-nextgen bcbio] - Validated, scalable, community developed variant calling and RNA-seq analysis. [http://bcb.io/2015/09/17/hg38-validation/ Validated variant calling with human genome build 38].
* [https://github.com/ekg/freebayes freebayes] and [https://github.com/ekg/alignment-and-variant-calling-tutorial a complete tutorial] from alignment to variant calling.


GUI software
=== [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GSEABenchmarkeR.html GSEABenchmarkeR]: Reproducible GSEA Benchmarking ===
* [http://snver.sourceforge.net/snvergui/ SNVerGUI]
[https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/674267v1 Towards a gold standard for benchmarking gene set enrichment analysis]


==== Variant Annotation ====
=== hypeR ===
See [[#Variant_Annotation_2|Variant Annotation]]
* [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/36/4/1307/5566242 hypeR: an R package for geneset enrichment workflows]
* [https://montilab.github.io/hypeR-workshop/ Efficient, Scalable, and Reproducible Enrichment Workflows] from [https://bioc2020.bioconductor.org/workshops.html Bioc2020]


=== Biocoductor and R packages ===
=== [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/rgsepd.html GSEPD] ===
* Bioconductor [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/VariantTools.html VariantTools] package can export to VCF and [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/VariantAnnotation.html VariantAnnotation] package can read VCF format files. See also the [http://bioconductor.org/help/workflows/variants/ Annotating Variants workflow] in Bioconductor. See also [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/annotation/html/SIFT.Hsapiens.dbSNP137.html SIFT.Hsapiens.dbSNP137],  [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/COSMIC.67.html COSMIC.67], and [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/annotation/html/PolyPhen.Hsapiens.dbSNP131.html PolyPhen.Hsapiens.dbSNP131] packages.
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-019-2697-5 GSEPD: a Bioconductor package for RNA-seq gene set enrichment and projection display]
* R packages [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/seqminer/index.html seqminer]


==== fundamental - VariantAnnotation ====
=== SeqGSEA ===
readVcf() can be used to read a *.vcf or *.vcf.gz file.
http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/SeqGSEA.html


==== dbSNP - SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP.20101109 ====
=== BAGSE ===
Compare the rs numbers of the data and dbSNP.
[https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/36/6/1689/5614816 BAGSE: a Bayesian hierarchical model approach for gene set enrichment analysis] 2020


==== variant wrt genes - TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene ====
=== GeneSetCluster ===
Look for the column '''LOCATION''' which has values ''coding'', ''fiveUTR'', ''threeUTR'', ''intron'', ''intergenic'', ''spliceSite'', and ''promoter''.
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-020-03784-z GeneSetCluster: a tool for summarizing and integrating gene-set analysis results]


==== amino acid change for the non-synonymous variants - BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19 ====
== Pipeline ==
Look for the column '''CONSEQUENCE''' which has values ''synonymous'' or ''nonsynonymous''.


==== SIFT & Polyphen for predict the impact of amino acid substitution on a human protein - PolyPhen.Hsapiens.dbSNP131 ====
=== SPEAQeasy ===
Look for the column '''PREDICTION''' which has values ''possibly damaging'' or ''benign''.
[https://rna-seqblog.com/speaqeasy-a-scalable-pipeline-for-expression-analysis-and-quantification-for-r-bioconductor-powered-rna-seq-analyses/ SPEAQeasy] – a scalable pipeline for expression analysis and quantification for R/Bioconductor-powered RNA-seq analyses


=== vcf ===
=== Nextflow ===
==== [http://www.1000genomes.org/wiki/Analysis/vcf4.0 vcf format] ====
* [https://www.nextflow.io/ Nextflow]: Data-driven computational pipelines, [https://www.nextflow.io/blog.html Blog].
* One row is one variant or one position/nucleotide in genome.
* [https://www.nextflow.io/example4.html RNA-Seq pipeline]
* Mapping quality is called MQ on the INFO column of a '''vcf''' file. It is on the 5th column (no header) or the MQ field on the last column of a '''sam''' file.
** MQ denotes [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root_mean_square RMS] mapping quality in '''vcf'''.
** MapQ = -10 log10(P) where P = probability that this mapping is NOT the correct one.
** https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phred_quality_score.  If Phred assigns a quality score of 30 to a base, the chances that this base is called incorrectly are 1 in 1000 (1/10^(MAPQ/10)=1/10^3)
** When MAPQ=0, it means that the read maps to two or more places with equal score. See [https://www.biostars.org/p/4015/ here].  
** When MAPQ=255, it means the mapping quality is not available. See https://biostar.usegalaxy.org/p/4077/
** http://davetang.org/muse/2011/09/14/mapping-qualities/
** [http://drive5.com/usearch/manual/quality_score.html Fastq] file
* variant category (snp, insertion, deletion, mixed) http://www.1000genomes.org/node/101
* [http://gatkforums.broadinstitute.org/gatk/discussion/1268/what-is-a-vcf-and-how-should-i-interpret-it What is a VCF and how should I interpret it?] from broad.
* See also [[Anders2013#sam.2Fbam.2C_.22samtools_view.22_and_Rsamtools|SAM/BAM format]].


Below is an example of each record/row
=== GeneTEFlow ===
{| class="wikitable"
[https://rna-seqblog.com/geneteflow-a-nextflow-based-pipeline-for-analysing-gene-and-transposable-elements-expression-from-rna-seq-data/ GeneTEFlow] – A Nextflow-based pipeline for analysing gene and transposable elements expression from RNA-Seq data
| 1
| #CHROM
| 2
|-
| 2
| POS
| 14370
|-
| 3
| ID
| rs6054257 or .
|-
| 4
| REF
| G
|-
| 5
| ALT
| A
|-
| 6
| QUAL
| 29
|-
| 7
| FILTER
| PASS or .
|-
| 8
| INFO
| NS=3;DP=14;AF=0.5;DB;H2
|-
| opt
| FORMAT
| GT:AD:DP:GQ:PL
|-
| opt
| NA00001
| 0/1:3,2:5:34:34,0,65
|}
where the meanings of GT(genotype), AD(Allelic depths for the ref and alt alleles in the order listed), HQ (haplotype quality), GQ (genotype quality)... can be found in the header of the VCF file.


==== Filtering ====
=== pipeComp ===
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/44378/ Filtering A Sam File For Quality Scores]. For example, to filter out reads with MAQP < 30 in SAM/BAM files
[https://github.com/plger/pipeComp/ pipeComp], a general framework for the evaluation of computational pipelines, reveals performant single-cell RNA-seq preprocessing tools
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
samtools view -b -q 30 input.bam > filtered.bam
</syntaxhighlight>
* To filter vcf based on MQ, use for example,  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
bcftools filter -i"QUAL >= 20 && DP >= 5 && MQ >= 30" INPUTVCF > OUTPUTVCF
</syntaxhighlight>


==== Open with LibreOffice Calc ====
=== [https://github.com/PF2-pasteur-fr/SARTools SARTools] ===
Use delimiter 'Tab' only and uncheck the others.
http://www.rna-seqblog.com/sartools-a-deseq2-and-edger-based-r-pipeline-for-comprehensive-differential-analysis-of-rna-seq-data/


It will then get the correct header #CHROM, POS, ID, REF, ALT, QUAL, FILTER, INFO (separated by ;), FORMAT (separated by :), SampleID (separated by :) where INFO field contains site-level annotations and FORMAT&SampleID fields contain sample-level annotations.
=== SEQprocess ===
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-019-2676-x SEQprocess]: a modularized and customizable pipeline framework for NGS processing in R package


==== Count number of records, snps and indels ====
=== GEMmaker ===
* [http://vcftools.sourceforge.net/documentation.html#file vcftools].
[https://github.com/SystemsGenetics/GEMmaker GEMmaker], [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-022-04629-7 Paper]
* https://www.biostars.org/p/49386/, https://www.biostars.org/p/109086/, https://www.biostars.org/p/50923/, https://wikis.utexas.edu/display/bioiteam/Variant+calling+using+SAMtools.


* Summary statistics
== pasilla and pasillaBamSubset Data ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pasilla - Data package with per-exon and per-gene read counts of RNA-seq samples of Pasilla knock-down by Brooks et al., Genome Research 2011.
bcftools stats XXX.vcf


# SN, Summary numbers:
pasillaBamSubset - Subset of BAM files untreated1.bam (single-end reads) and untreated3.bam (paired-end reads) from "Pasilla" experiment (Pasilla knock-down by Brooks et al., Genome Research 2011).
# SN    [2]id  [3]key  [4]value
SN      0      number of samples:      0
SN      0      number of records:      71712
SN      0      number of no-ALTs:      0
SN      0      number of SNPs: 65950
SN      0      number of MNPs: 0
SN      0      number of indels:      5762
SN      0      number of others:      0
SN      0      number of multiallelic sites:  0
SN      0      number of multiallelic SNP sites:      0
</syntaxhighlight>
* Remove the header
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
grep -v "^#" input.vcf > output.vcf 
</syntaxhighlight>
* Count number of records
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
grep -c -v "^#" XXX.vcf  # -c means count, -v is invert search
</syntaxhighlight>


==== [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/guide/tooldocs/org_broadinstitute_gatk_tools_walkers_variantutils_VariantsToTable.php VariantsToTable] tool from Braod GATK ====
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/BitSeq.html BitSeq] ==
* https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/blog?id=7089
Transcript expression inference and differential expression analysis for RNA-seq data. The homepage of [http://www.hiit.fi/u/ahonkela/ Antti Honkela].


==== [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/VariantAnnotation.html VariantAnnotation] package ====
== ReportingTools ==
* [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/21598212/extract-sample-data-from-vcf-files readVcf(), ScanVcfParam() and readInfo()] functions.
The [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/ReportingTools.html ReportingTools] software package enables users to easily display reports of analysis results generated from sources such as microarray and sequencing data.
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/variants/ scanVcfHeader() and scanVcfParam()] functions.


To install the R package, first we need to install required software in Linux
Figures can be included in a cell in output table. See [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/ReportingTools/inst/doc/microarrayAnalysis.pdf#page=3 Using ReportingTools in an Analysis of Microarray Data].  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev
sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev
</syntaxhighlight>
and then
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
source("http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("VariantAnnotation")


library(VariantAnnotation)
It is suggested by e.g. EnrichmentBrowser.
vcf <- readVcf("filename.vcf", "hg19")
# Header
header(vcf)


# Sample names
== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/sequences/index.html sequences] ==
samples(header(vcf))
More or less an educational package. It has 2 c and c++ source code. It is used in Advanced R programming and package development.


# Geno
== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/QuasR.html QuasR] ==
geno(header(vcf))
[http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2014/12/09/bioinformatics.btu781.short?rss=1&ssource=mfr Bioinformatics] paper


# Genomic positions
== CRAN/Bioconductor packages ==
head(rowRanges(vcf), 3)
=== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/ssizeRNA/index.html ssizeRNA] ===
ref(vcf)[1:5]
* Sample Size Calculation for RNA-Seq Experimental Design
# Variant quality
* [https://youtu.be/SapuPiaiNjs?t=1327 B4B: Module 2 - RNAseq power calculation]
qual(vcf)[1:5]
alt(vcf)[1:5]


# INFO
=== RNASeqPower ===
info(vcf)[1:3, ]
[https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/RNASeqPower.html RNASeqPower] Sample size for RNAseq studies
# Get the Depth (DP)
hist(info(vcf)$DP, xlab="DP")
summary(info(vcf)$DP, xlab="DP")
# Get the Mapping quality (MQ/MapQ)
hist(info(vcf)$MQ, xlab="MQ")


</syntaxhighlight>
=== [http://master.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/RnaSeqSampleSize.html RnaSeqSampleSize] ===
[https://cqs.mc.vanderbilt.edu/shiny/RnaSeqSampleSize/ Shiny] app


Example:  
=== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/rbamtools/index.html rbamtools] ===
Provides an interface to functions of the 'SAMtools' C-Library by Heng Li


We first show how to use linux command line to explore the VCF file. Then we show how to use the VariantAnnotation package.
=== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/refGenome/index.html refGenome]  ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
The packge contains functionality for import and managing of downloaded genome annotation Data from Ensembl genome browser (European Bioinformatics Institute) and from UCSC genome browser (University of California, Santa Cruz) and annotation routines for genomic positions and splice site positions.
# The vcf file is created from running samtools on SRR1656687.fastq


nskip=$(grep "^#" ~/Downloads/BMBC2_liver3_IMPACT_raw.vcf | wc -l)
=== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/WhopGenome/index.html WhopGenome] ===
echo $nskip # 53
Provides very fast access to whole genome, population scale variation data from VCF files and sequence data from FASTA-formatted files. It also reads in alignments from FASTA, Phylip, MAF and other file formats. Provides easy-to-use interfaces to genome annotation from UCSC and Bioconductor and gene ontology data from AmiGO and is capable to read, modify and write PLINK .PED-format pedigree files.
awk 'NR==53, NR==53' ~/Downloads/BMBC2_liver3_IMPACT_raw.vcf
#CHROM POS ID REF ALT QUAL FILTER INFO FORMAT dedup.bam


nall=$(cat ~/Downloads/BMBC2_liver3_IMPACT_raw.vcf | wc -l)
=== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/TCGA2STAT/index.html TCGA2STAT] ===
echo $nall  # 302174
Simple TCGA Data Access for Integrated Statistical Analysis in R


# Generate <variantsOnly.vcf> which contains only the variant body
TCGA2STAT depends on Bioconductor package CNTools which cannot be installed automatically.  
awk 'NR==54, NR==302174' ~/Downloads/BMBC2_liver3_IMPACT_raw.vcf > variantsOnly.vcf
 
# Generate <infoField.txt> which contains only the INFO field
cut -f 8 variantsOnly.vcf > infoField.txt
 
# Generate the final product
head -n 1 infoField.txt
DP=4;VDB=0.64;SGB=-0.453602;RPB=1;MQB=1;BQB=1;MQ0F=0;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=0,1,0,2;MQ=22
head -n 1 infoField.txt | cut -f1- -d ";" --output-delimiter " "
## Method 1: use cut
### Problem: the result is not a table since not all fields appear in all variants.
cut -f1- -d ";" --output-delimiter=$'\t' infoField.txt > infoFieldTable.txt
## Method 2: use sed
### Problem: same as Method 1.
sed 's/;/\t/g' infoField.txt > infoFieldTable2.txt
### OR if we want to replace the original file
sed -i 's/;/\t/g' infoField.txt
 
$ head -n 3 infoField.txt
DP=4;VDB=0.64;SGB=-0.453602;RPB=1;MQB=1;BQB=1;MQ0F=0;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=0,1,0,2;MQ=22
DP=6;VDB=0.325692;SGB=-0.556411;MQ0F=0.333333;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=0,0,0,4;MQ=11
DP=5;VDB=0.0481133;SGB=-0.511536;RPB=1;MQB=1;MQSB=1;BQB=1;MQ0F=0;ICB=1;HOB=0.5;AC=1;AN=2;DP4=1,0,2,1;MQ=26
 
$ grep "^##INFO=<ID=" BMBC2_liver3_IMPACT_raw.vcf
##INFO=<ID=INDEL,Number=0,Type=Flag,Description="Indicates that the variant is an INDEL.">
##INFO=<ID=IDV,Number=1,Type=Integer,Description="Maximum number of reads supporting an indel">
##INFO=<ID=IMF,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Maximum fraction of reads supporting an indel">
##INFO=<ID=DP,Number=1,Type=Integer,Description="Raw read depth">
##INFO=<ID=VDB,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Variant Distance Bias for filtering splice-site artefacts in RNA-seq data (bigger is better)",Version="3">
##INFO=<ID=RPB,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Mann-Whitney U test of Read Position Bias (bigger is better)">
##INFO=<ID=MQB,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Mann-Whitney U test of Mapping Quality Bias (bigger is better)">
##INFO=<ID=BQB,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Mann-Whitney U test of Base Quality Bias (bigger is better)">
##INFO=<ID=MQSB,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Mann-Whitney U test of Mapping Quality vs Strand Bias (bigger is better)">
##INFO=<ID=SGB,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Segregation based metric.">
##INFO=<ID=MQ0F,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Fraction of MQ0 reads (smaller is better)">
##INFO=<ID=ICB,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Inbreeding Coefficient Binomial test (bigger is better)">
##INFO=<ID=HOB,Number=1,Type=Float,Description="Bias in the number of HOMs number (smaller is better)">
##INFO=<ID=AC,Number=A,Type=Integer,Description="Allele count in genotypes for each ALT allele, in the same order as listed">
##INFO=<ID=AN,Number=1,Type=Integer,Description="Total number of alleles in called genotypes">
##INFO=<ID=DP4,Number=4,Type=Integer,Description="Number of high-quality ref-forward , ref-reverse, alt-forward and alt-reverse bases">
##INFO=<ID=MQ,Number=1,Type=Integer,Description="Average mapping quality">
odroid@odroid:~/Downloads$
 
$ head -n2 variantsOnly.vcf
1 10285 . T C 19.3175 . DP=4;VDB=0.64;SGB=-0.453602;RPB=1;MQB=1;BQB=1;MQ0F=0;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=0,1,0,2;MQ=22 GT:PL 1/1:46,2,0
1 10333 . C T 14.9851 . DP=6;VDB=0.325692;SGB=-0.556411;MQ0F=0.333333;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=0,0,0,4;MQ=11 GT:PL 1/1:42,12,0
 
$ awk 'NR==53, NR==58' ~/Downloads/BMBC2_liver3_IMPACT_raw.vcf
#CHROM POS ID REF ALT QUAL FILTER INFO FORMAT dedup.bam
1 10285 . T C 19.3175 . DP=4;VDB=0.64;SGB=-0.453602;RPB=1;MQB=1;BQB=1;MQ0F=0;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=0,1,0,2;MQ=22 GT:PL 1/1:46,2,0
1 10333 . C T 14.9851 . DP=6;VDB=0.325692;SGB=-0.556411;MQ0F=0.333333;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=0,0,0,4;MQ=11 GT:PL 1/1:42,12,0
1 16257 . G C 24.566 . DP=5;VDB=0.0481133;SGB=-0.511536;RPB=1;MQB=1;MQSB=1;BQB=1;MQ0F=0;ICB=1;HOB=0.5;AC=1;AN=2;DP4=1,0,2,1;MQ=26 GT:PL 0/1:57,0,10
1 16534 . C T 13.9287 . DP=5;VDB=0.87268;SGB=-0.556411;MQ0F=0.4;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=0,0,4,0;MQ=11 GT:PL 1/1:41,12,0
1 16571 . G A 12.4197 . DP=7;VDB=0.560696;SGB=-0.556411;RPB=1;MQB=1;MQSB=0;BQB=1;MQ0F=0.714286;AC=2;AN=2;DP4=1,0,2,2;MQ=8 GT:PL 1/1:39,8,0
odroid@odroid:~/Downloads$
</syntaxhighlight>
As you can see it is not easy to create a table from the INFO field.
 
Now we use the VariantAnnotation package.
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
> library("VariantAnnotation")
source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
> v=readVcf("BMBC2_liver3_IMPACT_raw.vcf", "hg19")
biocLite("CNTools")
> v
class: CollapsedVCF
dim: 302121 1
rowRanges(vcf):
  GRanges with 5 metadata columns: paramRangeID, REF, ALT, QUAL, FILTER
info(vcf):
  DataFrame with 17 columns: INDEL, IDV, IMF, DP, VDB, RPB, MQB, BQB, MQSB, ...
info(header(vcf)):
        Number Type    Description                                           
  INDEL 0      Flag    Indicates that the variant is an INDEL.               
  IDV  1      Integer Maximum number of reads supporting an indel           
  IMF  1      Float  Maximum fraction of reads supporting an indel         
  DP    1      Integer Raw read depth                                       
  VDB  1      Float  Variant Distance Bias for filtering splice-site arte...
  RPB  1      Float  Mann-Whitney U test of Read Position Bias (bigger is...
  MQB  1      Float  Mann-Whitney U test of Mapping Quality Bias (bigger ...
  BQB  1      Float  Mann-Whitney U test of Base Quality Bias (bigger is ...
  MQSB  1      Float  Mann-Whitney U test of Mapping Quality vs Strand Bia...
  SGB  1      Float  Segregation based metric.                             
  MQ0F  1      Float  Fraction of MQ0 reads (smaller is better)             
  ICB  1      Float  Inbreeding Coefficient Binomial test (bigger is better)
  HOB  1      Float  Bias in the number of HOMs number (smaller is better) 
  AC    A      Integer Allele count in genotypes for each ALT allele, in th...
  AN    1      Integer Total number of alleles in called genotypes           
  DP4  4      Integer Number of high-quality ref-forward , ref-reverse, al...
  MQ    1      Integer Average mapping quality                               
geno(vcf):
  SimpleList of length 2: GT, PL
geno(header(vcf)):
      Number Type    Description                             
  GT 1      String  Genotype                               
  PL G      Integer List of Phred-scaled genotype likelihoods
>
> header(v)
class: VCFHeader
samples(1): dedup.bam
meta(2): META contig
fixed(2): FILTER ALT
info(17): INDEL IDV ... DP4 MQ
geno(2): GT PL
>
> dim(info(v))
[1] 302121    17
> info(v)[1:4, ]
DataFrame with 4 rows and 17 columns
                INDEL      IDV      IMF        DP      VDB      RPB
            <logical> <integer> <numeric> <integer> <numeric> <numeric>
1:10285_T/C    FALSE        NA        NA        4 0.6400000        1
1:10333_C/T    FALSE        NA        NA        6 0.3256920        NA
1:16257_G/C    FALSE        NA        NA        5 0.0481133        1
1:16534_C/T    FALSE        NA        NA        5 0.8726800        NA
                  MQB      BQB      MQSB      SGB      MQ0F      ICB
            <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric>
1:10285_T/C        1        1        NA -0.453602  0.000000        NA
1:10333_C/T        NA        NA        NA -0.556411  0.333333        NA
1:16257_G/C        1        1        1 -0.511536  0.000000        1
1:16534_C/T        NA        NA        NA -0.556411  0.400000        NA
                  HOB            AC        AN          DP4        MQ
            <numeric> <IntegerList> <integer> <IntegerList> <integer>
1:10285_T/C        NA            2        2    0,1,0,...        22
1:10333_C/T        NA            2        2    0,0,0,...        11
1:16257_G/C      0.5            1        2    1,0,2,...        26
1:16534_C/T        NA            2        2    0,0,4,...        11
> write.table(info(v)[1:4,], file="infoFieldTable3.txt", sep="\t", quote=F)
> head(rowRanges(v), 3)
GRanges object with 3 ranges and 5 metadata columns:
              seqnames        ranges strand | paramRangeID            REF
                <Rle>      <IRanges>  <Rle> |    <factor> <DNAStringSet>
  1:10285_T/C        1 [10285, 10285]      * |        <NA>              T
  1:10333_C/T        1 [10333, 10333]      * |        <NA>              C
  1:16257_G/C        1 [16257, 16257]      * |        <NA>              G
                            ALT      QUAL      FILTER
              <DNAStringSetList> <numeric> <character>
  1:10285_T/C                  C  19.3175          .
  1:10333_C/T                  T  14.9851          .
  1:16257_G/C                  C  24.5660          .
  -------
  seqinfo: 25 sequences from hg19 genome
> qual(v)[1:5]
[1] 19.3175 14.9851 24.5660 13.9287 12.4197
> alt(v)[1:5]
DNAStringSetList of length 5
[[1]] C
[[2]] T
[[3]] C
[[4]] T
[[5]] A


> q('no')
install.packages("TCGA2STAT")
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


==== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/vcfR/index.html vcfR] package ====
The getTCGA() function allows to download various kind of data:
* '''gene expression''' which includes mRNA-microarray gene expression data (data.type="mRNA_Array") & RNA-Seq gene expression data (data.type="RNASeq")
* '''miRNA expression''' which includes miRNA-array data (data.type="miRNA_Array") & miRNA-Seq data (data.type="miRNASeq")
* '''mutation''' data (data.type="Mutation")
* '''methylation expression''' (data.type="Methylation")
* '''copy number changes''' (data.type="CNA_SNP")


==== Filtering strategy ====
=== TCGAbiolinks ===
* https://support.bioconductor.org/p/62817/ using '''QUAL''' and '''DP'''.
* https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/TCGAbiolinks.html. Many vignettes.
* https://bioconductor.org/packages/3.12/TCGAbiolinks
** data access through GenomicDataCommons
** provides data both from the legacy Firehose pipeline used by the TCGA publications (alignments based on hg18 and hg19 builds2), and the GDC harmonized GRCh38 pipeline
* The [https://rdrr.io/bioc/TCGAbiolinks/man/GDCquery.html help page of GDCquery] does not say it clearly about the option of '''file.type'''.  [https://github.com/BioinformaticsFMRP/TCGAbiolinks/issues/59 How to use TCGAbiolinks to download raw RSEM gene counts for specific type of cancer]. file.type= "results" or file.type= "normalized_results".
<ul>
<li>An example from [https://github.com/waldronlab/PublicDataResources Public Data Resources in Bioconductor] workshop 2020. According to ?GDCquery, for the legacy data arguments project, data.category, platform and/or file.extension should be used.
<pre>
library(TCGAbiolinks)
library(SummarizedExperiment)
query <- GDCquery(project = "TCGA-ACC",
                          data.category = "Gene expression",
                          data.type = "Gene expression quantification",
                          platform = "Illumina HiSeq",
                          file.type  = "normalized_results",
                          experimental.strategy = "RNA-Seq",
                          legacy = TRUE)


Note that the '''QUAL''' (variant quality score) values can go very large. For example in GSE48215, samtools gives QUAL a range of [3,228] but gatk gives a range of [3, 10042]. [http://gatkforums.broadinstitute.org/wdl/discussion/1268/what-is-a-vcf-and-how-should-i-interpret-it This post] says '''QUAL is not often a very useful property for evaluating the quality of a variant call'''.
gdcdir <- file.path("Waldron_PublicData", "GDCdata")
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
GDCdownload(query, method = "api", files.per.chunk = 10,
# vcfs is vcf file ran by samtools using GSE48215subset
            directory = gdcdir)  # 79 files
# vcfg is vcf file ran by gatk using GSE48215subset
ACCse <- GDCprepare(query, directory = gdcdir)
> summary(vcfs)
ACCse
      Length        Class        Mode
class(ACCse)
        1604 CollapsedVCF          S4
dim(assay(ACCse))  # 19947 x 79
> summary(vcfg)
assay(ACCse)[1:3, 1:2] # symbol id
      Length        Class        Mode
length(unique(rownames(assay(ACCse))))  #  19672
        868 CollapsedVCF          S4
rowData(ACCse)[1:2, ]
# DataFrame with 2 rows and 3 columns
#          gene_id entrezgene ensembl_gene_id
#      <character>  <integer>    <character>
# A1BG        A1BG          1 ENSG00000121410
# A2M          A2M          2 ENSG00000175899
</pre>
</li>
<li>HTSeq counts data example. [https://github.com/wwylab/DeMixT/issues/19 DeMixT]. [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9149780/ Error when running GDC_prepare].
{{Pre}}
query2 <- GDCquery(project = "TCGA-ACC",
                  data.category = "Transcriptome Profiling",
                  data.type = "Gene Expression Quantification",
                  workflow.type="HTSeq - Counts") # or "STAR - Counts"
gdcdir2 <- file.path("Waldron_PublicData", "GDCdata2")
GDCdownload(query2, method = "api", files.per.chunk = 10,
            directory = gdcdir2)  # 79 files
ACCse2 <- GDCprepare(query2, directory = gdcdir2)
ACCse2
dim(assay(ACCse2))  # 56457 x 79
assay(ACCse2)[1:3, 1:2]  # ensembl id
rowData(ACCse2)[1:2, ]
DataFrame with 2 rows and 3 columns
                ensembl_gene_id external_gene_name original_ensembl_gene_id
                    <character>        <character>              <character>
ENSG00000000003 ENSG00000000003            TSPAN6      ENSG00000000003.13
ENSG00000000005 ENSG00000000005              TNMD        ENSG00000000005.5
</pre>
</li>
<li>Clinical data
<pre>
acc_clin <- GDCquery_clinic(project = "TCGA-ACC", type = "Clinical")
dim(acc_clin)
# [1] 92 71
</pre>
</li>
<li>[https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/TCGAbiolinks/versions/1.2.5/topics/TCGAanalyze_DEA TCGAanalyze_DEA()]. Differentially Expression Analysis (DEA) Using '''edgeR''' Package.
<pre>
dataNorm <- TCGAbiolinks::TCGAanalyze_Normalization(dataBRCA, geneInfo)
dataFilt <- TCGAanalyze_Filtering(tabDF = dataBRCA, method = "quantile", qnt.cut =  0.25)
samplesNT <- TCGAquery_SampleTypes(colnames(dataFilt), typesample = c("NT"))
samplesTP <- TCGAquery_SampleTypes(colnames(dataFilt), typesample = c("TP"))
dataDEGs <- TCGAanalyze_DEA(dataFilt[,samplesNT],
                      dataFilt[,samplesTP],"Normal", "Tumor")
# 2nd example
dataDEGs <- TCGAanalyze_DEA(mat1 = dataFiltLGG, mat2 = dataFiltGBM,
                          Cond1type = "LGG", Cond2type = "GBM",
                          fdr.cut = 0.01,  logFC.cut = 1,
                          method = "glmLRT")
</pre>
</li>
<li>Enrichment analysis
<pre>
ansEA <– TCGAanalyze_EAcomplete(TFname="DEA genes LGG Vs GBM",
                                RegulonList = rownames(dataDEGs))


> summary(qual(vcfs))
TCGAvisualize_EAbarplot(tf = rownames(ansEA$ResBP),
  Min. 1st Qu. Median    Mean 3rd Qu.   Max.  
                        GOBPTab = ansEA$ResBP, GOCCTab = ansEA$ResCC,
  3.013  10.580  23.650  45.510  45.400 228.000
                        GOMFTab = ansEA$ResMF, PathTab = ansEA$ResPat,
> summary(qual(vcfg))
                        nRGTab = rownames(dataDEGs),
     Min. 1st Qu.   Median    Mean  3rd Qu.     Max.  
                        nBar = 20)
    3.98    21.77    47.74  293.90  116.10 10040.00
</pre>
</li>
<li>[https://docs.gdc.cancer.gov/Data/Bioinformatics_Pipelines/Expression_mRNA_Pipeline/ mRNA Analysis Pipeline] from GDC documentation.
</li>
</ul>
* See the vignette in the [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/workflows/html/SingscoreAMLMutations.html SingscoreAMLMutations] package.
* Papers
** [https://academic.oup.com/nar/article/44/8/e71/2465925 TCGAbiolinks: an R/Bioconductor package for integrative analysis of TCGA data]
** [https://f1000research.com/articles/5-1542 TCGA Workflow: Analyze cancer genomics and epigenomics data using Bioconductor packages]
** [https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006701 New functionalities in the TCGAbiolinks package for the study and integration of cancer data from GDC and GTEx]
<ul>
<li>[https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/SummarizedExperiment.html RangedSummarizedExperiment] class
<ul>
<li>assay(() </li>
<li>colData() </li>
<li>rowData() </li>
<li>assayNames() </li>
<li>metadata() </li>
<pre>
> dim(colData(ACCse))
[1] 79 72
> dim(rowData(ACCse))
[1] 19947     3
> dim(assay(ACCse))
[1] 19947    79
> assayNames(ACCse)
[1] "normalized_count"
> assayNames(ACCse2)
[1] "HTSeq - Counts"
> metadata(ACCse)
$data_release
[1] "Data Release 25.0 - July 22, 2020"
</pre>
</ul>
<li>[https://rpubs.com/tiagochst/TCGAbiolinks_to_DESEq2 TCGAbiolinks to DESEq2]. My verified version (R 4.3.2 & Bioc ‘3.17’) available on [https://gist.github.com/arraytools/6e6142f6fabb31e54e188ea1fb0deeee Github].


> range(info(vcfs)$DP)
</ul>
[1]  1 336
> range(info(vcfg)$DP)
[1]  1 317


> range(info(vcfs)$MQ)
=== curatedTCGAData ===
[1] 4 60
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/curatedTCGAData.html Curated Data From The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) as MultiAssayExperiment Objects]
> range(info(vcfg)$MQ)
** data access through ExperimentHub
[1] 21.00 65.19
** provides data from the legacy Firehose pipeline
* [https://waldronlab.io/MultiAssayWorkshop/ Multi-omic Integration and Analysis of cBioPortal and TCGA data with MultiAssayExperiment] from [https://bioc2020.bioconductor.org/workshops.html Bioc2020]
<ul>
<li>[https://waldronlab.io/PublicDataResources/ Public data resources and Bioconductor] from [https://bioc2020.bioconductor.org/workshops.html Bioc2020]
<pre>
library(curatedTCGAData)
library(MultiAssayExperiment)
curatedTCGAData(diseaseCode = "*", assays = "*")
curatedTCGAData(diseaseCode = "ACC")


# vcfg2 is vcf file ran by gatk using GSE48215
ACCmae <- curatedTCGAData("ACC", c("RPPAArray", "RNASeq2GeneNorm"),
> vcfg2 <- readVcf("~/GSE48215/outputgcli/bt20_raw.vcf", "hg19")
                          dry.run=FALSE)
> summary(vcfg2)
ACCmae
      Length        Class        Mode
dim(colData(ACCmae)) # 79 (samples) x 822 (features)
      506851 CollapsedVCF          S4
> range(qual(vcfg2))
[1]    0.00 73662.77
> summary(qual(vcfg2))
    Min.  1st Qu.  Median    Mean  3rd Qu.    Max.
    0.00    21.77    21.77  253.70    62.74 73660.00


> range(info(vcfg2)$DP)
head(metadata(colData(ACCmae))[["subtypes"]])
[1]   0 3315
</pre>
> summary(info(vcfg2)$DP)
</li>
  Min. 1st Qu.  Median    Mean 3rd Qu.    Max.
</ul>
  0.00    2.00    2.00  14.04    4.00 3315.00
* Caveats for working with TCGA data
> range(info(vcfg2)$MQ)
** Not all TCGA samples are cancer, there are a mix of samples in each of the 33 cancer types.
[1] NaN NaN
** Use sampleTables on the MultiAssayExperiment object along with data(sampleTypes, package = "TCGAutils") to see what samples are present in the data.
> range(info(vcfg2)$MQ, na.rm=T)
** There may be tumors that were used to create multiple contributions leading to technical replicates. These should be resolved using the appropriate helper functions such as mergeReplicates.
[1] 20 70
** Primary tumors should be selected using '''TCGAutils::TCGAsampleSelect''' and used as input to the subsetting mechanisms.
</syntaxhighlight>


=== SAMtools (samtools, bcftools, htslib) ===
=== [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/caOmicsV.html caOmicsV] ===
* http://samtools.sourceforge.net/mpileup.shtml
http://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-016-0989-6 Data from TCGA ws used
* http://massgenomics.org/2012/03/5-things-to-know-about-samtools-mpileup.html. Li's paper is available in [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2723002/ NCBI PMC].
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3198575/ A statistical framework for SNP calling, mutation discovery, association mapping and population genetical parameter estimation from sequencing data] by Heng Li.
* https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/media/docs/Samtools.pdf


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Visualize multi-dimentional cancer genomics data including of patient information, gene expressions, DNA methylations, DNA copy number variations, and SNP/mutations in matrix layout or network layout.
export seqtools_samtools_PATH=/opt/SeqTools/bin/samtools-1.3:/opt/SeqTools/bin/samtools-1.3/misc
export PATH=$seqtools_samtools_PATH:$PATH


samtools sort TNBC1/accepted_hits.bam TNBC1/accepted_hits-sorted
=== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/Map2NCBI/index.html Map2NCBI] ===
samtools index TNBC1/accepted_hits-sorted.bam TNBC1/accepted_hits-sorted.bai
The GetGeneList() function is useful to download Genomic Features (including gene features/symbols) from NCBI (ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/genomes/MapView/).
samtools mpileup -uf ~/igenome/human/NCBI/build37.2/genome.fa \
            TNBC1/accepted_hits-sorted.bam | bcftools view -vcg - > TNBC1/var.raw.vcf
</syntaxhighlight>
where '-u' in mpileup means uncompressed and '-f' means faidx indexed reference sequence file. If we do not use pipe command, the output from samtools mpileup is a bcf file which can be viewed by using 'bcftools view XXX.bcf | more' command.


Note that the ''samtools mpileup'' can be used in different ways. For example,
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
> library(Map2NCBI)
samtools mpileup -f XXX.fa XXX.bam > XXX.mpileup
> GeneList = GetGeneList("Homo sapiens", build="ANNOTATION_RELEASE.107", savefiles=TRUE, destfile=path.expand("~/"))
samtools mpileup -v -u -f XXX.fa XXX.bam > XXX.vcf
  # choose [2], [n], and [1] to filter the build and feature information.
samtools mpileup -g -f XXX.fa XXX.bam > XXX.bcf
  # The destination folder will contain seq_gene.txt, seq_gene.md.gz and GeneList.txt files.
> str(GeneList)
'data.frame': 52157 obs. of  15 variables:
$ tax_id      : chr  "9606" "9606" "9606" "9606" ...
$ chromosome  : chr  "1" "1" "1" "1" ...
$ chr_start    : num  11874 14362 17369 30366 34611 ...
$ chr_stop    : num  14409 29370 17436 30503 36081 ...
$ chr_orient  : chr  "+" "-" "-" "+" ...
$ contig      : chr  "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" ...
$ ctg_start    : num  1874 4362 7369 20366 24611 ...
$ ctg_stop    : num  4409 19370 7436 20503 26081 ...
$ ctg_orient  : chr  "+" "-" "-" "+" ...
$ feature_name : chr  "DDX11L1" "WASH7P" "MIR6859-1" "MIR1302-2" ...
$ feature_id  : chr  "GeneID:100287102" "GeneID:653635" "GeneID:102466751" "GeneID:100302278" ...
$ feature_type : chr  "GENE" "GENE" "GENE" "GENE" ...
$ group_label  : chr  "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" ...
$ transcript  : chr  "Assembly" "Assembly" "Assembly" "Assembly" ...
$ evidence_code: chr  "-" "-" "-" "-" ...
> GeneList$feature_name[grep("^NAP", GeneList$feature_name)]
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


==== [http://samtools.github.io/bcftools/bcftools.html bcftools] ====
=== TCseq: Time course sequencing data analysis ===
'''bcftools''' — utilities for variant calling and manipulating VCFs and their binary counterparts BCFs. bcftools is one of components in '''SAMtools''' software.
http://bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/TCseq.html


Installation
=== UCSC Xena ===
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
* [https://xena.ucsc.edu/welcome-to-ucsc-xena/ Welcome to UCSC Xena], [https://github.com/ucscXena Source code]. Note one should not confuse it with [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Xeva.html Xeva] for analysis PDX data.  
wget https://github.com/samtools/bcftools/releases/download/1.2/bcftools-1.2.tar.bz2
* [https://github.com/ropensci/UCSCXenaTools UCSCXenaTools]
sudo tar jxf bcftools-1.2.tar.bz2 -C /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/
* It was used by this tumor purity paper [https://academic.oup.com/bib/article/22/6/bbab163/6265216#312129108 Prediction of tumor purity from gene expression data using machine learning].
cd /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/bcftools-1.2/
 
sudo make # create bcftools, plot-vcfstats, vcfutils.pl commands
=== RTCGA ===
</syntaxhighlight>
https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/RTCGA.html


Example: variant call
=== genefu ===
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
[https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/genefu.html Computation of Gene Expression-Based Signatures in Breast Cancer]
samtools sort TNBC1/accepted_hits.bam TNBC1/accepted_hits-sorted
samtools index TNBC1/accepted_hits-sorted.bam TNBC1/accepted_hits-sorted.bai
samtools mpileup -uf ~/igenome/human/NCBI/build37.2/genome.fa \
                    TNBC1/accepted_hits-sorted.bam | bcftools view -vcg - > TNBC1/var.raw.vcf
# Or
samtools mpileup -g -f XXX.fa XXX.bam > sample.bcf
bcftools call -v -m -O z -o var.raw.vcf.gz sample.bcf
zcat var.raw.vcf.gz | more
zcat var.raw.vcf.gz | grep -v "^#" | wc -l
samtools tview -p 17:1234567 XXX.bam XXX.fa  | more    # IGV alternative
</syntaxhighlight>
where '-v' means exports variants only, '-m' for multiallelic-caller and '-O z' means compressed vcf format.


Example: count the number of snps, indels, et al in the vcf file, use
== GEO ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
See the internal link at [[R#GEO_.28Gene_Expression_Omnibus.29|R-GEO]].
bcftools stats xxx.vcf | more
</syntaxhighlight>


Example: filter based on variant quality, depth, mapping quality
[https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/05/19/326223 GREIN: An interactive web platform for re-analyzing GEO RNA-seq data]
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
bcftools filter -i"QUAL >= 20 && DP >= 5 && MQ >= 60" inputVCF > output.VCF
</syntaxhighlight>
where '-i'


Example: change the header (dedup.bam -> dedup), use
=== GEO2RNAseq ===
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
[https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/771063v1.full GEO2RNAseq: An easy-to-use R pipeline for complete pre-processing of RNA-seq data]
$ grep dedup.bam dT_ori_raw.vcf                                                 
##samtoolsCommand=samtools mpileup -go temp.bcf -uf /home/brb/GSE11209-master/annotation/genome.fa dedup.bam
#CHROM  POS    ID      REF    ALT    QUAL    FILTER  INFO    FORMAT  dedup.bam
$ echo dedup > sampleName
$ bcftools reheader -s sampleName dT_ori_raw.vcf -o dT_ori_raw2.vcf
$ grep dedup.bam dT_ori_raw2.vcf
##samtoolsCommand=samtools mpileup -go temp.bcf -uf /home/brb/GSE11209-master/annotation/genome.fa dedup.bam
$ diff dT_ori_raw.vcf dT_ori_raw2.vcf
45c45
< #CHROM        POS    ID      REF    ALT    QUAL    FILTER  INFO    FORMAT  dedup.bam
---
> #CHROM        POS    ID      REF    ALT    QUAL    FILTER  INFO    FORMAT  dedup
</syntaxhighlight>


==== [http://www.htslib.org/doc/tabix.html htslib] ====
== Network-based ==
* bgzip – Block compression/decompression utility. The output file .gz is in a binary format.
[https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-19019-5 Network-based integration of multi-omics data for clinical outcome prediction in neuroblastoma] 2022
* tabix – Generic indexer for TAB-delimited genome position files. The output file tbi is in a binary format.


Installation
== Proteomics ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/MatrixQCvis.html MatrixQCvis: Shiny-based interactive data-quality exploration for omics data]
wget https://github.com/samtools/htslib/releases/download/1.2.1/htslib-1.2.1.tar.bz2
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2016/BioC2016/ConcurrentWorkshops4/Gatto/Bioc2016.html R/Bioconductor tools for mass spectrometry-based proteomics]
sudo tar jxf htslib-1.2.1.tar.bz2 -C /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/
cd /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/htslib-1.2.1/
sudo make  # create tabix, htsfile, bgzip commands
</syntaxhighlight>


Example
=== OlinkAnalyze ===
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
* https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/OlinkAnalyze/index.html
export PATH=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/bcftools-1.2/:$PATH
* [https://github.com/arnav-mehta/covid19-proteomics/blob/main/20201023_COVID%20pos%20vs%20neg.R 20201023_COVID pos vs neg.R]
export PATH=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/htslib-1.2.1/:$PATH
# zip and index
bgzip -c var.raw.vcf > var.raw.vcf.gz
tabix var.raw.vcf.gz  # create var.raw.vcf.ga.tbi, index vcf files (very fast in this step)
bcftools annotate -c ID -a common_all_20150603.vcf.gz var.raw.vcf.gz > var_annot.vcf # 2 min


# subset based on chromosome 1, include 'chr' and position range if necessary
=== OlinkRPackage ===
tabix -h var.raw.vcf.gz 1: > chr1.vcf
* [https://github.com/Olink-Proteomics/OlinkRPackage OlinkRPackage], [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/OlinkAnalyze/index.html CRAN]
tabix -h var.raw.vcf.gz chr1:10,000,000-20,000,000
* [https://github.com/arnav-mehta/covid19-proteomics Plasma proteomics reveals tissue-specific cell death and mediators of cell-cell interactions in severe COVID-19 patients] 2021
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://www.olink.com/faq/what-is-npx/ What is NPX?] NPX, Normalized Protein eXpression, is Olink’s arbitrary unit which is in Log2 scale.
* [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666379121001154#appsec2 Longitudinal proteomic analysis of severe COVID-19 reveals survival-associated signatures, tissue-specific cell death, and cell-cell interactions] Filbin 2021. Olink data is available in [https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/nf853r8xsj/1 here].


=== GATK ===
== Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics ==
* Source code is at [https://github.com/broadgsa/gatk-protected/ github]
* This is NOT RPPA (reverse phase protein arrays)
* Need to create an account w/ password and log in in order to see and download the software (require Java).
* Phosphoprotein 磷蛋白 -level
* Downloaded file is called GenomeAnalysisTK-3.5.tar.bz2 or GenomeAnalysisTK-3.6.tar.bz2. Note that the current version 3.6 (released on 6/1/2016) requires Java 1.8.
* MS-based proteomics has several advantages. It can analyze all the proteins in a system and is unbiased and hypothesis-free 1. MS methods are also ideally suited to discover and quantify post-translational modifications (PTMs) on proteins. MS-based targeted proteomic methods have increased specificity and multiplexing capabilities compared to classical immunological methods.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6731080/ Integration and Analysis of CPTAC Proteomics Data in the Context of Cancer Genomics in the cBioPortal] 2019
# Download GenomeAnalysisTK-3.4-46.tar.bz2 from gatk website
* https://proteomics.cancer.gov/data-portal
sudo mkdir /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/gatk
* [https://docs.cbioportal.org/user-guide/faq/#how-can-i-query-phosphoprotein-levels-in-the-portal How can I query phosphoprotein levels in the portal?]
sudo tar jxvf ~/Downloads/GenomeAnalysisTK-3.4-46.tar.bz2 -C /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/gatk
* R/Bioconductor
ls /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/gatk
** [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/MSnbase.html MSnbase] from Bioconductor
# GenomeAnalysisTK.jar  resources
** https://github.com/lgatto/RforProteomics, [https://lgatto.github.io/bioc-ms-prot/lab.html Bioconductor tools for mass spectrometry and proteomics]
</syntaxhighlight>
** [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/134743/ Tutorial:Mass Spectrometry Data Analysis with the Spectra Package]
* Ubuntu 14 only has Java 1.6 and 1.7. Ubuntu 16 only has Java 1.8 and 1.9.
** [https://www.physalia-courses.org/courses-workshops/course58/ R/BIOCONDUCTOR FOR MASS SPECTROMETRY AND PROTEOMICS]
* Picard and HTSJDK also rely on Java.  
* An example to download data from cbioportal.org
* [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/guide/ GATK guide] and [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/guide/tagged?tag=requirements requirements].
** Go to https://www.cbioportal.org/datasets and search "CPTAC" through the search box or the find function in the browser. It returns 8 hits.
* [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/guide/article?id=3891 Best Practices workflow for SNP and indel calling on RNAseq data using GATK]. It recommend using [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/guide/tooldocs/org_broadinstitute_gatk_tools_walkers_haplotypecaller_HaplotypeCaller.php HaplotypeCaller].
** For example [https://www.cbioportal.org/study/summary?id=coad_cptac_2019 Colon Cancer (CPTAC-2 Prospective, Cell 2019)] contains several molecule profiles to download including samples Phosphoprotein site level expression.
* [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/events/slides/1307/GATKwh1-BP-2-Realignment.pdf Indel realignment] Input=BAM, Output=BAM. Big improvement for Base Quality Score Recalibration when run on realigned BAM files (artificial SNPs are replaced with real indels).
** Click the download button to download the data. "coad_cptac_2019.tar.gz". For this case, "wc -l" shows 31263 rows for phosphoprotein quantification data and 8067 rows for protein quantification data.
* [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/events/slides/1307/GATKwh1-BP-3-Base_recalibration.pdf Base Quality Score Recalibration] Input=BAM, known sites, Output=BAM.
<pre>
* [https://www.broadinstitute.org/gatk/guide/tooldocs/org_broadinstitute_gatk_tools_walkers_genotyper_UnifiedGenotyper.php UnifiedGenotyper] for variant call.
$ head -5 data_phosphoprotein_quantification.txt' | cut -f 1-5
* https://wikis.utexas.edu/display/bioiteam/Variant+calling+with+GATK
ENTITY_STABLE_ID GENE_SYMBOL PHOSPHOSITE 01CO005 01CO006
* [http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1471-2407-13-55.pdf Identification of somatic and germline mutations using whole exome sequencing of congenital acute lymphoblastic leukemia]: a paper that has used GATK for germline and somatic analyses
AAAS_pS495 AAAS pS495 NA -0.365
* http://gatkforums.broadinstitute.org/discussion/3892/the-gatk-best-practices-for-variant-calling-on-rnaseq-in-full-detail
AAAS_pS525 AAAS pS525 NA NA
* [https://www.qiagenbioinformatics.com/blog/clinical/new-plugin-to-support-your-bwa-gatk-pipelines/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=06.2016&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiWkdWa09UYzRZakkwWWpBNCIsInQiOiJ3Z2VtODJTTGpTTzltbGQ0ZVFyMXJRZWNNaHhyN3ZacCtKMnlwWjQrNVdJcGttN3lvQTN6TFlBRVF1cHFFY3lzT3FjRzA1Tk5jcllReCtSTlhCaDlcL1ppSHQ5eTl4SjRrRk1uSDlCQWJMTTg9In0%3D New plugin to support your BWA-GATK pipelines for '''Biomedical Genomics Server Solution''']
AAAS_pS541 AAAS pS541 -0.24 NA
AAED1_pS12 AAED1 pS12 -0.46 -0.424


==== dbSNP file ====
# R
For running GATK best practices, dbsnp file has to be downloaded using the GATK version (with 'chr') for Ensembl but non-GATK (without 'chr') for UCSC. See [[Anders2013#GATK|Anders -> GATK]].
> summary(x[, 4], na.rm = T)
  Min. 1st Qu.  Median    Mean 3rd Qu.    Max.    NA's
-5.776  -1.095  -0.608  -0.690  -0.213  2.383  20378
> summary(as.vector(as.matrix(x[, 4:5])), na.rm = T)
  Min. 1st Qu.  Median    Mean 3rd Qu.    Max.    NA's
  -5.78  -0.81  -0.36  -0.43    0.00    3.13  36304
</pre>
[[File:Cbioportal cptac.png|350px]]


* ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/snp/organisms/human_9606_b147_GRCh37p13/VCF/GATK/ common_all_xxxxxx.vcf.gz and tbi files
== Metabolomics Analysis ==
* ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/snp/organisms/human_9606_b147_GRCh38p2/VCF/GATK/ common_all_xxxxxx.vcf.gz and tbi files
* [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166526X18300655#s0010 Chapter Fourteen - An Overview of Metabolomics Data Analysis: Current Tools and Future Perspectives] 2018
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9032224/ Guide to Metabolomics Analysis: A Bioinformatics Workflow] 2022
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-59400-0 Integrative analysis of metabolomics and transcriptomics to uncover biomarkers in sepsis] 2024
* [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0141813023054624 A comprehensive review of genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomic insights into the differentiation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa from the planktonic to biofilm state: A multi-omics approach] 2024
* R
** [https://metid.tidymass.org/ metid], [https://www.tidymass.org/metid/articles/multiple_databases.html Identify peak tables with multiple databases], [https://metid.tidymass.org/articles/public_databases Database provided for metid],https://hmdb.ca/downloads HMDB database
** [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/MetID.html MetID]
** [https://rformassspectrometry.github.io/metaRbolomics-book/0207-R_packages_for_metabolomics-Network_analysis_and_biochemical_pathways.html The MetaRbolomics book]
** [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformaticsadvances/article/2/1/vbac067/6702008 metabolomicsR: a streamlined workflow to analyze metabolomic data in R] 2022.
*** [https://github.com/xia-lab/MetaboAnalystR MetaboAnalystR 4.0: a unified LC-MS workflow for global metabolomics]
*** [https://www.metaboanalyst.ca/docs/RTutorial.xhtml MetaboAnalyst6.0 - from raw spectra to biomarkers, patterns, functions and systems biology]
** [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/omu/index.html omu] : A Metabolomics Analysis Tool for Intuitive Figures and Convenient Metadata Collection
** FELLA
*** [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41540-023-00274-9 High-throughput metabolomics for the design and validation of a diauxic shift model] 2023
*** [https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2023/fo/d3fo00997a Metabolic regulation and antihyperglycemic properties of diet-derived PGG through transcriptomic and metabolomic profiling] 2023
*** [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9140352/ Multiple testing correction for p.scores in FELLA]. Can those p-scores be used as p-values? Yes.
*** [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/119264/ How to obtain the KEGG IDs that mapped to a pathway]
*** [https://github.com/b2slab/FELLA/issues/24 How to disable module, enzyme, and gene names in the network?]
*** [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/116881/ consulting about the FELLA package]
*** Make sure to use '''internalDir = TRUE''' option in '''buildDataFromGraph()''' so the database can be shown in the database dropdown menu when we use '''launchApp()''',
*** https://github.com/b2slab/FELLA/blob/master/R/plotGraph.R


==== intervals file ====
=== Enzyme ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://www.khanacademy.org/science/biology/gene-expression-central-dogma/central-dogma-transcription/a/one-gene-one-enzyme-hypothesis One gene, one enzyme]. ''The one gene, one enzyme hypothesis is the idea that each gene encodes a single enzyme. Today, we know that this idea is generally (but not exactly) correct.''
java -Xmx10g -jar /opt/SeqTools/bin/gatk/GenomeAnalysisTK.jar \
<pre>
      -T RealignerTargetCreator -R /home/brb/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa \
library(KEGGREST)
      -o  /home/brb/SeqTestdata/usefulvcf/hg19/gatk/BRB-SeqTools_indels_only.intervals \
      -known  /home/brb/SeqTestdata/usefulvcf/hg19/gatk/common_all_20160601.vcf  -nt 11
</syntaxhighlight>


==== Missing mapping quality score ====
# Step 1: Retrieve KO entries associated with the enzyme
https://www.biostars.org/p/79367/#79369
enzyme_id <- "ec:2.7.1.1"
ko_entries <- keggLink("ko", enzyme_id)


On GSE48215 case, I got 34 missing MQ from bwa + gatk but no missing MQ from bwa + samtools???
# Step 2: Retrieve genes associated with the KO entries
ko_ids <- sub("ko:", "", ko_entries)  # Extract KO IDs
gene_links <- lapply(ko_ids, function(ko) keggLink("genes", paste0("ko:", ko)))


=== [https://github.com/ekg/freebayes freebayes] ===
# Combine results into a data frame
The program gave different errors for some real datasets downloaded from GEO.
genes_df <- do.call(rbind, lapply(names(gene_links), function(ko) {
  data.frame(KO = ko, Gene = gene_links[[ko]], stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
}))


A small test data included in the software works.
# View the first few rows of the genes data frame
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
head(genes_df)
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github$ sudo apt-get update
</pre>
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github$ sudo apt-get install cmake
* '''Enzymes''' are the proteins that are encoded by genes.
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github$ git clone --recursive git://github.com/ekg/freebayes.git
* Gene → Transcription → mRNA → Translation → Enzyme.
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github$ cd freebayes/
** A '''gene''' is a segment of DNA that contains the instructions for making a protein. It's like a blueprint or a recipe for creating a specific protein.  
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github/freebayes$ make
** '''Transcription''': When a gene is "turned on" or expressed, the DNA sequence is transcribed into a complementary RNA molecule called messenger RNA (mRNA). This process is like copying the recipe from the DNA blueprint.
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github/freebayes$ make test  # Got some errors. So don't worry to 'make test'
** '''mRNA''': The mRNA molecule carries the genetic information from the DNA to the ribosome, which is the site of protein synthesis.
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github/freebayes/test/tiny$ ../../bin/freebayes -f q.fa NA12878.chr22.tiny.bam > tmp.vcf
** '''Translation''': The mRNA sequence is translated into a sequence of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. This process is like following the recipe to assemble the ingredients into a final product.
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github/freebayes/test/tiny$ ls -lt
** '''Enzyme''': The resulting '''protein''', in this case, is an enzyme. Enzymes are biological molecules that catalyze specific chemical reactions, allowing them to speed up or facilitate various biological processes. An enzyme is a type of protein, but not all proteins are enzymes.
total 360
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb  15812 Oct  9 10:52 tmp.vcf
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb 287213 Oct  9 09:33 NA12878.chr22.tiny.bam
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb    96 Oct  9 09:33 NA12878.chr22.tiny.bam.bai
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb  16307 Oct  9 09:33 NA12878.chr22.tiny.giab.vcf
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb  12565 Oct  9 09:33 q.fa
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb    16 Oct  9 09:33 q.fa.fai
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb  2378 Oct  9 09:33 q_spiked.vcf.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb    91 Oct  9 09:33 q_spiked.vcf.gz.tbi
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb  4305 Oct  9 09:33 q.vcf.gz
-rw-rw-r-- 1 brb brb    102 Oct  9 09:33 q.vcf.gz.tbi
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github/freebayes/test/tiny$ ~/github/samtools/samtools view NA12878.chr22.tiny.bam | wc -l
3333
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github/freebayes/test/tiny$ wc -l tmp.vcf
76 tmp.vcf
brb@brb-P45T-A:~/github/freebayes/test/tiny$ wc -l q.fa
207 q.fa
</syntaxhighlight>


To debug the code, we can
== Protein-protein interaction/PPI ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<ul>
../../bin/freebayes -f q.fa NA12878.chr22.tiny.bam > tmpFull.out 2>&1
<li>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein%E2%80%93protein_interaction
</syntaxhighlight>
<li>[https://www.r-bloggers.com/2012/06/obtaining-a-protein-protein-interaction-network-for-a-gene-list-in-r/ Obtaining a protein-protein interaction network for a gene list in R] and other related posts.
Then compare tmp.vcf and tmpFull.out files. We see
<li>[https://a-little-book-of-r-for-bioinformatics.readthedocs.io/en/latest/src/chapter11.html Protein-Protein Interaction Graphs]
* total sites: 12280
<li>[https://downloads.thebiogrid.org/BioGRID/ BioGRID], [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/pro.3978 The BioGRID database: A comprehensive biomedical resource of curated protein, genetic, and chemical interactions]
* the first variant call happens at position 186. Look at tmpFull.out file, we see most of positions just show 3 lines in the output but variants like position 186 show a lot of output (line 643 to 736).
<pre>
* the output 'processing position XXX' was generated from AlleleParser:toNextPosition() which was called by AlleleParser::getNextAlleles() which was called by freebayes.cpp::main() line 126, the while() loop.
$ wc -l BIOGRID-ALL-4.4.214.tab.txt                                                                              12:07:59
2454000 BIOGRID-ALL-4.4.214.tab.txt
</pre>
<pre>
R> x <- read.delim("BIOGRID-ALL-4.4.214.tab.txt", skip=35, nrows=10)
R> dim(x)
[1] 10 11
R> x[1:2, ]
  INTERACTOR_A INTERACTOR_B OFFICIAL_SYMBOL_A OFFICIAL_SYMBOL_B
1      ETG6416      ETG2318            MAP2K4              FLNC
2    ETG84665        ETG88              MYPN            ACTN2
                                                      ALIASES_FOR_A
1 JNKK|JNKK1|MAPKK4|MEK4|MKK4|PRKMK4|SAPKK-1|SAPKK1|SEK1|SERK1|SKK1
2                                            CMD1DD|CMH22|MYOP|RCM4
                            ALIASES_FOR_B EXPERIMENTAL_SYSTEM          SOURCE
1 ABP-280|ABP280A|ABPA|ABPL|FLN2|MFM5|MPD4          Two-hybrid  Marti A (1997)
2                                  CMD1AA          Two-hybrid  Bang ML (2001)
  PUBMED_ID ORGANISM_A_ID ORGANISM_B_ID
1  9006895          9606          9606
2  11309420          9606          9606
</pre>
<li>[https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/38/24/5390/6769888 Defining the extent of gene function using ROC curvature] 2022
<li>https://string-db.org/, [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/STRINGdb.html STRINGdb] R package. When using the web service, remember to
* minimum required interaction score: 0.90 instead of the default 0.40
* hide disconnected nodes in the network
<li>Cytoscrape
* [https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/111001011 Cytoscape之stringAPP蛋白互作分析详解]
* [https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/455182867 STRING网站+Cytoscape软件制作精美蛋白互作网络图(PPI)]
</ul>


=== [http://wiki.bits.vib.be/index.php/Varscan2 Varscan2] ===
== Drug-Drug Interactions ==
* http://dkoboldt.github.io/varscan/
[https://appsilon.com/drug-drug-interactions-r-shiny/ Understanding Drug-Drug Interactions Using R Shiny]
* https://github.com/dkoboldt/varscan


=== vcftools ===
= Journals =
https://vcftools.github.io/examples.html
* Impact factor: [https://www.bioxbio.com/subject/medicine Top Journals in medicine]
* [https://www.scijournal.org/ SCI Journal]


This toolset can be used to perform the following operations on VCF files:
== Biometrical Journal ==
* https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/15214036
* [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/15214036/homepage/forauthors.html Author's Guideline]
* [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/results/global-subject-codes/st30?target=topic-title-results&startPage=&PubType=journal Biostatistics (topic) journals] from Wiley


* Filter out specific variants
== [https://academic.oup.com/biostatistics/issue Biostatistics] ==
* Compare files
* Summarize variants
* Convert to different file types
* Validate and merge files
* Create intersections and subsets of variants


<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
== [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics Bioinformatics] ==
wget http://sourceforge.net/projects/vcftools/files/vcftools_0.1.12b.tar.gz/download \
[https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/search-results?f_TocHeadingTitle=GENOME%20ANALYSIS Genome Analysis] section
    -o vcftools_0.1.12b.tar.gz
tar -xzvf vcftools_0.1.12b.tar.gz
sudo mv vcftools_0.1.12b /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/
export PERL5LIB=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/perl/
/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/
make
export PATH=$PATH:/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/bin
ls bin
# fill-aa      vcf-annotate  vcf-convert      vcf-phased-join  vcf-subset
# fill-an-ac    vcf-compare    vcf-fix-ploidy  vcf-query        vcftools
# fill-fs      vcf-concat    vcf-indel-stats  vcf-shuffle-cols  vcf-to-tab
# fill-ref-md5  vcf-consensus  vcf-isec        vcf-sort          vcf-tstv
# man1          vcf-contrast  vcf-merge        vcf-stats        vcf-validator
</syntaxhighlight>
Some example
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
$ cd ~/SRP032789
$ vcftools --vcf GSM1261016_IP2-50_var.flt.vcf


VCFtools - v0.1.12b
== [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/  BMC Bioinformatics] ==
(C) Adam Auton and Anthony Marcketta 2009


Parameters as interpreted:
== [https://www.biorxiv.org/ BioRxiv] ==
--vcf GSM1261016_IP2-50_var.flt.vcf


After filtering, kept 1 out of 1 Individuals
== PLOS ==
After filtering, kept 193609 out of a possible 193609 Sites
Run Time = 1.00 seconds


$ wc -l GSM1261016_IP2-50_var.flt.vcf
== MDPI ==
193636 GSM1261016_IP2-50_var.flt.vcf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MDPI, [https://twitter.com/MKarhulahti/status/1723296939649683689 All MDPI, Frontiers & Hindawi] journals planned to be erased (level 0) from Finnish academic assessment by end of 2024.


$ vcf-indel-stats < GSM1261016_IP2-50_var.flt.vcf > out.txt
= Software =
Use of uninitialized value in pattern match (m//) at /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/bin/vcf-indel-stats line 49.
== BRB-SeqTools ==
Use of uninitialized value in concatenation (.) or string at /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/bin/vcf-indel-stats line 49.
https://brb.nci.nih.gov/seqtools/
<: No such file or directory at /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/bin/vcf-indel-stats line 18.
main::error('<: No such file or directory') called at /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/bin/vcf-indel-stats line 50
main::init_regions('HASH(0xd77cb8)') called at /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/bin/vcf-indel-stats line 71
main::do_stats('HASH(0xd77cb8)') called at /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/vcftools_0.1.12b/bin/vcf-indel-stats line 9
</pre>


To compare two vcf files, see https://vcftools.github.io/documentation.html
== [http://mev.tm4.org/#/welcome WebMeV] ==
<pre>
* [http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/77/21/e11 WebMeV: A Cloud Platform for Analyzing and Visualizing Cancer Genomic Data]
./vcftools --vcf input_data.vcf --diff other_data.vcf --out compare
</pre>


=== Online course on Variant calling ===
== GeneSpring ==
* edX: HarvardX: PH525.6x Case Study: Variant Discovery and Genotyping. Course notes is at their [https://github.com/hbc/edX/blob/master/edX_Notes.md Github] page.
RNA-Seq


== Variant Annotation ==
== CCBR Exome Pipeliner ==
See also the paper [http://bib.oxfordjournals.org/content/15/2/256.abstract A survey of tools for variant analysis of next-generation genome sequencing data].
https://ccbr.github.io/Pipeliner/


=== [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/SNP/ dbSNP] ===
== Tibanna ==
[https://support.bioconductor.org/p/33140/ SNPlocs data R package for Human]. Some [http://grokbase.com/t/r/bioconductor/131gt2jyfg/bioc-problem-locating-snp-by-rsid-for-snplocs-hsapiens-dbsnp-20120608-package-bioconductor-x clarification] about SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP.20120608 package.
[https://data.4dnucleome.org/ Tibanna] helps you run your genomic pipelines on Amazon cloud (AWS). It is used by the 4DN DCIC (4D Nucleome Data Coordination and Integration Center) to process data. Tibanna supports CWL/WDL (w/ docker), Snakemake (w/ conda) and custom Docker/shell command.
<pre>
> library(BSgenome)
> available.SNPs()
[1] "SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP141.GRCh38"   
[2] "SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP142.GRCh37"   
[3] "SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP.20090506"   
[4] "SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP.20100427"   
[5] "SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP.20101109"   
[6] "SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP.20110815"   
[7] "SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP.20111119"   
[8] "SNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP.20120608"   
[9] "XtraSNPlocs.Hsapiens.dbSNP141.GRCh38"
</pre>


[https://support.bioconductor.org/p/30078/ Query dbSNP]
== [https://github.com/PMBio/MOFA MOFA]: Multi-Omics Factor Analysis ==


An example:
== WGCNA ==
<pre>
* It uses a network method to create distance matrix for genes. We can further to use Hierarchical clustering to create groups/modules/clusters of genes.
wget https://github.com/samtools/bcftools/releases/download/1.2/bcftools-1.2.tar.bz2
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weighted_correlation_network_analysis Weighted gene '''co-expression''' network analysis]
sudo tar jxf bcftools-1.2.tar.bz2 -C /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/
* [https://youtu.be/OpWEHazyQLA Webinar #7 – Introduction to Weighted Gene Co-expression Network Analysis] (video)
cd /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/bcftools-1.2/
sudo make


wget https://github.com/samtools/htslib/releases/download/1.2.1/htslib-1.2.1.tar.bz2
== Benchmarking ==
sudo tar jxf htslib-1.2.1.tar.bz2 -C /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/
[https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-019-1738-8 Essential guidelines for computational method benchmarking]
cd /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/htslib-1.2.1/
sudo make  # create tabix, htsfile, bgzip commands


export bdge_bowtie_PATH=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/bowtie2-2.2.1
= Simulation =
export bdge_tophat_PATH=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/tophat-2.0.11.Linux_x86_64
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/128762/ NGS reads simulation]
export bdge_samtools_PATH=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/samtools-0.1.19
export PATH=$bdge_bowtie_PATH:$bdge_samtools_PATH:$bdge_tophat_PATH:$PATH
export PATH=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/bcftools-1.2/:$PATH
export PATH=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/htslib-1.2.1/:$PATH


wget ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/snp/organisms/human_9606/VCF/common_all_20150603.vcf.gz.tbi
== Simulate RNA-Seq ==
wget ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/snp/organisms/human_9606/VCF/common_all_20150603.vcf.gz
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RNA-Seq_bioinformatics_tools#RNA-Seq_simulators
cd TNBC1
* https://popmodels.cancercontrol.cancer.gov/gsr/packages/
mv ~/Downloads/common_all_20150603.vcf.gz* .
bgzip -c var.raw.vcf > var.raw.vcf.gz
tabix var.raw.vcf.gz
bcftools annotate -c ID -a common_all_20150603.vcf.gz var.raw.vcf.gz > var_annot.vcf
</pre>


Any found in dbSNP?
=== [http://maq.sourceforge.net Maq] ===
<pre>
Used by [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/25/9/1105/203994/TopHat-discovering-splice-junctions-with-RNA-Seq TopHat: discovering splice junctions with RNA-Seq]
grep -c 'rs[0-9]' raw_snps.vcf
</pre>


=== ANNOVAR ===
=== BEERS/Grant G.R. 2011 ===
[http://annovar.openbioinformatics.org/en/latest/ ANNOVAR] and the web based interface to ANNOVAR [http://wannovar.usc.edu/index.php wANNOVAR]. ANNOVAR can annotate genetic variants using
http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/27/18/2518.long#sec-2. The simulation method is called [http://cbil.upenn.edu/BEERS/ BEERS] and it was used in the [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/29/1/15/272537/STAR-ultrafast-universal-RNA-seq-aligner STAR] software paper.
* Gene-based annotation
* Region-based annotation
* Filter-based annotation
* Other functionalities


Note that
For the command line options of <'''reads_simulator.pl'''> and more details about the config files that are needed/prepared by BEERS, see [https://gist.github.com/arraytools/dd62bcca60cc36a1d1769d1a4a7d226b this gist].
* It is correct to use the original download link from the email to download the latest version.
* annovar folder needs to be placed under a directory with write permission
* If we run annovar with a new reference genome, the code will need to download some database. When annovar is downloading the database, the cpu is resting so the whole process looks idling.
* Annovar will print out a warning with information about changes if there is a new version available.
* BRB-SeqTools (''grep "\.pl" preprocessgui/*.*'') uses '''annotate_variation.pl''' (5), '''convert2annovar.pl''' (2), '''table_annovar.pl''' (4), '''variants_reduction.pl''' (1).
* In [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/ANNOVAR.html nih/biowulf], it creates ''$ANNOVAR_HOME'' and ''$ANNOVAR_DATA'' environment variables.
* To check the version of my local copy
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
~/annovar/annotate_variation.pl
</syntaxhighlight>
* Contents of annovar
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l ~/annovar/
total 476
-rwxr-xr-x 1 brb brb 212090 Mar  7 14:59 annotate_variation.pl
-rwxr-xr-x 1 brb brb  13589 Mar  7 14:59 coding_change.pl
-rwxr-xr-x 1 brb brb 166582 Mar  7 14:59 convert2annovar.pl
drwxr-xr-x 2 brb brb  4096 Jun 18  2015 example
drwxr-xr-x 3 brb brb  4096 Mar 21 09:59 humandb
-rwxr-xr-x 1 brb brb  19419 Mar  7 14:59 retrieve_seq_from_fasta.pl
-rwxr-xr-x 1 brb brb  34682 Mar  7 14:59 table_annovar.pl
-rwxr-xr-x 1 brb brb  21774 Mar  7 14:59 variants_reduction.pl
brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -lh ~/annovar/humandb | head
total 36G
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  927 Mar 21 09:59 annovar_downdb.log
drwxr-xr-x 2 brb brb 4.0K Jun 18  2015 genometrax-sample-files-gff
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  20K Mar  7 14:59 GRCh37_MT_ensGeneMrna.fa
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 3.1K Mar  7 14:59 GRCh37_MT_ensGene.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.4G Dec 15  2014 hg19_AFR.sites.2014_10.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  87M Dec 15  2014 hg19_AFR.sites.2014_10.txt.idx
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 2.8G Dec 15  2014 hg19_ALL.sites.2014_10.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  89M Dec 15  2014 hg19_ALL.sites.2014_10.txt.idx
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 978M Dec 15  2014 hg19_AMR.sites.2014_10.txt
</syntaxhighlight>


=== [http://snpeff.sourceforge.net/ SnpEff & SnpSift] ===
This can generate paired end data but they are in one FASTA file.
* http://snpeff.sourceforge.net/SnpEff.html (basic information)
* http://snpeff.sourceforge.net/SnpEff_manual.html (Manual)
* http://snpeff.sourceforge.net/protocol.html (6 examples)
* https://wiki.hpcc.msu.edu/display/Bioinfo/SnpEff+-+The+Basics
* https://docs.uabgrid.uab.edu/wiki/Galaxy_DNA-Seq_Tutorial
* http://www.genome.gov/Pages/Research/DIR/DIRNewsFeatures/Next-Gen101/Teer_VariantAnnotation.pdf
* http://veda.cs.uiuc.edu/course2013/pres/fields/lab/Variant_Calling_v1.pptx (if you click the link, chrome will dl the pptx file)
* In BRB-SeqTools, '''snpEff.jar''' (2) and '''SnpSift.jar''' (5)
* NIH/biowulf also has installed [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/snpEff.html snpEff & SnpSift]


==== SnpEff: Genetic variant '''annotation''' and '''effect prediction''' toolbox ====
# Input: vcf & reference genome database (eg GRCh38.79).
# Output: vcf & <snpEff_summary.html> & < snpEff_genes.txt> files.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
wget http://iweb.dl.sourceforge.net/project/snpeff/snpEff_latest_core.zip
$ sudo apt-get install cpanminus
sudo unzip snpEff_latest_core.zip -d /opt/RNA-Seq/bin
$ sudo cpanm Math::Random
export PATH=/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/snpEff/:$PATH
$ wget http://cbil.upenn.edu/BEERS/beers.tar
$
$ tar -xvf beers.tar      # two perl files <make_config_files_for_subset_of_gene_ids.pl> and <reads_simulator.pl>
$
$ cd ~/Downloads/
$ mkdir beers_output 
$ mkdir beers_simulator_refseq && cd "$_"
$ wget http://itmat.rum.s3.amazonaws.com/simulator_config_refseq.tar.gz
$ tar xzvf simulator_config_refseq.tar.gz
$ ls -lth
total 1.4G
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  44M Sep 16  2010 simulator_config_featurequantifications_refseq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 7.7M Sep 15  2010 simulator_config_geneinfo_refseq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 106M Sep 15  2010 simulator_config_geneseq_refseq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.3G Sep 15  2010 simulator_config_intronseq_refseq
$ cd ~/Downloads/
$ perl reads_simulator.pl 100 testbeers \
  -configstem refseq \
  -customcfgdir ~/Downloads/beers_simulator_refseq \
  -outdir ~/Downloads/beers_output


# Next we want to download snpEff database.
$ ls -lh beers_output
# 1. Need to pay attention the database is snpEff version dependent
total 3.9M
# 2. Instead of using the command line (very slow < 1MB/s),
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.8K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
#  java -jar /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/snpEff/snpEff.jar databases | grep GRCh
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.2M Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
#  java -jar /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/snpEff/snpEff.jar download GRCh38.79
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.6K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_junctions-crossed_testbeers.txt
# we just go to the file using the the web browser
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 2.7M Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_substitutions_testbeers.txt
#  http://sourceforge.net/projects/snpeff/files/databases/v4_1/  # 525MB
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 6.3K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_testbeers.bed
# 3. the top folder of the zip file is called 'data'. We will need to unzip it to the snpEff directory.
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  31K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_testbeers.cig
#  That is, snpEff +- data
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  22K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
#                  |- examples
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  584 Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_testbeers.log
#                  |- galaxy
#                  +- scripts
mv ~/Downloads/snpEff_v4_1_GRCh38.79.zip .
unzip snpEff_v4_1GRCh38.79.zip
sudo java -Xmx4G -jar /opt/RNA-Seq/bin/snpEff/snpEff.jar \
                      -i vcf -o vcf GRCh38.79 var_annot.vcf > var_annot_snpEff.vcf


brb@T3600 ~ $ ls -l /opt/SeqTools/bin/snpEff/
$ wc -l simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
total 44504
102 simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
drwxrwxr-x 5 brb brb    4096 May  5 11:24 data
$ head -4 simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
drwxr-xr-x 2 brb brb    4096 Feb 17 16:37 examples
seq.1 GENE.5600
drwxr-xr-x 3 brb brb    4096 Feb 17 16:37 galaxy
seq.2 GENE.35506
drwxr-xr-x 3 brb brb    4096 Feb 17 16:37 scripts
seq.3 GENE.506
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  6138594 Dec 5 10:49 snpEff.config
seq.4 GENE.34922
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 20698856 Dec  5 10:49 snpEff.jar
$ tail -4 simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 18712032 Dec  5 10:49 SnpSift.jar
seq.97 GENE.4197
</syntaxhighlight>
seq.98 GENE.8763
seq.99 GENE.19573
seq.100 GENE.18830
$ wc -l simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
36131 simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
$ head -2 simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
chr1:6052304-6052531 25 1 G
chr2:73899436-73899622 141 3 ATA
$ tail -2 simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
chr4:68619532-68621804 1298 -2 AA
chr21:32554738-32554962 174 1 T
$ wc -l simulated_reads_substitutions_testbeers.txt
71678 simulated_reads_substitutions_testbeers.txt
$ head -2 simulated_reads_substitutions_testbeers.txt
chr22:50902963-50903167 50903077 G->A
chr1:6052304-6052531 6052330 G->C
$ wc -l simulated_reads_junctions-crossed_testbeers.txt
49   simulated_reads_junctions-crossed_testbeers.txt
$ head -2 simulated_reads_junctions-crossed_testbeers.txt
seq.1a chrX:49084601-49084713
seq.1b chrX:49084909-49086682


'''Output file''' (compare ''cosmic_dbsnp_rem.vcf'' and ''snpeff_anno.vcf'' at [https://github.com/arraytools/vc-annotation/tree/master/snpeff/tmp here]):
$ cat beers_output/simulated_reads_testbeers.log
* add 5 lines at the header. Search "ID=ANN" at [https://github.com/arraytools/vc-annotation/blob/master/snpeff/tmp/snpeff_anno.vcf snpeff_anno.vcf]
Simulator run: 'testbeers'
<pre>
started: Thu Mar 16 15:25:39 EDT 2017
##SnpEffVersion="4.2 (build 2015-12-05), by Pablo Cingolani"
num reads: 100
##SnpEffCmd="SnpEff  -no-downstream -no-upstream ....
readlength: 100
##INFO=<ID=ANN,Number=.,Type=String,Description="Functional annotations: 'Allele | Annotation | Annotation_Impact | Gene_Name | Gene_ID | Feature_Type | Feature_ID |...
substitution frequency: 0.001
##INFO=<ID=LOF,Number=.,Type=String,Description="Predicted loss of function effects for this variant. ...
indel frequency: 0.0005
##INFO=<ID=NMD,Number=.,Type=String,Description="Predicted nonsense mediated decay effects for this variant. ...
base error: 0.005
</pre>
low quality tail length: 10
* added functional annotations '''ANN''' in the INFO field. See an example at [http://snpeff.sourceforge.net/SnpEff_manual.html Basic example: Annotate using SnpEff]
percent of tails that are low quality: 0
<pre>
quality of low qulaity tails: 0.8
ANN=A|missense_variant|MODERATE|ISG15|ISG15|transcript|NM_005101.3|protein_coding|2/2|c.248G>A|p.Ser83Asn|355/666|248/498|83/165||
percent of alt splice forms: 0.2
</pre>
number of alt splice forms per gene: 2
stem: refseq
sum of gene counts: 3,886,863,063
sum of intron counts = 1,304,815,198
sum of intron counts = 2,365,472,596
intron frequency: 0.355507598105262
padded intron frequency: 0.52453796437909
finished at Thu Mar 16 15:25:58 EDT 2017


==== SnpSift: SnpSift helps filtering and manipulating genomic annotated files ====
$ wc -l simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
Once you annotated your files using SnpEff, you can use SnpSift to help you filter large genomic datasets in order to find the most significant variants
400 simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
$ head simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
>seq.1a
CGAAGAAGGACCCAAAGATGACAAGGCTCACAAAGTACACCCAGGGCAGTTCATACCCCATGGCATCTTGCATCCAGTAGAGCACATCGGTCCAGCCTTC
>seq.1b
GCTCGAGCTGTTCCTTGGACGAATGCACAAGACGTGCTACTTCCTGGGATCCGACATGGAAGCGGAGGAGGACCCATCGCCCTGTGCATCTTCGGGATCA
>seq.2a
GCCCCAGCAGAGCCGGGTAAAGATCAGGAGGGTTAGAAAAAATCAGCGCTTCCTCTTCCTCCAAGGCAGCCAGACTCTTTAACAGGTCCGGAGGAAGCAG
>seq.2b
ATGAAGCCTTTTCCCATGGAGCCATATAACCATAATCCCTCAGAAGTCAAGGTCCCAGAATTCTACTGGGATTCTTCCTACAGCATGGCTGATAACAGAT
>seq.3a
CCCCAGAGGAGCGCCACCTGTCCAAGATGCAGCAGAACGGCTACGAAAATCCAACCTACAAGTTCTTTGAGCAGATGCAGAACTAGACCCCCGCCACAGC


'''[http://snpeff.sourceforge.net/SnpSift.html#filter SnpSift filter]'''
# Take a look at the true coordinates
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ head -4 simulated_reads_testbeers.bed # one-based coords and contains both endpoints of each span
cat "$outputDir/tmp/$tmpfd/snpeff_anno.vcf" | \
chrX 49084529 49084601 +
    java -jar "$seqtools_snpeff/SnpSift.jar" \
chrX 49084713 49084739 +
      filter "(ANN[*].BIOTYPE = 'protein_coding') | (ANN[*].EFFECT has 'splice')"  \
chrX 49084863 49084909 +
    > "$outputDir/tmp/$tmpfd/snpeff_proteincoding.vcf"
chrX 49086682 49086734 +
$ head -4 simulated_reads_testbeers.cig # has a cigar string representation of the mapping coordinates, and a more human readable representation of the coordinates
seq.1a chrX 49084529 73M111N27M 49084529-49084601, 49084713-49084739 + CGAAGAAGGACCCAAAGATGACAAGGCTCACAAAGTACACCCAGGGCAGTTCATACCCCATGGCATCTTGCATCCAGTAGAGCACATCGGTCCAGCCTTC
seq.1b chrX 49084863 47M1772N53M 49084863-49084909, 49086682-49086734 - GCTCGAGCTGTTCCTTGGACGAATGCACAAGACGTGCTACTTCCTGGGATCCGACATGGAAGCGGAGGAGGACCCATCGCCCTGTGCATCTTCGGGATCA
seq.2a chr1 183516256 100M 183516256-183516355 - GCCCCAGCAGAGCCGGGTAAAGATCAGGAGGGTTAGAAAAAATCAGCGCTTCCTCTTCCTCCAAGGCAGCCAGACTCTTTAACAGGTCCGGAGGAAGCAG
seq.2b chr1 183515275 100M 183515275-183515374 + ATGAAGCCTTTTCCCATGGAGCCATATAACCATAATCCCTCAGAAGTCAAGGTCCCAGAATTCTACTGGGATTCTTCCTACAGCATGGCTGATAACAGAT
$ wc -l simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
400 simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
$ wc -l simulated_reads_testbeers.bed
247 simulated_reads_testbeers.bed
$ wc -l simulated_reads_testbeers.cig
200 simulated_reads_testbeers.cig
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


the output file (compare snpeff_anno.vcf and snpeff_proteincoding.vcf at https://github.com/arraytools/vc-annotation/tree/master/snpeff/tmp here]
=== [http://sammeth.net/confluence/display/SIM/Home Flux] Sammeth 2010 ===
* the header will add 3 lines
<pre>
##SnpSiftVersion="SnpSift 4.2 (build 2015-12-05), by Pablo Cingolani"
##SnpSiftCmd="SnpSift filter '(ANN[*].BIOTYPE = 'protein_coding') | (ANN[*].EFFECT has 'splice')'"
##FILTER=<ID=SnpSift,Description="SnpSift 4.2 ...
</pre>
* KEEP variants satisfying the filter criterion (In the ANN field, BIOTYPE=protein_coding and EFFECT=splice). So it will reduce the variants size. No more fields are added.


'''[http://snpeff.sourceforge.net/SnpSift.html#dbNSFP SnpSift dbNSFP]'''
=== [http://www.ebi.ac.uk/goldman-srv/simNGS/ SimNGS] ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
java -jar "$seqtools_snpeff/SnpSift.jar" dbNSFP -f $dbnsfpField \
    -v -db "$dbnsfpFile" "$outputDir/tmp/$tmpfd/nonsyn_splicing2.vcf" \
    > "$outputDir/tmp/$tmpfd/nonsyn_splicing_dbnsfp.vcf"
</syntaxhighlight>
Compare ''nonsyn_splicing2.vcf'' and ''[https://github.com/arraytools/vc-annotation/blob/master/snpeff/tmp/nonsyn_splicing_dbnsfp.vcf nonsyn_splicing_dbnsfp.vcf]'' at [https://github.com/arraytools/vc-annotation/tree/master/snpeff/tmp github]
output file
* the header adds 29 lines.
<pre>
##SnpSiftCmd="SnpSift dbnsfp -f SIFT_score,SIFT_pred, ...
##INFO=<ID=dbNSFP_GERP___RS,Number=A,Type=Float,Description="Field 'GERP++_RS' from dbNSFP">
##INFO=<ID=dbNSFP_CADD_phred,Number=A,Type=Float,Description="Field 'CADD_phred' from dbNSFP">
...
</pre>
* the INFO field will add
<pre>
dbNSFP_CADD_phred=2.276;dbNSFP_CADD_raw=-0.033441;dbNSFP_FATHMM_pred=.,.,T; ...
</pre>


'''[http://snpeff.sourceforge.net/SnpSift.html#Extract SnpSift extractFields]'''
=== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/SimSeq/index.html SimSeq] ===
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >java -jar "$seqtools_snpeff/SnpSift.jar" extractFields \
[http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/02/26/bioinformatics.btv124.abstract Bioinformatics]
    -s "," -e "." "$outputDir/tmp/$tmpfd/nonsyn_splicing_dbnsfp.vcf" CHROM POS ID REF ALT "ANN[0].EFFECT" "ANN[0].IMPACT" "ANN[0].GENE" "ANN[0].GENEID" "ANN[0].FEATURE" "ANN[0].FEATUREID" "ANN[0].BIOTYPE" "ANN[0].HGVS_C" "ANN[0].HGVS_P" dbNSFP_SIFT_score dbNSFP_SIFT_pred dbNSFP_Polyphen2_HDIV_score dbNSFP_Polyphen2_HDIV_pred dbNSFP_Polyphen2_HVAR_score dbNSFP_Polyphen2_HVAR_pred dbNSFP_LRT_score dbNSFP_LRT_pred dbNSFP_MutationTaster_score dbNSFP_MutationTaster_pred dbNSFP_MutationAssessor_score dbNSFP_MutationAssessor_pred dbNSFP_FATHMM_score dbNSFP_FATHMM_pred dbNSFP_PROVEAN_score dbNSFP_PROVEAN_pred dbNSFP_VEST3_score dbNSFP_CADD_raw dbNSFP_CADD_phred dbNSFP_MetaSVM_score dbNSFP_MetaSVM_pred dbNSFP_MetaLR_score dbNSFP_MetaLR_pred dbNSFP_GERP___NR dbNSFP_GERP___RS dbNSFP_phyloP100way_vertebrate dbNSFP_phastCons100way_vertebrate dbNSFP_SiPhy_29way_logOdds \
    > "$outputDir/tmp/$tmpfd/annoTable.txt"
</pre>
The output file will
* remove header from the input VCF file
* break the INFO field into several columns; Only the columns we specify in the command will be kept.


==== Local ====
A data-based simulation algorithm for rna-seq data. The vector of read counts simulated for a given experimental unit has a joint distribution that closely matches the distribution of a source rna-seq dataset provided by the user.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ ls -l /opt/SeqTools/bin/snpEff/
total 44504
drwxrwxr-x 5 brb brb    4096 May  5 11:24 data
drwxr-xr-x 2 brb brb    4096 Feb 17 16:37 examples
drwxr-xr-x 3 brb brb    4096 Feb 17 16:37 galaxy
drwxr-xr-x 3 brb brb    4096 Feb 17 16:37 scripts
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  6138594 Dec  5 10:49 snpEff.config
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 20698856 Dec  5 10:49 snpEff.jar
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 18712032 Dec  5 10:49 SnpSift.jar


$ ls -l /opt/SeqTools/bin/snpEff/data
=== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/empiricalFDR.DESeq2/index.html empiricalFDR.DESeq2] ===
total 12
http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/12/05/012211
drwxr-xr-x 2 brb brb 4096 May  5 11:24 GRCh38.82
drwxrwxr-x 2 brb brb 4096 Feb  5 09:28 hg19
drwxr-xr-x 2 brb brb 4096 Mar  8 09:44 hg38
</syntaxhighlight>


==== Biowulf ====
The key function is '''simulateCounts''', which takes a fitted DESeq2 data object as an input and returns a simulated data object (DESeq2 class) with the same sample size factors, total counts and dispersions for each gene as in real data, but without the effect of predictor variables.  
The following code fixed some typos on biowulf website.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
echo $SNPSIFT_JAR
# Make sure the database (GRCH37.75 in this case) exists
ls /usr/local/apps/snpEff/4.2/data
# CanFam3.1.75  Felis_catus_6.2.75  GRCh37.75    GRCh38.82 GRCm38.81  GRCz10.82  hg38
# CanFam3.1.81  Felis_catus_6.2.81  GRCh37.GTEX  GRCh38.p2.RefSeq  GRCm38.82  hg19      hg38kg
# CanFam3.1.82  Felis_catus_6.2.82  GRCh38.81    GRCm38.75 GRCz10.81  hg19kg    Zv9.75
# Use snpEff to annotate against GRCh37.75
snpEff -v -lof -motif -hgvs -nextProt GRCh37.75 protocols/ex1.vcf > ex1.eff.vcf # 25 minutes
          # create ex1.eff.vcf (475MB), snpEff_genes.txt (2.5MB) and snpEff_summary.html (22MB)
# Use SnpSift to pull out 'HIGH IMPACT' or 'MODERATE IMPACT' variants
cat ex1.eff.vcf | \
  java -jar $SNPSIFT_JAR filter "((EFF[*].IMPACT = 'HIGH') | (EFF[*].IMPACT = 'MODERATE'))"  \
  > ex1.filtered.vcf
          # ex1.filtered.vcf (8.2MB), 2 minutes
# Use SnpSift to annotate against the dbNSFP database
java -jar $SNPSIFT_JAR dbnsfp -v -db /fdb/dbNSFP2/dbNSFP2.9.txt.gz ex1.eff.vcf \
  > file.annotated.vcf
          # file.annotated.vcf (479 MB), 11 minutes
</syntaxhighlight>
and the output
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ ls -lth | head
total 994M
-rw-r----- 1  479M May 15 11:47 file.annotated.vcf
-rw-r----- 1  8.2M May 15 11:31 ex1.filtered.vcf
-rw-r----- 1  476M May 15 10:31 ex1.eff.vcf
-rw-r----- 1  2.5M May 15 10:30 snpEff_genes.txt
-rw-r----- 1  22M May 15 10:30 snpEff_summary.html
lrwxrwxrwx 1    39 May 15 10:01 protocols -> /usr/local/apps/snpEff/4.2/../protocols
</syntaxhighlight>


=== [http://cancer.sanger.ac.uk/cosmic COSMIC] ===
Functions fdrTable, fdrBiCurve and empiricalFDR compare the DESeq2 results obtained for the real and simulated data, compute the empirical false discovery rate (the ratio of the number of differentially expressed genes detected in the simulated data and their number in the real data) and plot the results.
* [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0W354Ttrh0BZCjt1D3I2HA Youtube videos]
* [http://cancer.sanger.ac.uk/cosmic/gene/analysis?ln=BRAF#histo Histogram] of BRAF (melanoma).


=== AnnTools ===
=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/polyester.html polyester] ===
=== GNS-SNP ===
http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/12/05/012211
=== SeattleSeq ===
=== SVA ===
=== VARIANT ===
=== VEP ===


=== Web tools ===
Given a set of annotated transcripts, polyester will simulate the steps of an RNA-seq experiment (fragmentation, reverse-complementing, and sequencing) and produce files containing simulated RNA-seq reads.  
* [http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgVai UCSC Variant Annotation Integrator]
* [http://snp.gs.washington.edu/SeattleSeqAnnotation137/ SeattleSeq Annotation 137]
* [http://www.ensembl.org/Homo_sapiens/Tools/VEP Variant Effect Predictor] and [http://useast.ensembl.org/info/docs/tools/vep/script/index.html?redirect=no VEP script]


== De novo genome assembly ==
'''Input''': reference FASTA file (containing names and sequences of transcripts from which reads should be simulated) OR a GTF file denoting transcript structures, along with one FASTA file of the DNA sequence for each chromosome in the GTF file.
* [http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/06/21/bioinformatics.btv383.abstract Bandage: interactive visualisation of de novo genome assemblies]


== Single Cell RNA-Seq ==
'''Output''': FASTA files. Reads in the FASTA file will be labeled with the transcript from which they were simulated.
* [http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/31/13/2225.short?rss=1 Normalization and noise reduction for single cell RNA-seq experiments]
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/a-step-by-step-workflow-for-low-level-analysis-of-single-cell-rna-seq-data-with-bioconductor/ A step-by-step workflow for low-level analysis of single-cell RNA-seq data with Bioconductor]
* https://youtu.be/IrlNcJwPClQ?list=PLEyKDyF1qdObdFBc3JncwXAnMUHlcd0ap


=== [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/monocle.html monocle] ===
Too many dependencies. <strike>Got an error in installation.</strike>. It seems it has not considered splice junctions.


=== [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/sincell.html sincell] ===
=== seqgendiff ===
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-020-3450-9 Data-based RNA-seq simulations by binomial thinning]


=== [https://github.com/diazlab/SCell SCell] ===
== Simulate DNA-Seq ==
[http://www.rna-seqblog.com/scell-integrated-analysis-of-single-cell-rna-seq-data/ SCell – integrated analysis of single-cell RNA-seq data]
* Software list - https://popmodels.cancercontrol.cancer.gov/gsr/packages/
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5224698/ A comparison of tools for the simulation of genomic next-generation sequencing data] Merly Escalona 2016


=== [https://bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12864-016-2897-6 GEVM] ===
=== wgsim ===
Detection of high variability in gene expression from single-cell RNA-seq profiling. Two mouse scRNA-seq data sets were obtained from Gene Expression Omnibus (GSE65525 and GSE60361).
https://github.com/lh3/wgsim


== The best RNA-Seq analysis interface ==
* Used by [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2017/12/20/237107.full.pdf#page=3 Cleaning clinical genomic data: Simple identification and removal of recurrently miscalled variants in single genomes] bioRxiv 2017
[http://bib.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/06/23/bib.bbv036.full Systematically evaluating interfaces for RNA-seq analysis from a life scientist perspective]
* [https://gatkforums.broadinstitute.org/gatk/discussion/7859/how-to-simulate-reads-using-a-reference-genome-alt-contig (How to) Simulate reads using a reference genome ALT contig]
* [http://research.cs.wisc.edu/wham/comparison-using-wgsim/ Comparing WHAM with BWA using wgsim
* http://biobits.org/samtools_primer.html


== Co-expression in RNA-Seq ==
=== dwgssim ===
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/co-expression-network-analysis-using-rna-seq-data/ Co-expression network analysis using RNA-Seq data]
* [https://github.com/nh13/dwgsim Whole Genome Simulator for Next-Generation Sequencing]
* Example: [https://www.bioinformatics.recipes/recipe/view/recipe-variants-bcftools/#info How to generate variant calls with bcftools]


== Monitor Software Version Change ==
=== NEAT ===
* https://github.com/zstephens/neat-genreads
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5125660/ Simulating next-generation sequencing datasets from empirical mutation and sequencing models] Zachary Stephens, 2016
* If I set 10 as the coverage rate and read length 101, the generated fq file is about 34GB (3.3GB * 10) for each one of the pairs.


== Circos Plot ==
=== DNA aligner accuracy: BWA, Bowtie, Soap and SubRead tested with simulated reads ===
Circos is a popular tool for summarizing genomic events in a tumor genome.
http://genomespot.blogspot.com/2014/11/dna-aligner-accuracy-bwa-bowtie-soap.html


* [http://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004274 Genome Modeling System: A Knowledge Management Platform for Genomics]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ head simDNA_100bp_16del.fasta
>Pt-0-100
TGGCGAACGCGGGAATTGACCGCGATGGTGATTCACATCACTCCTAATCCACTTGCTAATCGCCCTACGCTACTATCATTCTTT
>Pt-10-110
GCGGGATTGAACCCGATTGAATTCCAATCACTGCTTAATCCACTTGCTACATCGCCCTACGTACTATCTATTTTTTTGTATTTC
>Pt-20-120
GAACCCGCGATGAATTCAATCCACTGCTACCATTGGCTACATCCGCCCCTACGCTACTCTTCTTTTTTGTATGTCTAAAAAAAA
>Pt-30-130
TGGTGAATCACAATCACTGCCTAACCATTGGCTACATCCGCCCCTACGCTACACTATTTTTTGTATTGCTAAAAAAAAAAATAA
>Pt-40-140
ACAACACTGCCTAATCCACTTGGCTACTCCGCCCCTAGCTACTATCTTTTTTTGTATTTCTAAAAAAAAAAAATCAATTTCAAT
</syntaxhighlight>


== Cancer & Mutation ==
=== Simulate Whole genome ===
=== [https://www.mycancergenome.org/ My Cancer Genome] ===
* [https://github.com/nh13/dwgsim DWGSIM] mentioned by [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3785481/ Variant Callers for Next-Generation Sequencing Data: A Comparison Study]. For its usage, see http://davetang.org/wiki/tiki-index.php?page=DWGSIM
 
=== Simulate whole exome ===
* https://www.biostars.org/p/66714/ (no final answer)
* [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/29/8/1076/225073 Wessim: a whole-exome sequencing simulator based on in silico exome capture] Sangwoo Kim 2013 & [http://sak042.github.io/Wessim/ software]
 
=== SCSIM ===
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-020-03550-1 SCSIM: Jointly simulating correlated single-cell and bulk next-generation DNA sequencing data]


=== [https://civic.genome.wustl.edu/#/home CIViC - Clinical Interpretations of Variants in Cancer] ===
== Variant simulator ==
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-019-2611-1 sim1000G: a user-friendly genetic variant simulator in R for unrelated individuals and family-based designs]


=== NCBI ===
== Mutation-Simulator ==
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fC9rYghqUTo NCBI Resources and Variant Interpretation Tools for the Clinical Community]: ClinVar, MedGen, GTR, Variation Viewer
[https://github.com/mkpython3/Mutation-Simulator Mutation-Simulator]


= R and Bioconductor packages =
== SigProfilerSimulator ==
* [https://nsaunders.wordpress.com/2015/04/28/some-basics-of-biomart/ Some basics of biomaRt] (and GenomicRanges)
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-020-03772-3 Generating realistic null hypothesis of cancer mutational landscapes using SigProfilerSimulator]
* [http://master.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/annotation/AnnotatingRanges/ Annotating Ranges] Represent common sequence data types (e.g., from BAM, gff, bed, and wig files) as genomic ranges for simple and advanced range-based queries.
 
<pre>
== Convert FASTA to FASTQ ==
library(VariantAnnotation)
It is interesting to note that the simulated/generated FASTA files can be used by alignment/mapping tools like BWA just like FASTQ files.
library(AnnotationHub)
 
library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene)
If we want to convert FASTA files to FASTQ files, use https://code.google.com/archive/p/fasta-to-fastq/. The quality score 'I' means 40 (the highest) by Sanger (range [0,40]). See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FASTQ_format. The Wikipedia website also mentions FASTQ read simulation tools and a comparison of these tools.
library(TxDb.Mmusculus.UCSC.mm10.ensGene)
library(org.Hs.eg.db)
library(org.Mm.eg.db)
library(BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19)
</pre>
* [http://faculty.ucr.edu/~tgirke/HTML_Presentations/Manuals/Workshop_Dec_6_10_2012/Rrnaseq/Rrnaseq.pdf Analysis of RNA-Seq Data with R/Bioconductor] by Girke in UC Riverside
* [http://www.ebi.ac.uk/training/sites/ebi.ac.uk.training/files/materials/2012/121029_HTS/martin_morgan1_nicolas_delhomme2_embo2012_rbioconductor.pdf R / Bioconductor for High-Throughput Sequence Analysis 2012] by Martin Morgan1 and Nicolas Delhomme
* [http://www-huber.embl.de/pub/pdf/nprot.2013.099.pdf Count-based differential expression analysis of RNA sequencing data using R and Bioconductor] by Simon Anders
* [http://www.ebi.ac.uk/training/sites/ebi.ac.uk.training/files/materials/2013/131021_HTS/genesandgenomes.pdf Sequences, Genomes, and Genes in R / Bioconductor] by Martin Morgan 2013.  
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4509590/ Orchestrating high-throughput genomic analysis with Bioconductor] by Wolfgang Huber et al 2015.
* [https://rpubs.com/achitsaz/97976 RNA-seq Analysis Example] This is a script that will do differential gene expression (DGE) analysis for RNA-seq experiments using the bioconductor package edgeR. RPKMs were calculated for bar plots.


== Some workflows ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/rnaseqGene/ RNA-Seq workflow] ===
$ cat test.fasta
Gene-level exploratory analysis and differential expression. A non stranded-specific and paired-end rna-seq experiment was used for the tutorial.
>Pt-0-50
<pre>
TGGCGAACGACGGGAATACCCGGAGGTGAATTCAAATCCACT
      STAR      Samtools        Rsamtools
>Pt-10-60
fastq -----> sam ----------> bam  ----------> bamfiles  -|
GACGGAATTGAACCCGATGGGATACAATCCACTGCCTTATCC
                                                          \  GenomicAlignments      DESeq2
>Pt-20-70
                                                          --------------------> se --------> dds
GAACCCGCGATGGTGTCACAATCCACTCTTAACCATTGCTAC
      GenomicFeatures        GenomicFeatures            /       (SummarizedExperiment) (DESeqDataSet)
>Pt-30-80
  gtf ----------------> txdb ---------------> genes -----|
GGTGAATTCACAATCCACTGCCTTACCACTTGGCTACCCCCT
</pre>
>Pt-40-90
=== [http://master.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/high-throughput-sequencing/ Sequence analysis] ===
AATCCACTGCCTTATCCACTGGCTACATCCCTACGCTACTAT
<pre>
$ perl ~/Downloads/fasta_to_fastq.pl test.fasta
library(ShortRead) or library(Biostrings) (QA)
@Pt-0-50
gtf + library(GenomicFeatures) or directly library(TxDb.Scerevisiae.UCSC.sacCer2.sgdGene) (gene information)
TGGCGAACGACGGGAATACCCGGAGGTGAATTCAAATCCACT
GenomicRanges::summarizeOverlaps or GenomicRanges::countOverlaps(count)
+
edgeR or DESeq2 (gene expression analysis)
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
library(org.Sc.sgd.db) or library(biomaRt)
@Pt-10-60
</pre>
GACGGAATTGAACCCGATGGGATACAATCCACTGCCTTATCC
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@Pt-20-70
GAACCCGCGATGGTGTCACAATCCACTCTTAACCATTGCTAC
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@Pt-30-80
GGTGAATTCACAATCCACTGCCTTACCACTTGGCTACCCCCT
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@Pt-40-90
AATCCACTGCCTTATCCACTGGCTACATCCCTACGCTACTAT
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
</syntaxhighlight>


=== [http://master.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/annotation/annotation/ Accessing Annotation Data] ===
Alternatively we can use just one line of code by [https://www.reddit.com/r/bioinformatics/comments/32pu00/fasta_to_fastq_converter/ awk]
Use microarray probe, gene, pathway, gene ontology, homology and other annotations. Access GO, KEGG, NCBI, Biomart, UCSC, vendor, and other sources.
<syntaxhighlight>
<source lang="rsplus">
$ awk 'BEGIN {RS = ">" ; FS = "\n"} NR > 1 {print "@"$1"\n"$2"\n+"; for(c=0;c<length($2);c++) printf "H"; printf "\n"}' \
library(org.Hs.eg.db)  # Sample OrgDb Workflow
  test.fasta > test.fq
library("hgu95av2.db") # Sample ChipDb Workflow
$ cat test.fq
library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene) # Sample TxDb Workflow
@Pt-0-50
library(Homo.sapiens)  # Sample OrganismDb Workflow
TGGCGAACGACGGGAATACCCGGAGGTGAATTCAAATCCACT
library(AnnotationHub) # Sample AnnotationHub Workflow
+
library("biomaRt")     # Using biomaRt
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
library(BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19) # BSgenome packages
@Pt-10-60
</source>
GACGGAATTGAACCCGATGGGATACAATCCACTGCCTTATCC
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
@Pt-20-70
GAACCCGCGATGGTGTCACAATCCACTCTTAACCATTGCTAC
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
@Pt-30-80
GGTGAATTCACAATCCACTGCCTTACCACTTGGCTACCCCCT
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
@Pt-40-90
AATCCACTGCCTTATCCACTGGCTACATCCCTACGCTACTAT
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
</syntaxhighlight>
Change the 'H' to the quality score value that you need (Depending what phred score scale you are using).
 
== Simulate genetic data ==
[https://onunicornsandgenes.blog/2019/06/16/simulating-genetic-data-with-r-an-example-with-deleterious-variants-and-a-pun/ ‘Simulating genetic data with R: an example with deleterious variants (and a pun)’]
 
= PDX/Xenograft =
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_derived_xenograft
* [https://bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2164-15-1172 Are special read alignment strategies necessary and cost-effective when handling sequencing reads from patient-derived tumor xenografts?] by Tso et al, BMC Genomics, 2014.
* [http://www.arrayserver.com/wiki/index.php?title=Align_Ion_Torrent_reads Map xenograft reads] by [http://www.omicsoft.com/array-studio/ Array Suite]
* [http://www.pdxfinder.org/ PDXFinder] includes PDMR as one of 6 providers. The website source code https://github.com/PDXFinder/pdxfinder.
** [http://www.pdxfinder.org/data/pdx/IRCC/CRC0120LM#variation A Colorectal Carcinoma example] contains 'genomic data'. Each row represents one seq position. No raw FASTQ files available.
* NCI [https://pdmr.cancer.gov/database/default.htm Patient-Derived Models Repository (PDMR)].
** '''passage number''' (P0 represented first '''implant'''). [https://bitesizebio.com/13685/cell-culture-passage-number-explained/ Understanding Cell Passage Number and How to Calculate it for Cell Cultures]. A passage number refers to the '''number of times''' a culture of cells has been '''sub-cultivated''' or transferred to a new environment. For example, if a culture of cells is started and then '''split''' into two new cultures, each of these new cultures would be considered a "passage 2" culture. The original culture would be considered "passage 1." This is commonly used in in-vitro cell culture studies to track the age, growth, and changes of the cells over time. It is also used to ensure the consistent quality of the cells or organisms being used in experiments.
** ftp://dctdftp.nci.nih.gov/pub/pdm/
** The ftp link can be obtained by clicking 'PDMR Models' -> 'PDMR database' -> Click here to access the PDMR Database -> 'Genomic Analysis'.
** There will be three tabs: NCI Cancer Genome Panel (4246 records), Whole Exome Sequence (785 records) and RNASeq (807 records).
** For Whole Exome Sequence, '''VCF''' was provided. For RNASeq, '''RSEM''' files per genes or isoforms are available.
** The '''RNASeq Transcriptome Data Analysis Pipeline and Specifications''' and '''Whole Exome Sequencing Data Analysis Pipeline and Specifications''' are available under SOPs. [https://pdmdb.cancer.gov/pls/apex/f?p=101:34:0::NO:34:: RNASeq] TPM data.
* [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/reproducible-bioinformatics-project/ Reproducible Bioinformatics Project]
* [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/28/12/i172/269972 Xenome] a tool for classifying reads from xenograft samples, Thomas Conway et al 2012.
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K-mer K-mer]
** The program is bundled in '''[https://github.com/data61/gossamer/blob/master/docs/xenome.md Gossamer]''' (Github)
** [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/gossamer.html Biowulf] It is noted that Gossamer runs in a Singularity container
** Indexing took 13 hours when I set 16 threads and 24GB memory (25.4GB was used). A set of 23 files with prefix 'idx' will be generated.
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
#!/bin/bash
module load gossamer
xenome index -M 24 -T 16 -P idx \
  -H $HOME/igenomes/Mus_musculus/UCSC/mm9/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa \
  -G $HOME/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa
</syntaxhighlight>
* [http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0074432 Next-Generation Sequence Analysis of Cancer Xenograft Models] by Fernando J. Rossello et al 2013.
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4991491/ Whole transcriptome profiling of patient-derived xenograft models as a tool to identify both tumor and stromal specific biomarkers] Bradford et al 2016
* [https://f1000research.com/articles/5-2741/v1 An open-source application for disambiguating two species in next generation sequencing data from grafted samples] by Ahdesmäki MJ et al 2016. [https://github.com/AstraZeneca-NGS/disambiguate Disambiguation]
* [http://mcr.aacrjournals.org/content/molcanres/15/8/1012.full.pdf Next-Generation Sequencing Analysis and Algorithms for PDX and CDX Models] by Garima Khandelwal et al 2017. [https://github.com/CRUKMI-ComputationalBiology/bamcmp bamcmp] software.
* [https://bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12864-017-4414-y Computational approach to discriminate human and mouse sequences in patient-derived tumour xenografts] by Maurizio Callari et al 2018. Both RNA-Seq and DNA-Seq are considered. Software [https://github.com/cclab-brca/ICRG ICRG].
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-018-2353-5 XenofilteR: computational deconvolution of mouse and human reads in tumor xenograft sequence data] Kluin et al 2018. Software in [https://github.com/PeeperLab/XenofilteR github].
* [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/bbtools.html BBSplit], [https://pdmr.cancer.gov/content/docs/MCCRD_SOP0011_PDX_Whole_Exome_Seq_Analysis_Pipeline.pdf PDX Whole Exome Seq Analysis Pipeline], [https://pdmr.cancer.gov/content/docs/MCCRD_SOP0012_PDX_RNASeq_Analysis_Pipeline.pdf RNASeq Transciptome Data Analysis Pipeline] from PDMR. [https://www.biostars.org/p/143019/ Tool to separate human and mouse rna seq reads].
* [https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006596 Whole genomes define concordance of matched primary, xenograft, and organoid models of pancreas cancer] Gendoo et al 2019
* [https://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/79/17/4539 Integrative Pharmacogenomics Analysis of Patient-Derived Xenografts] 2019
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31262303/ Genomic data analysis workflows for tumors from patient-derived xenografts (PDXs): challenges and guidelines] 2019
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Xeva.html Xeva] package. Analysis of patient-derived xenograft (PDX) data. Paper [https://aacrjournals.org/cancerres/article/79/17/4539/638195/Integrative-Pharmacogenomics-Analysis-of-Patient Integrative Pharmacogenomics Analysis of Patient-Derived Xenografts] Mer, 2019. ''Molecular profile and pharmacologic profile''.
** GSE78806 - microarray-based Gene expression data, PDX passages, and tissue information
** [https://www.nature.com/articles/nm.3954 High-throughput screening using patient-derived tumor xenografts to predict clinical trial drug response] Gao, 2015. Molecular profiles including mutation, CNA, RNASeq-based gene expression, and pharmacologic profiles.
 
== RNA-Seq ==
* [https://pdmr.cancer.gov/content/docs/MCCRD_SOP0012_PDX_RNASeq_Analysis_Pipeline.pdf RNASeq Transciptome Data Analysis Pipeline and Specifications] by Mocha
*# ''PDX Mouse reads are removed from the raw FASTQ files using bbsplit (bbtools v37.36).''
*# The fastq files are mapped to human transcriptome based on exon models from hg19 using Bowtie2 (version 2.2.6) [1]. The resulting SAM files are converted to BAM forma using samtools [2] and the coordinations in BAM are converted to the genomic (hg19) coordinations using RSEM (version 1.2.31). Gene and transcript quantifications are also done using RSEM.
*# Removal of Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs)
* Platform [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GPL16791 GPL16791] Illumina HiSeq 2500
** https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSM1702792
** https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSM1887215
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GPL25431 GPL25431] Illumina HiSeq 4000 (Homo sapiens; Mus musculus)
** GSE118197
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GPL18573 GPL18573] Illumina NextSeq 500
** GSE106336 [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-01967-6 MYC] regulates ductal-neuroendocrine lineage plasticity in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma associated with poor outcome and chemoresistance
* [https://youtu.be/j4qpJ8sVjT0 Mastering RNA-Seq (NGS Data Analysis) - A Critical Approach To Transcriptomic Data Analysis]. This is posted on [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/mastering-rna-seq-data-analysis-a-critical-approach-to-transcriptomic-data-analysis/ rna-seqblog]. See the link [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4991491/ Whole transcriptome profiling of patient-derived xenograft models as a tool to identify both tumor and stromal specific biomarkers].
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-020-03633-z PDXGEM]: patient-derived tumor xenograft-based gene expression model for predicting clinical response to anticancer therapy in cancer patients
* [https://github.com/qianzhulab/Xenomake Xenomake]: Processing pipeline for Patient Derived Xenograft (PDX) Spatial Transcriptomics Datasets
 
== DNA-Seq ==
* [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124713004634 Endocrine-Therapy-Resistant ESR1 Variants Revealed by Genomic Characterization of Breast-Cancer-Derived Xenografts]
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gap/cgi-bin/molecular.cgi?study_id=phs000611.v1.p1&phv=195714&phd=&pha=&pht=3502&phvf=&phdf=&phaf=&phtf=&dssp=1&consent=&temp=1 dbGaP]
** GaP accession [https://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=phs000611 phs000611].
* https://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?view=studies&f=study&term=xenograft&go=Go
* [https://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?study=ERP021871 ERP021871]
 
== MAF (TCGA, GDC) ==
* See [https://brb.nci.nih.gov/d3oncoprint/D3Oncoprint-UserManual.pdf#page=17 D3Oncoprint] manual. D3oncoprint uses java to create the interface (java -jar D3Oncoprint.jar). The result is shown in a browser. The top part is a heatmap and the bottom part is a table. The heatmap is good only for a small number of variants and there is no way to zoom in if we have a lot of variants (eg 1000). The phenotypes file is optional. The following 3 columns are required and the others are for tooltip and table. The column name from a VCF file input is given below.
** '''Gene column''': GENE
** '''Variant type column''': ExonicFunc.refGene
** '''Aminoacid change column''': AAChange.refGene (this defines the name of '''variant'''. The variant uses the single letter aminoacid codes. This information is only used in HTML table. For example if AAChange.refGene=UGT1A7:NM_019077:exon1:c.T387G:p.N129K, then the variant will be N129K. My observation is the variant name for variant type 'frameshift_deletion' is altered in table; R128fs -> R128Xfs)
* https://www.reddit.com/r/bioinformatics/comments/cmdza5/vcf_and_maf_file_formats/ which links to
** MAF: https://docs.gdc.cancer.gov/Data/File_Formats/MAF_Format/
** VCF: https://gatk.broadinstitute.org/hc/en-us/articles/360035531692?id=11005
** [https://www.reddit.com/r/bioinformatics/comments/cmdza5/vcf_and_maf_file_formats/ VCF and MAF file formats?]
* [https://pdmr.cancer.gov/content/docs/MCCRD_SOP0023_v2.0_PDX_consensus_files.pdf The Standing Operating Procedure (SOP) describes procedures for generating consensus/intersect variants calls for reporting in the NCI Patient-Derived Models database]
* Convert vcf to maf. https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/vcf2maf.html
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/maftools/inst/doc/maftools.html#10_variant_annotations maftools] : Summarize, Analyze and Visualize MAF Files (oncoplots)
* https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/TCGAbiolinks.html
** [https://www.biostars.org/p/295833/ Use TCGAbiolinks package] to download maf file.
** http://firebrowse.org/. For example, BRCA -> Mutation Annotation File (from bar plot on RHS). Pick any data. The (extracted) file name will be *.maf.txt.


{| class="wikitable"
= DNA Seq Data =
! Object type
== NIH ==
! example package name
* Go to [http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?view=search_obj SRA/Sequence Read Archive]and type the keywords 'Whole Genome Sequencing human'. An example of the procedures to search whole genome sequencing data from human samples:
! contents
*# Enter 'Whole Genome Sequencing human' in ncbi/sra search sra objects at http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?view=search_obj
|-
*# The webpage will return the result in terms of SRA experiments, SRA studies, Biosamples, GEO datasets. I pick SRA studies from Public Access.
| OrgDb
*# The result is sorted by the Accession number (does not take the first 3 letters like DRP into account). The Accession number has a format SRPxxxx. So I just go to the Last page (page 98)
| org.Hs.eg.db
*# I pick the first one Accession:SRP066837 from this page. The page shows the '''Study type''' is whole genome sequence. http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?study=SRP066837
| gene based information for Homo sapiens
*# <span style="color: red">(Important trick)</span> Click the number next to '''Run'''. It will show a summary (SRR #, library name, MBases, age, biomaterial provider, isolate and sex) about all samples. http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP066837
|-
*# Download the raw data from any one of them (eg SRR2968056). For whole genome, the '''Strategy''' is ''WGS''. For whole exome, the '''Strategy''' is called ''WXS''.
| TxDb
* Search the keywords 'nonsynonymous' and 'human' in [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/?term=nonsynonymous+human PMC]
| TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene
| transcriptome ranges for Homo sapiens
|-
| OrganismDb
| Homo.sapiens
| composite information for Homo sapiens
|-
| BSgenome
| BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19
| genome sequence for Homo sapiens
|-
|
| [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/refGenome/index.html refGenome]
|
|}


== RNA-Seq Data Analysis using R/Bioconductor ==
=== Use [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK158900/ SRAToolKit] instead of wget to download ===
* https://github.com/datacarpentry/rnaseq-data-analysis by Stephen Turner.
Don't use the ''wget'' command since it requires the specification of right http address.
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/69677/ Tutorial: Introduction to Bioconductor for high-throughput sequence analysis] by UseR 2015
* [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/systemPipeR.html systemPipeR] Building end-to-end analysis pipelines with automated report generation for next generation sequence (NGS) applications such as RNA-Seq, ChIP-Seq, VAR-Seq and Ribo-Seq. An important feature is support for running command-line software, such as NGS aligners, on both single machines or compute clusters.
* [http://bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2015/BioC2015/ BioC2015]


== Visualization ==
[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK158899/ Downloading SRA data using command line utilities]
=== [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenVisR.html GenVisR] ===


=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/ComplexHeatmap.html ComplexHeatmap] ===
[https://github.com/NCBI-Hackathons/SRA2R SRA2R] - a package to import SRA data directly into R.


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/limma.html limma] ==
(Method 1) Use the '''[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?view=toolkit_doc&f=fastq-dump fastq-dump]''' command. For example, the following command (modified from the [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK158899/#SRA_download.downloading_sra_data_using document] will download the first 5 reads and save it to a file called <SRR390728.fastq> ('''NOT sra format)''' in the current directory.
* [http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/01/20/nar.gkv007.long Differential expression analyses for RNA-sequencing and microarray studies]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [http://bioinf.wehi.edu.au/RNAseqCaseStudy/ Case Study] using a Bioconductor R pipeline to analyze RNA-seq data (this is linked from limma package user guide). ''Here we illustrate how to use two Bioconductor packages - '''Rsubread''' and '''limma''' - to perform a complete RNA-seq analysis, including '''Subread''''''Bold text''' read mapping, '''featureCounts''' read summarization, '''voom''' normalization and '''limma''' differential expresssion analysis.''
/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/sratoolkit.2.3.5-2-ubuntu64/bin/fastq-dump -X 5 SRR390728 -O .
* Unbalanced data, non-normal data, Bartlett's test for equal variance across groups and SAM tests (assumes equal variances just like limma). See [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/47217/ this post].
# OR
/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/sratoolkit.2.3.5-2-ubuntu64/bin/fastq-dump --split-3 SRR390728 # no progress bar
</syntaxhighlight>
This will download the files in FASTQ format.


== easyRNASeq ==
(Method 2) If we need to downloading by wget or FTP (works for ‘SRR’, ‘ERR’, or ‘DRR’ series):
Calculates the coverage of high-throughput short-reads against a genome of reference and summarizes it per feature of interest (e.g. exon, gene, transcript). The data can be normalized as 'RPKM' or by the 'DESeq' or 'edgeR' package.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
wget ftp://ftp-trace.ncbi.nih.gov/sra/sra-instant/reads/ByRun/sra/SRR/SRR304/SRR304976/SRR304976.sra
</syntaxhighlight>
It will download the file in SRA format. In the case of SRR590795, the sra is 240M and fastq files are 615*2MB.


== ShortRead ==
(Method 3) Download Ubuntu x86_64 tarball from http://downloads.asperasoft.com/en/downloads/8?list
Base classes, functions, and methods for representation of high-throughput, short-read sequencing data.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ tar xzvf aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.tar.gz
aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.sh
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ ./aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.sh


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Rsamtools.html Rsamtools] ==
Installing Aspera Connect
The Rsamtools package provides an interface to BAM files.


The main purpose of the Rsamtools package is to import BAM files into R. Rsamtools also provides some facility for file access such as record counting, index file creation, and filtering to create new files containing subsets of the original. An important use case for Rsamtools is as a starting point for creating R objects suitable for a diversity of work flows, e.g., AlignedRead objects in the ShortRead package (for quality assessment and read manipulation), or GAlignments objects in GenomicAlignments package (for RNA-seq and other applications). Those desiring more functionality are encouraged to explore samtools and related software efforts
Deploying Aspera Connect (/home/brb/.aspera/connect) for the current user only.
Restart firefox manually to load the Aspera Connect plug-in


This package provides an interface to the 'samtools', 'bcftools', and 'tabix' utilities (see 'LICENCE') for manipulating SAM (Sequence Alignment / Map), FASTA, binary variant call (BCF) and compressed indexed tab-delimited (tabix) files.
Install complete.


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/IRanges.html IRanges] ==
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ ~/.aspera/connect/bin/ascp -QT -l640M \
IRanges is a fundamental package (see how many packages depend on it) to other packages like '''GenomicRanges''', '''GenomicFeatures''' and '''GenomicAlignments'''. The package defines the IRanges class.  
  -i ~/.aspera/connect/etc/asperaweb_id_dsa.openssh \
  [email protected].nih.gov:/sra/sra-instant/reads/ByRun/sra/SRR/SRR590/SRR590795/SRR590795.sra .
SRR590795.sra                                                                          100%  239MB  535Mb/s    00:06
Completed: 245535K bytes transferred in 7 seconds
(272848K bits/sec), in 1 file.
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $
</syntaxhighlight>
''Aspera is typically 10 times faster than FTP'' according to the website. For this case, wget takes 12s while ascp uses 7s.


The '''plotRanges'''() function given in the 'An Introduction to IRanges' vignette shows how to draw an IRanges object.
Note that the URL on the website's is wrong. I got the correct URL from emailing to ncbi help. Google: ascp "[email protected].gov"


If we want to make the same plot using the ggplot2 package, we can follow the example in [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/21506724/how-to-plot-overlapping-ranges-with-ggplot2 this post]. Note that disjointBins() returns a vector the bin number for each bins counting on the y-axis.
=== SRAdb package ===
https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/SRAdb.html


=== flank ===
First we install some required package for XML and RCurl.
The example is obtained from ?IRanges::flank.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<pre>
sudo apt-get update
ir3 <- IRanges(c(2,5,1), c(3,7,3))
sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev
# IRanges of length 3
sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev
#    start end width
</syntaxhighlight>
# [1]    2  3    2
and then
# [2]    5  7    3
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
# [3]     1  3    3
source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("SRAdb")
</syntaxhighlight>
 
== SRA ==
[https://ncbiinsights.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2021/05/27/nih-open-access-cloud-sra/ The wait is over… NIH’s Public Sequence Read Archive is now open access on the cloud]


flank(ir3, 2)
Only the cancer types with expected cases > 10^5 in the US in 2015 are considered here. http://www.cancer.gov/types/common-cancers
#    start end width
# [1]    0  1    2
# [2]    3  4    2
# [3]    -1  0    2
# Note: by default flank(ir3, 2) = flank(ir3, 2, start = TRUE, both=FALSE)
# For example, [2,3] => [2,X] => (..., 0, 1, 2) => [0, 1]
#                                    == ==


flank(ir3, 2, start=FALSE)
=== SRA Explorer ===
#    start end width
* https://ewels.github.io/sra-explorer/
# [1]    4  5    2
* Source code https://github.com/ewels/sra-explorer
# [2]    8  9    2
# [3]    4  5    2
# For example, [2,3] => [X,3] => (..., 3, 4, 5) => [4,5]
#                                        == ==


flank(ir3, 2, start=c(FALSE, TRUE, FALSE))
=== SRP056969 ===
#    start end width
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-00867-z Inference of RNA decay rate from transcriptional profiling highlights the regulatory programs of Alzheimer’s disease]
# [1]     4  5    2
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/rna-seq-reveals-mrna-stability-a-marker-in-alzheimers-patients/ RNA-Seq reveals mRNA stability a marker in Alzheimer’s patients]
# [2]     3  4    2
* REMBRANDTS: REMoving Bias from Rna-seq ANalysis of Differential Transcript Stability
# [3]    4  5    2
# Combine the ideas of the previous 2 cases.


flank(ir3, c(2, -2, 2))
=== SRP066363 - lung cancer ===
#    start end width
* Platform: GPL11154 Illumina HiSeq 2000 (Homo sapiens)
# [1]    0  1    2
* Overall design: RNAseq and DNA copy number analysis of H1975 cells
# [2]    5  6     2
* Strategy: 6 RNA-Seq and 3 Whole exome. Paired. [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra?linkname=bioproject_sra_all&from_uid=302630 9 samples]  
# [3]    -1  0    2
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP066363
# The original statement is the same as flank(ir3, c(2, -2, 2), start=T, both=F)
* http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE74866
# For example, [5, 7] => [5, X] => ( 5, 6) => [5, 6]
#                                  == ==


flank(ir3, -2, start=F)
=== SRP015769 or SRP062882 - prostate cancer ===
#    start end width
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP015769 5 are from normal and 5 are from tumor. Whole Exome Seq.
# [1]    2  3    2
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP062882 6 normal and the rest are tumor.
# [2]    6  7    2
# [3]    2  3    2
# For example, [5, 7] => [X, 7] => (..., 6, 7) => [6, 7]
#                                      == ==


flank(ir3, 2, both = TRUE)
=== SRP053134 - breast cancer ===
#    start end width
* http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?run=SRR1785051
# [1]    0  3    4
# [2]    3  6    4
# [3]    -1  2    4
# The original statement is equivalent to flank(ir3, 2, start=T, both=T)
# (From the manual) If both = TRUE, extends the flanking region width positions into the range.
#        The resulting range thus straddles the end point, with width positions on either side.
# For example, [2, 3] => [2, X] => (..., 0, 1, 2, 3) => [0, 3]
#                                            ==
#                                      == == == ==


flank(ir3, 2, start=FALSE, both=TRUE)
Look at the MBases value column. It determines the coverage for each run.
#    start end width
# [1]    2  5    4
# [2]    6  9    4
# [3]    2  5    4
# For example, [2, 3] => [X, 3] => (..., 2, 3, 4, 5) => [4, 5]
#                                          ==
#                                      == == == ==


</pre>
=== [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE64016 SRP050992] single cell RNA-Seq ===
Used in [https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-016-0927-y Design and computational analysis of single-cell RNA-sequencing experiments]


Both IRanges and GenomicRanges packages provide the '''flank''' function.
=== Single cell RNA-Seq ===
* [http://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-016-0964-6 Exploiting single-cell expression to characterize co-expression replicability]
* [[NGS#Single_Cell_RNA-Seq|NGS -> Single cell RNA-Seq]]


'''Flanking region''' is also a common term in High-throughput sequencing. The [http://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/book/export/html/6 IGV] user guide also has some option related to flanking.
=== SRP040626 or SRP040540 - Colon and rectal cancer ===
* General tab: '''Feature flanking regions (base pairs)'''. IGV adds the flank before and after a feature locus when you zoom to a feature, or when you view gene/loci lists in multiple panels.
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP040626
* Alignments tab: '''Splice junction track options'''. The minimum amount of nucleotide coverage required on both sides of a junction for a read to be associated with the junction. This affects the coverage of displayed junctions, and the display of junctions covered only by reads with small flanking regions.
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP040540


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenomicRanges.html GenomicRanges] ==
=== OmicIDX ===
GenomicRanges depends on [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/IRanges.html IRanges] package. See the dependency diagram below.
[https://seandavi.github.io/2019/06/omicidx-on-bigquery/ OmicIDX on BigQuery]
<pre>
GenomicFeatues ------- GenomicRanges -+- IRanges -- BioGenomics
                        |            +
                  +-----+            +- GenomeInfoDb
                  |                      |
GenomicAlignments  +--- Rsamtools --+-----+
                                    +--- Biostrings
</pre>


The package defines some classes
== Tutorials ==
* GRanges
See the [[#BWA|BWA]] section.  
* GRangesList
* GAlignments
* SummarizedExperiment: it has the following slots - expData, rowData, colData, and assays. Accessors include assays(), assay(), colData(), expData(), mcols(), ... The mcols() method is defined in the S4Vectors package.


(As of Jan 6, 2015) The introduction in GenomicRanges vignette mentions the ''GAlignments'' object created from a 'BAM' file discarding some information such as SEQ field, QNAME field, QUAL, MAPQ and any other information that is not needed in its document. This means that multi-reads don't receive any special treatment. Also pair-end reads will be treated as single-end reads and the pairing information will be lost. This might change in the future.
== Whole Exome Seq ==
* [http://www.1000genomes.org/category/exome 1000genomes]. 1000genomes and tcga are two places to get vcf files too.
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4179624/ Review of Current Methods, Applications, and Data Management for the Bioinformatics Analysis of Whole Exome Sequencing] (Bao 2014)
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3083463/ A framework for variation discovery and genotyping using next-generation DNA sequencing data]. See the table 1 there.
* Some data from SRA repository.
** http://sra.dnanexus.com/?q=cancer+exome&result_type=Study
** http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/?term=WXS
** [http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?study=SRP008740 SRP008740] See [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3956068/ A survey of tools for variant analysis of next-generation sequencing data] (Pabinger 2014)


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenomicAlignments.html GenomicAlignments] ==
== Whole Genome Seq ==
=== Counting reads with summarizeOverlaps vignette ===
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/browse/ BioProject] and
<pre>
** Search: filter by 'Homo sapiens wgs'
library(GenomicAlignments)
** Project data type: Genome sequencing
library(DESeq)
** Click 'Date' to sort by it
library(edgeR)
** 20 hits as of 1/11/2017 (many of them do not have data)
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/PRJNA352450 PRJNA352450] 18 experiments
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX2341045 SRX2341045] 20.5M spots, 4.1G bases, 1.8Gb
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/PRJNA343545 PRJNA343545] 48 experiments
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX2187657 SRX2187657] 417.4M spots, 126.1G bases, 55.1Gb
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/309109 309109] 5 experiments
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX1538498 SRX1538498] 1.7M spots, 346.1M bases, 99.7Mb
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/PRJNA289286 PRJNA289286] 5 experiments
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX1100298 SRX1100298] 504M spots, 101.8G bases, 45.3Gb
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/PRJNA260389 PRJNA260389] 27 experiments
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX699196 SRX699196] 34,099,675 spots, 6.8G bases, 4.3Gb size
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/248553 248553] 3 experiments
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX1026041 SRX1026041] 1.2G spots, 250.9G bases, 114.2Gb
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/210123 210123] 26 experiments
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX318496 SRX318496] 173.7M spots, 34.7G bases, 23Gb
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/43433 43433] 3 experiments (ABI SOLiD System 3.0)
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX017230 SRX017230]  851.1M spots, 85.1G bases, 68.8Gb


fls <- list.files(system.file("extdata", package="GenomicAlignments"),
== SraRunTable.txt ==
    recursive=TRUE, pattern="*bam$", full=TRUE)
# http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/?term=SRA059511
# http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX194938[accn] and click ''SRP004077''
# http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?study=SRP004077 and click '''Runs''' from the RHS
# http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP004077 and click '''RunInfoTable'''


features <- GRanges(
Note that (For this study, it has 2377 rows)
    seqnames = c(rep("chr2L", 4), rep("chr2R", 5), rep("chr3L", 2)),
* Column A (AssemblyName_s) eg GRCh37
    ranges = IRanges(c(1000, 3000, 4000, 7000, 2000, 3000, 3600, 4000,
* Column I (library_name_s) eg
        7500, 5000, 5400), width=c(rep(500, 3), 600, 900, 500, 300, 900,  
* column N (header=Run_s) shows all SRR or ERR accession numbers.
        300, 500, 500)), "-",
* Column P (Sample_Name)
    group_id=c(rep("A", 4), rep("B", 5), rep("C", 2)))
* Column Y (header=Assay_Type_s) shows '''WGS'''.
features
* Column AB (LibraryLayout_s): PAIRED
 
= Public Data =
[https://twitter.com/tangming2005/status/1666437518907133954 Ten Resources for easy access public genomic data] 6/7/2023. UCSCXenaTools (TCGA, ICGC, GDC), PharmacoGx, rDGidb, [https://www.omicsdi.org/#/ OmicsDI], AnnotationHub, TCGAbiolinks, GenomicDataCommons, cbioportal.
 
[https://waldronlab.io/PublicDataResources/ Public data resources and Bioconductor] from [https://bioc2020.bioconductor.org/workshops.html Bioc2020].
 
{| class="wikitable"  
|-
! Package name
! Object class
! Downloads (Distinct IPs, Jul 2020)
|-
| [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GEOquery.html GEOquery]
| SummarizedExperiment
| 5754
|-
| [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/GenomicDataCommons.html GenomicDataCommons]
| GDCQuery
| 1154
|-
| [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/TCGAbiolinks.html TCGAbiolinks]<br />[https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/curatedTCGAData.html curatedTCGAData]
| RangedSummarizedExperiment<br />MultiAssayExperimentObjects
| 2752 <br />275
|-
| [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/recount.html recount]
| RangedSummarizedExperiment
| 418
|-
| [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/curatedMetagenomicData.html curatedMetagenomicData]
| ExperimentHub
| 224
|}


# GRanges object with 11 ranges and 1 metadata column:
== Caution ==
#      seqnames      ranges strand  |    group_id
[https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.10.11.617967v2?s=09 Public RNA-seq data are not representative of global human diversity] 2024
#          <Rle>    <IRanges>  <Rle>  | <character>
 
#  [1]    chr2L [1000, 1499]      -   |          A
== ISB Cancer Genomics Cloud (ISB-CGC) ==
[2]   chr2L [3000, 3499]      -  |          A
https://isb-cgc.appspot.com/ Leveraging Google Cloud Platform for TCGA Analysis
[3]   chr2L [4000, 4499]      -  |          A
 
[4]   chr2L [7000, 7599]     -  |          A
The ISB Cancer Genomics Cloud (ISB-CGC) is democratizing access to NCI Cancer Data (TCGA, TARGET, CCLE) and coupling it with unprecedented computational power to allow researchers to explore and analyze this vast data-space.
[5]   chr2R [2000, 2899]     -  |          B
 
...     ...         ...   ... ...         ...
[https://github.com/isb-cgc/ISB-CGC-Webapp ISB-CGC Web Application]
#  [7]    chr2R [3600, 3899]     -   |          B
 
#  [8]    chr2R [4000, 4899]     -  |          B
== CCLE, DepMap ==
[9]   chr2R [7500, 7799]     -   |          B
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-019-1186-3 Next-generation characterization of the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia] 2019
#  [10]    chr3L [5000, 5499]      -  |          C
* It has 1000+ cell lines profiled with different -omics including DNA methylation, RNA splicing, as well as some proteomics (and lots more!).
#  [11]    chr3L [5400, 5899]      -  |          C
* [https://bioinformatics.mdanderson.org/Supplements/ResidualDisease/Reports/assembleCCLEClinical.html Assembling Clinical Information for the CCLE Data]
#  -------
* Data download [https://depmap.org/portal/download/all/ Depmap]
#  seqinfo: 3 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
* [https://depmap.org/portal/ Dependency Map (DepMap)] portal is to empower the research community to make discoveries related to cancer vulnerabilities by providing open access to key cancer dependencies analytical and visualization tools [https://depmap.org/portal/ccle/ CCLE]
olap
** '''sample_info.csv''' also available from the download page
# class: SummarizedExperiment
** '''CCLE_RNAseq_reads.csv''': read counts from RSEM. 1406 x (54358 - 1). Use '''readr::read_csv()'''. range(x[, -1]) = 0 13018000. Note: log2(13018000) = 23.634.
# dim: 11 2
** '''CCLE_expression_full.csv''': log2(TPM + 1). 1406 x (53971 - 1). range(x[, -1]) = 0.00000 17.78354
# exptData(0):
** '''CCLE_expression.csv''': log2(TPM+1). 1406 x 19221 genes. protein coding genes. 33 diseases.  
# assays(1): counts
** '''CCLE_expression_proteincoding_genes_expected_count.csv''': 1406 x (19222 - 1). read count (non-integers) data from RSEM for just protein coding genes. range(x[, -1]) = 0 13018000.
# rownames: NULL
** '''CCLE_expression_transcripts_expected_count.csv''': read count data from RSEM. 1406 x (228138-1). Non-integers. range(x[, -1]) = 0 11664000.
# rowData metadata column names(1): group_id
<ul>
# colnames(2): sm_treated1.bam sm_untreated1.bam
<li>[https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/depmap.html depmap] package: Cancer Dependency Map Data Package. The depmap package currently contains eight (kinds) datasets available through [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/ExperimentHub.html ExperimentHub].
# colData names(0):
* RNA inference knockout data
* CRISPR-Cas9 knockout data
* WES copy number data
* CCLE Reverse Phase Protein Array data
* CCLE RNAseq gene expression data
* Cancer cell lines
* Mutation calls
* Drug Sensitivity
<pre>
R> eh <- ExperimentHub()
R> class(eh)
[1] "ExperimentHub"
attr(,"package")
[1] "ExperimentHub"


assays(olap)$counts
R> rnai <- eh[["EH2260"]]
#      sm_treated1.bam sm_untreated1.bam
R> class(rnai)
[1,]               0                0
[1] "tbl_df"    "tbl"        "data.frame"
[2,]               0                0
</pre>
[3,]               0                0
</li>
[4,]               0                0
</ul>
# [5,]               5                1
 
# [6,]               5                0
== NCI's Genomic Data Commons (GDC)/TCGA ==
[7,]               2                0
The GDC supports several cancer genome programs at the NCI Center for Cancer Genomics (CCG), including The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), Therapeutically Applicable Research to Generate Effective Treatments (TARGET), and the Cancer Genome Characterization Initiative (CGCI).
[8,]             376              104
 
[9,]               0                0
* [https://portal.gdc.cancer.gov/ NCI's GDC] - Genomic Data Commons Data Portal. Researchers can access over 3 PB of bigData from projects like CPTAC, TARGET and of course TCGA.
# [10,]               0                0
** [https://gdc.cancer.gov/support/gdc-webinars GDC webinars]
# [11,]               0                0
** [https://gdc.cancer.gov/resources-tcga-users/tcga-code-tables/tcga-study-abbreviations Study Abbreviations]
</pre>
* [https://tcpaportal.org/tcpa/download.html MDAnderson] download, [https://tcpaportal.org/tcpa/faq.html FAQ], [https://bioinformatics.mdanderson.org/public-software/tcpa/ Available Software]
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/TCGAbiolinks/inst/doc/tcgaBiolinks.html#tcgaanalyze_dea__tcgaanalyze_leveltab:_differential_expression_analysis_(dea) Working with TCGAbiolinks package]
** edgeR is used to find DE; see the TCGAanalyze_DEA() function and [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/TCGAbiolinks/inst/doc/analysis.html#TCGAanalyze_DEA__TCGAanalyze_LevelTab:_Differential_expression_analysis_(DEA) TCGAanalyze: Analyze data from TCGA]
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/GSE62944.html GEO accession data GSE62944 as a SummarizedExperiment] and [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE62944 GEO] website.
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25819073 BioXpress: an integrated RNA-seq-derived gene expression database for pan-cancer analysis.]
* https://github.com/srp33/TCGA_RNASeq_Clinical
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/12/21/046904 MOGSA: integrative single sample gene-set analysis of multiple omics data] 2019. The data was obtained from TCGA and NCI60.
* [https://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/79/13/3514 RNA Sequencing of the NCI-60: Integration into CellMiner and CellMiner CDB]
* [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01621459.2020.1730853?journalCode=uasa20 Integrating Multidimensional Data for Clustering Analysis With Applications to Cancer Patient Data] 2020


Pasilla data. Note that the bam files are not clear where to find them. According to the [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/50162/ message], we can download SAM files first and then convert them to BAM files by samtools (Not verify yet).
=== GenomicDataCommons package ===
<pre>
* [[#GenomicDataCommons_package|See here]]
samtools view -h -o outputFile.bam inputFile.sam
* [https://seandavi.github.io/post/2017/12/genomicdatacommons-example-uuid-to-tcga-and-target-barcode-translation/ GenomicDataCommons] Example: UUID to TCGA and TARGET Barcode Translation
</pre>


A modified R code that works is
=== NCI60 ===
<pre>
[https://dtp.cancer.gov/discovery_development/nci-60/characterization.htm Molecular Characterization of the NCI-60]. NCI-ADR-RES and OVCAR-8 being derived from one another, SNB-19 and U251 are derived from the same patient
###################################################
### code chunk number 11: gff (eval = FALSE)
###################################################
library(rtracklayer)
fl <- paste0("ftp://ftp.ensembl.org/pub/release-62/",
            "gtf/drosophila_melanogaster/",
            "Drosophila_melanogaster.BDGP5.25.62.gtf.gz")
gffFile <- file.path(tempdir(), basename(fl))
download.file(fl, gffFile)
gff0 <- import(gffFile, asRangedData=FALSE)


###################################################
=== Case studies ===
### code chunk number 12: gff_parse (eval = FALSE)
[https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1186/s40249-020-00662-x.pdf Expression of the SARS-CoV-2 cell receptor gene ACE2 in a wide variety of human tissues]
###################################################
 
idx <- mcols(gff0)$source == "protein_coding" &
== NCI Proteomic Data Commons ==
          mcols(gff0)$type == "exon" &
https://pdc.cancer.gov/pdc/ vs https://gdc.cancer.gov/
          seqnames(gff0) == "4"
gff <- gff0[idx]
## adjust seqnames to match Bam files
seqlevels(gff) <- paste("chr", seqlevels(gff), sep="")
chr4genes <- split(gff, mcols(gff)$gene_id)


###################################################
== GTEx ==
### code chunk number 12: gff_parse (eval = FALSE)
* [https://www.gtexportal.org/home/ Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project]
###################################################
* [https://master.bioconductor.org/packages/release/workflows/html/recountWorkflow.html recount workflow: accessing over 70,000 human RNA-seq samples with Bioconductor]
library(GenomicAlignments)
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/602367v1 Basal Contamination of Bulk Sequencing: Lessons from the GTEx dataset]
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/variancePartition.html variancePartition] Quantify and interpret divers of variation in multilevel gene expression experiments. [https://www.biologicalpsychiatryjournal.com/article/S0006-3223(20)31674-7/fulltext Transcriptomic Insight Into the Polygenic Mechanisms Underlying Psychiatric Disorders] 2020


# fls <- c("untreated1_chr4.bam", "untreated3_chr4.bam")
== NIH LINCS ==
fls <- list.files(system.file("extdata", package="pasillaBamSubset"),
* http://www.lincsproject.org/, http://www.lincsproject.org/LINCS/tools
    recursive=TRUE, pattern="*bam$", full=TRUE)
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/slinky/inst/doc/LINCS-analysis.html slinky], [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/35/17/3176/5284904 paper]
path <- system.file("extdata", package="pasillaBamSubset")
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/cmapR.html cmapR]
bamlst <- BamFileList(fls)
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29065900/ GRcalculator: an online tool for calculating and mining dose-response data]
genehits <- summarizeOverlaps(chr4genes, bamlst, mode="Union") # SummarizedExperiment object
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6381817/ Reproducible Bioconductor workflows using browser-based interactive notebooks and containers]
assays(genehits)$counts


###################################################
== Sharing data ==
### code chunk number 15: pasilla_exoncountset (eval = FALSE)
* [https://datascience.cancer.gov/data-sharing NCI Data Sharing]
###################################################
* [https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006472 Ten quick tips for sharing open genomic data] Brown et al, PLOS 2018
library(DESeq)


expdata = MIAME(
= Gene set analysis =
              name="pasilla knockdown",
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/88926/ Over Representation Vs Enrichment Analysis]
              lab="Genetics and Developmental Biology, University of
 
                  Connecticut Health Center",
== Hypergeometric test ==
              contact="Dr. Brenton Graveley",
* [http://mygoblet.org/training-portal/courses/pathway-and-network-analysis-omics-data-2014 A course from bioinformatics.ca] and [http://mygoblet.org/sites/default/files/materrials/Pathways_2014_Module2.pdf over-represented pathway].
              title="modENCODE Drosophila pasilla RNA Binding Protein RNAi
* [http://blog.nextgenetics.net/?e=94 How informative are enrichment analyses really?]
                  knockdown RNA-Seq Studies",
              pubMedIds="20921232",
              url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE18508",
              abstract="RNA-seq of 3 biological replicates of from the Drosophila
                  melanogaster S2-DRSC cells that have been RNAi depleted of mRNAs
                  encoding pasilla, a mRNA binding protein and 4 biological replicates
                  of the the untreated cell line.")


design <- data.frame(
== Next-generation sequencing data ==
              condition=c("untreated", "untreated"),
* [http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/32/17/i611.full Gene-set association tests for next-generation sequencing data]
              replicate=c(1,1),
              type=rep("single-read", 2), stringsAsFactors=TRUE)
library(DESeq)
geneCDS <- newCountDataSet(
                  countData=assay(genehits),
                  conditions=design)


experimentData(geneCDS) <- expdata
= Forums =
sampleNames(geneCDS) = colnames(genehits)
* Biostars source code https://github.com/ialbert/biostar-central
* https://support.bioconductor.org/ (powered by Biostar too)


###################################################
= Batch effect =
### code chunk number 16: pasilla_genes (eval = FALSE)
[[Batch_effect|Batch effect]]
###################################################
chr4tx <- split(gff, mcols(gff)$transcript_id)
txhits <- summarizeOverlaps(chr4tx, bamlst)
txCDS <- newCountDataSet(assay(txhits), design)
experimentData(txCDS) <- expdata
</pre>


We can also check out ?summarizeOverlaps to find some fake examples.
= Misc =
== Advice ==
* [https://widdowquinn.github.io/ten_great_papers/ Ten great papers for biologists starting out in computational biology]
* [https://github.com/nih-byob/presentations/tree/master/2019/01_bioinformatics_tips Bioinformatics advice I wish I learned 10 years ago] from NIH


== [http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Rsubread.html Rsubread] ==
== High Performance ==
See [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/65604/ this post] for about C version of the [http://bioinf.wehi.edu.au/featureCounts/ featureCounts] program.
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3RVfv6lUtc NYCMC


[https://www.biostars.org/p/96176/ featureCounts vs HTSeq-count]
== Cloud Computing ==
* [https://github.com/VCCRI/Falco/ '''Falco''': A quick and flexible single-cell RNA-seq processing framework on the cloud]
* [https://youtu.be/cP5rvWoJDOQ Getting started with Bioconductor in the cloud]
* [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/micloud-a-bioinformatics-cloud-for-seamless-execution-of-complex-ngs-data-analysis-pipelines/ miCloud]: a bioinformatics cloud for seamless execution of complex NGS data analysis pipelines


== Inference ==
== Merge different datasets (different genechips) ==
=== DESeq or edgeR ===
* https://support.bioconductor.org/p/65506/
* [http://genomebiology.com/2014/15/12/550#sec4 DESeq2 method]
* DESeq2 with a large number of samples -> use DESEq2 to normalize the data and then use do a Wilcoxon rank-sum test on the normalized counts, for each gene separately, or, even better, use a permutation test. See [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/60432/ this post]. Or consider the limma-voom method instead, which will handle 1000 samples in a few seconds without the need for extra memory.
* edgeR normalization factor [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/65683/ post]. Normalization factors are computed using the trimmed mean of M-values (TMM) method; see the [http://genomebiology.com/2010/11/3/r25 paper by Robinson & Oshlack 2010] for more details. Briefly, M-values are defined as the library size-adjusted log-ratio of counts between two libraries. The most extreme 30% of M-values are trimmed away, and the mean of the remaining M-values is computed. This trimmed mean represents the log-normalization factor between the two libraries. The idea is to eliminate systematic differences in the counts between libraries, by assuming that most genes are not DE.
* edgeR [http://f1000research.com/articles/5-1438/v1 From reads to genes to pathways: differential expression analysis of RNA-Seq experiments using Rsubread and the edgeR quasi-likelihood pipeline]
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/65890/ Can I feed TCGA normalized count data to EdgeR?]
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/66067/ counts() function and normalized counts].
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/74572/ Why use Negative binomial distribution] in RNA-Seq data?] and the [http://www.bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2015/CSAMA2015/lect/L05-deseq2-anders.pdf Presentation] by Simon Anders.


=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/EBSeq.html EBSeq] ===
== Genomic data vs transcriptomic data ==
An R package for gene and isoform differential expression analysis of RNA-seq data
* The main difference between genomic data and transcriptomic data is that genomic data provides information on the complete DNA sequence of an organism, while transcriptomic data provides information on the expression levels of genes.
* Genomic data:
** Genomic data refers to the complete DNA sequence of an organism, which includes all of its genes, regulatory regions, and non-coding regions. This type of data provides information on the genetic makeup of an organism, including its potential to develop certain diseases, its evolutionary history, and its overall genetic diversity.  
** Examples of genomic data: Whole genome sequencing (WGS), Genome-wide association studies (GWAS), Copy number variation (CNV) analysis, Comparative genomics, Metagenomics.
* Transcriptomic data
** Transcriptomic data, on the other hand, refers to the collection of all RNA transcripts produced by the genes of an organism. RNA transcripts are produced when genes are transcribed into RNA molecules, which are then used as templates to synthesize proteins. Transcriptomic data provides information on the expression levels of genes, which can help researchers understand how genes are regulated and how they contribute to biological processes.
** Examples of transcriptomic data: RNA-Seq, Microarray, scRNA-Seq, qPCR, Ribosome profiling


http://www.rna-seqblog.com/analysis-of-ebv-transcription-using-high-throughput-rna-sequencing/
== Low read count and filtering ==
* DESeq2 '''pre-filtering''':
** ''While it is not necessary to pre-filter low count genes before running the DESeq2 functions, there are two reasons which make pre-filtering useful: by removing rows in which there are very few reads, we reduce the memory size of the dds data object, and we increase the speed of the transformation and testing functions within DESeq2.'' [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/vignettes/DESeq2/inst/doc/DESeq2.html#pre-filtering DESeq2 vignette].
** One can also omit this step entirely and just rely on the '''independent filtering''' procedures available in results(), either IHW or genefilter::filtered_p().
:<syntaxhighlight lang='r'>
smallestGroupSize <- 3 # smallest group size
keep <- rowSums(counts(dds) >= 10) >= smallestGroupSize
dds <- dds[keep, ]
</syntaxhighlight>


=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/prebs.html prebs] ===
* '''glmnet(, exclude)'''. See its [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/glmnet/vignettes/glmnet.pdf#page=27 vignettte] for some examples including computing univariate T-test and excluding 40% genes with low T-statistic. Notice the <span style="color: red"> bias</span> could be introduced if we use both x and y to filter variables unless the same procedure is applied during CV.
Probe region expression estimation for RNA-seq data for improved microarray comparability
* [https://combine-australia.github.io/RNAseq-R/slides/RNASeq_filtering_qc.pdf#page=10 RNA-seq: filtering, quality control and visualisation]. As a general rule, a good threshold can be chosen for a '''CPM''' value that corresponds to a count of 10.
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26737772/ Effect of low-expression gene filtering on detection of differentially expressed genes in RNA-seq data] 2015
* [https://seqqc.wordpress.com/2020/02/17/removing-low-count-genes-for-rna-seq-downstream-analysis/ Removing low count genes for RNA-seq downstream analysis]
* [https://bioinformatics-core-shared-training.github.io/cruk-summer-school-2018/RNASeq2018/html/02_Preprocessing_Data.nb.html#filtering-the-genes RNA-seq analysis in R Pre-processsing RNA-seq data]. ''It keeps all genes where the total number of reads across all samples is greater than 5.''
* [http://monashbioinformaticsplatform.github.io/RNAseq-DE-analysis-with-R/RNAseq_DE_analysis_with_R.html RNAseq data analysis in R - Notebook]. ''A common way to do this is by filtering out genes having less than 1 count-per-million reads ('''cpm''') in half the samples. The “edgeR” library provides the '''cpm''' function which can be used here.''
* [https://www.bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2016/CSAMA/lab-3-rnaseq/rnaseq_gene_CSAMA2016.html#pre-filtering-rows-with-very-small-counts RNA-seq workflow - gene-level exploratory analysis and differential expression]. ''we will remove those genes which have a total count of less than 5.''
* [https://biocorecrg.github.io/RNAseq_course_2019/differential_expression.html Differential expression analysis] workshop material. It referred to this paper [https://f1000research.com/articles/5-1438/v2 From reads to genes to pathways: differential expression analysis of RNA-Seq experiments using Rsubread and the edgeR quasi-likelihood pipeline]. It uses the criterion ''we keep genes that have '''CPM''' values above 0.5 in at least two libraries''.
* [https://web.stanford.edu/class/bios221/labs/rnaseq/lab_4_rnaseq.html RNA Sequence Analysis in R: edgeR] which also uses '''cpm''' to filter genes.


=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/DEXSeq.html DEXSeq] ===
=== Independent Filtering ===
Inference of differential exon usage in RNA-Seq
<ul>
<li>[https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/genefilter.html genefilter] package. [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/genefilter/inst/doc/independent_filtering_plots.pdf Independent filtering vignette].
* In the 1st plot, the legend represents different threshold values (θ). For instance, when θ = 0.1, we filter out 10% of hypotheses before conducting multiple testing.
* The 1st plot shows the larger the theta, the more number of hypotheses are rejected when we consider a fixed FDR cutoff. But the plot does not consider larger theta values.
* The second plot indicates what is the optimal theta threshold to filter genes.
* In this example, removing 60% genes rejects the most number of hypotheses/returns the most number of discoveries.
* It can be seen very large values of theta could reduce power.
* The '''filter parameter''' in [https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/genefilter/versions/1.54.2/topics/filtered_p filtered_p() or filtered_R()] represents '''ranks'''. That is, using, for example, S2(=rowVars()) or S3=rank(S2) as the '''filter''' returns the same result.
:<syntaxhighlight lang='r'>
# filtered_p: Returned BH adjusted p for different thresholds defined in theta.
#            This can be used to generate the 1st plot.
filtered_p(filter, test, theta, data, method = "none")
# filtered_R: Returned the number of rejections using the specified BH cutoff (alpha)
#            for different thresholds.
#            This can be used to generate the 2nd & 3rd plots and find the optimal threshold.
filtered_R(alpha, filter, test, theta, data, method = "none")
</syntaxhighlight>
* The last plot uses sample mean instead of sample variance as the filter statistic. As we can see, only 10% genes are filtered out.
</br>
[[File:Filtered_p.png|220px]] [[File:Filtered R.png|220px]] [[File:Filtered R mean.png|220px]]


=== [http://www-personal.umich.edu/~jianghui/rseqnp/ rSeqNP] ===
<li>DESeq2 [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/vignettes/DESeq2/inst/doc/DESeq2.html#indfilt Independent filtering of results]. '''Independent filtering is performed AFTER the differential expression analysis (DEA) in DESeq2.'''
A non-parametric approach for detecting differential expression and splicing from RNA-Seq data
* The results function of the DESeq2 package performs independent filtering by default using the '''mean of normalized counts''' as a '''filter statistic'''.
* A threshold on the '''filter statistic''' is found which optimizes the number of adjusted p values lower than a significance level alpha.
* The adjusted p values for the genes which do not pass the filter threshold are set to '''NA'''.


== Pipeline ==
<li>[https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s StatQuest: edgeR and DESeq2, part 2]. Mitigate the multiple testing problem. [https://statquest.org/statquest-filtering-genes-with-low-read-counts/ code], [https://techal.org/mitigating-the-multiple-testing-problem-independent-filtering-with-edger-and-deseq2 written guide].
=== [https://github.com/PF2-pasteur-fr/SARTools SARTools] ===
* A simulated data shows '''[https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s?si=1klGB8taFVnZ1B9v&t=462 FDR is doing a great job limiting number of <span style="color: orange">False Positives</span> in the significant results, but it's not awesome keeping the <span style="color: green">True Positives</span>]'''.
http://www.rna-seqblog.com/sartools-a-deseq2-and-edger-based-r-pipeline-for-comprehensive-differential-analysis-of-rna-seq-data/
* [https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s?si=1pJkbX6_ltrAB0Nx&t=542 Each time we increase the number of bogus tests, we reduce the number of True Positive p-values < .05 that survive the FDR adjustment].
* [https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s?si=OAsr2lI92sf0429P&t=580 A plot of True/False Positives vs Number of bogus tests]. That means FDR is still having its limitation. <s>The independent filtering helps address this limitation.</s>
* [https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s?si=qDEhvzHcI7_M3eX_&t=637 edgeR recommends removing all genes except those with > 1 CPM in 2 or more samples]. It compensates for differences in read depth between libraries. The CPM cutoff "1" depends on the data. [https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s?si=m6YVfwkIBwZGd1dN&t=924 How can we determine what a good CPM cutoff is?].
* [https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s?si=LX2m1mlFVZH9REzY&t=983 Differences of edgeR and DESeq2].
* [https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s?si=vZc0m5wdoABAkrQ6&t=1160 Y-axis is number of significant genes, X-axis is the threshold/quantiles]. Choose the threshold/quantile such that the number of significant genes is maximized.
* [https://youtu.be/Gi0JdrxRq5s?si=1cdGVRdEIigXp6IW&t=1267 Advice]. We see the filtering was done after calculating p-values.


== pasilla and pasillaBamSubset Data ==
<li>[https://bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2011/CSAMA/Thursday/Morning%20Talks/110629-multtestindepfilt-huber.pdf Sensitivity, Specificity, ROC, Multiple testing, Independent filtering] by Wolfgang Huber.
pasilla - Data package with per-exon and per-gene read counts of RNA-seq samples of Pasilla knock-down by Brooks et al., Genome Research 2011.
<li>[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20460310/ Independent filtering increases detection power for high-throughput experiments]. Richard Bourgon 2010.
<li>[https://hbctraining.github.io/DGE_workshop_salmon_online/lessons/05b_wald_test_results.html Exploring DESeq2 results: Wald test]. 3. Genes with a low mean normalized counts.
<li>[https://www.r-bloggers.com/2012/09/deseq-vs-edger-comparison/ DESeq vs edgeR Comparison].
</ul>


pasillaBamSubset - Subset of BAM files untreated1.bam (single-end reads) and untreated3.bam (paired-end reads) from "Pasilla" experiment (Pasilla knock-down by Brooks et al., Genome Research 2011).
=== edgeR::filterByExpr ===
* [https://rdrr.io/bioc/edgeR/man/filterByExpr.html ?filterByExpr]
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/limma/inst/doc/usersguide.pdf#page=71 limma] user guide
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9151145/ Is it okay to increase filtering to get more significant Adjusted P Values for DEGs found using Limma?]
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9157095/ DESeq2 filtering vs edgeR filtering]


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/BitSeq.html BitSeq] ==
== Normalization ==
Transcript expression inference and differential expression analysis for RNA-seq data. The homepage of [http://www.hiit.fi/u/ahonkela/ Antti Honkela].
* [http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/07/21/nar.gkv736.long How data analysis affects power, reproducibility and biological insight of RNA-seq studies in complex datasets] 2015
* [http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/16/347 Comparing the normalization methods for the differential analysis of Illumina high-throughput RNA-Seq data] 2015
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-018-2382-0 Expression analysis of RNA sequencing data from human neural and glial cell lines depends on technical replication and normalization methods] 2018
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-019-2745-1 A statistical normalization method and differential expression analysis for RNA-seq data between different species] Zhou 2019
* [https://github.com/crazyhottommy/RNA-seq-analysis RNA-seq analysis] some notes from Ming Tang
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-019-3247-x A protocol to evaluate RNA sequencing normalization methods] Abrams et al 2019. It concluded that transcripts per million ('''TPM''') was the best performing normalization method based on its preservation of biological signal as compared to the other methods tested.
* [https://bioconductor.github.io/BiocWorkshops/rna-seq-analysis-is-easy-as-1-2-3-with-limma-glimma-and-edger.html#data-pre-processing Data pre-processing] 6.6.3 Normalising gene expression distributions. log2 CPM (counts per million) was considered. edgeR::calcNormFactors(x, method = "TMM") was used to normalize counts.
* [https://morphoscape.wordpress.com/2020/09/26/generalized-linear-models-and-plots-with-edger-advanced-differential-expression-analysis/ Generalized Linear Models and Plots with edgeR – Advanced Differential Expression Analysis]
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/srep18898 CrossNorm: a novel normalization strategy for microarray data in cancers] Cheng 2016
* [https://rdrr.io/bioc/EnrichmentBrowser/man/normalize.html EnrichmentBrowser::normalize()]
* [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/SingleCellExperiment/inst/doc/intro.html SingleCellExperiment] vignette. It lists 4 special assays: counts, logcounts, '''cpm''' and '''tpm'''.
* [https://compgenomr.github.io/book/gene-expression-analysis-using-high-throughput-sequencing-technologies.html#within-sample-normalization-of-the-read-counts 8.3.4 Within sample normalization of the read counts] and [https://compgenomr.github.io/book/gene-expression-analysis-using-high-throughput-sequencing-technologies.html#computing-different-normalization-schemes-in-r 8.3.5 Computing different normalization schemes in R] from Computational Genomics with R by Altuna Akalin
** '''CPM''' is the simplest method. It addresses the '''sequencing depth''' bias by normalizing the read counts per gene by dividing each gene’s read count by a certain value and multiplying it by 10^6. There are 3 ways for the denominator: Total Counts Normalization, Upper Quartile Normalization and Median Normalization.
** Popular metrics that improve upon CPM are RPKM/FPKM (reads/fragments per kilobase of million reads) and TPM (transcripts per million).
** '''RPKM''' is obtained by dividing the CPM value by another factor, which is the length of the gene per kilobase. FPKM (substitute ''reads'' with ''fragments'') is the same as RPKM, but is used for paired-end reads. So RPKM differs from CPM by adding one step.
** '''TPM''' also controls for both the library size and the gene lengths, however, with the TPM method, the read counts are first normalized by the gene length (per kilobase), and then gene-length normalized values are divided by the sum of the gene-length normalized values and multiplied by 10^6.
** '''Library composition''' or '''RNA composition'''. In DESeq2 the read counts are normalized by computing size factors, which addresses the differences not only in the library sizes, but also the ''library compositions''. See [https://compgenomr.github.io/book/gene-expression-analysis-using-high-throughput-sequencing-technologies.html#differential-expression-analysis 8.3.7 Differential expression analysis]
*** [https://youtu.be/Wdt6jdi-NQo?t=54 Different samples contain different active genes]
*** [https://chipster.csc.fi/manual/deseq2.html This procedure corrects for library size and RNA composition bias, which can arise for example when only a small number of genes are very highly expressed in one experiment condition but not in the other].
*** [https://hbctraining.github.io/DGE_workshop_salmon/lessons/01_DGE_setup_and_overview.html DESeq2 first normalizes the count data to account for differences in library sizes and RNA composition between samples].
*** A few ''highly'' differentially expressed genes between samples, differences in the number of genes expressed between samples, or presence of contamination can skew some types of normalization methods. [https://hbctraining.github.io/DGE_workshop_salmon/lessons/02_DGE_count_normalization.html Introduction to DGE] gives a nice graphical illustration of RNA composition.
*** [https://youtu.be/UFB993xufUU?t=215 StatQuest: DESeq2, part 1, Library Normalization] - adjusting for differences in library composition
*** '''Sequencing bias detection''' from [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/NOISeq/inst/doc/NOISeq.pdf#page=12 RNA composition] from the NOISeq's vignette.
* [https://academic.oup.com/bib/article/19/5/776/3056951#supplementary-data Selecting between-sample RNA-Seq normalization methods from the perspective of their assumptions] Evans 2018. R code is in github. [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/seqc.html seqc] package from Bioconductor.
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.03.11.435043v2 Evaluation of critical data processing steps for reliable prediction of gene co-expression from large collections of RNA-seq data] Vandenbon 2021. Methods that correct for differences in gene length (RPKM and FPKM) don't affect correlation value; that is, these methods would be equivalent to '''CPM''' normalization.
* [https://translational-medicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12967-021-02936-w TPM, FPKM, or Normalized Counts? A Comparative Study of Quantification Measures for the Analysis of RNA-seq Data from the NCI Patient-Derived Models Repository] Zhao 2021
* Youtube
** [https://youtu.be/UFB993xufUU StatQuest: DESeq2, part 1, Library Normalization], [http://bioconductor.org/books/release/OSCA/data-infrastructure.html scran::computeSumFactors()]
** [https://youtu.be/Wdt6jdi-NQo StatQuest: edgeR, part 1, Library Normalization] (TMM)
** [https://youtu.be/TTUrtCY2k-w RPKM, FPKM and TPM, Clearly Explained!!!]
** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlf6wYJrwKY&list=PLblh5JKOoLUJo2Q6xK4tZElbIvAACEykp High Throughput Sequencing]
* [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/robust-normalization-and-transformation-techniques-for-constructing-gene-coexpression-networks-from-rna-seq-data/ Robust normalization and transformation techniques for constructing gene coexpression networks from RNA-seq data] 2022


== ReportingTools ==
=== log2 transformation ===
The ReportingTools software package enables users to easily display reports of analysis
No matter we use TPM, TMM, FPKM, or DESeq2 normalized counts, we still need to take a log2(x+1) transformation before any analyses.
results generated from sources such as microarray and sequencing data.


== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/sequences/index.html sequences] ==
=== Quantile normalization ===
More or less an educational package. It has 2 c and c++ source code. It is used in Advanced R programming and package development.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantile_normalization. The new values are the '''averaged''' '''ordered''' values per gene based on the original rank.
* [https://www.r-bloggers.com/2024/03/mastering-quantile-normalization-in-r-a-step-by-step-guide/ Mastering Quantile Normalization in R: A Step-by-Step Guide]. The quantiles of the normalized data are consistent across the different datasets.
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/286278/ Question: Quantile normalizing prior to or after TPM scaling?]
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2014/12/04/012203.full.pdf When to use Quantile Normalization?] and its R package [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/quantro.html quantro]
* [https://davetang.org/muse/2014/07/07/quantile-normalisation-in-r/ Quantile normalisation in R]
<ul>
<li>normalize.quantiles() from preprocessCore package. [https://www.statology.org/quantile-normalization-in-r/ How to Perform Quantile Normalization in R]
* for ties, the average is used in normalize.quantiles(), ((4.666667 + 5.666667) / 2) = 5.166667.
* I got into an error when I use the function in RStudio docker container but the solution [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/122925/#9135989 here] ('''BiocManager::install("preprocessCore", configure.args="--disable-threading")''') works.
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
source('http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R')
biocLite('preprocessCore')
#load package
library(preprocessCore)
#the function expects a matrix
#create a matrix using the same example
mat <- matrix(c(5,2,3,4,4,1,4,2,3,4,6,8),
            ncol=3)
mat
#    [,1] [,2] [,3]
#[1,]    5    4    3
#[2,]    2    1    4
#[3,]    3    4    6
#[4,]    4    2    8
#quantile normalisation
normalize.quantiles(mat)
#        [,1]    [,2]    [,3]
#[1,] 5.666667 5.166667 2.000000
#[2,] 2.000000 2.000000 3.000000
#[3,] 3.000000 5.166667 4.666667
#[4,] 4.666667 3.000000 5.666667
</syntaxhighlight>
</li>
</ul>


== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/QuasR.html QuasR] ==
=== Distribution, density plot ===
[http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2014/12/09/bioinformatics.btu781.short?rss=1&ssource=mfr Bioinformatics] paper
[https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Density-plot-showing-the-distribution-of-RNA-seq-read-counts-FPKM-of-PEG-treated_fig2_318575379 Density plot showing the distribution of RNA-seq read counts (FPKM)] log10(FPKM)


== CRAN packages ==
=== Negative binomial distribution ===
=== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/ssizeRNA/index.html ssizeRNA] ===
[https://support.bioconductor.org/p/74572/ RNA-seq and Negative binomial distribution]
Sample Size Calculation for RNA-Seq Experimental Design


=== [http://master.bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/RnaSeqSampleSize.html RnaSeqSampleSize] ===
== Z-score transformation ==
[https://cqs.mc.vanderbilt.edu/shiny/RnaSeqSampleSize/ Shiny] app
* This practice has been used extensively in papers without a clear foundation.
* [https://www.jmdjournal.org/article/S1525-1578(10)60455-2/fulltext Analysis of Microarray Data Using Z Score Transformation] Cheadle 2003. Z-normalization was calculated '''per gene'''.
** For example, [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-66986-8 ssGSEA score-based Ras dependency indexes derived from gene expression data reveal potential Ras addiction mechanisms with possible clinica implications] applies z-scores on each gene AND ssGSEA scores for each pathway/gene signature.
* [https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0085150 Transforming RNA-Seq Data to Improve the Performance of Prognostic Gene Signatures] Zwiener 2014. Often, standardizing gene expressions is implemented as a default in software packages.
* [https://bioinformatics.stackexchange.com/a/2181 RNAseq: Z score, Intensity, and Resources]. ''For visualization in heatmaps or for other clustering (e.g., k-means, fuzzy) it is useful to use z-scores.''


=== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/rbamtools/index.html rbamtools] ===
== Ensembl to gene symbol ==
Provides an interface to functions of the 'SAMtools' C-Library by Heng Li
* http://useast.ensembl.org/index.html (seems down). [http://training.ensembl.org/exercises Training].
* Online tools
** [https://www.syngoportal.org/convert SynGO - ID conversion tool]
** [https://www.biotools.fr/human/ensembl_symbol_converter ENSEMBL Gene ID to Gene Symbol Converter]
* R. [https://medium.com/computational-biology/gene-id-mapping-using-r-14ff50eec9ba Gene ID mapping using R].
** [https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/AnnotationDbi/versions/1.34.4/topics/AnnotationDb-objects AnnotationDbi::mapIds()] function + [https://www.biostars.org/p/239681/ "org.Hs.eg.db"] package. It works well.
*** Vignette of [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/EnhancedVolcano.html EnhancedVolcano] package
*** [https://www.r-bloggers.com/2016/07/converting-gene-names-in-r-with-annotationdbi/ Converting Gene Names in R with AnnotationDbi]
*** my [https://gist.github.com/arraytools/6e6142f6fabb31e54e188ea1fb0deeee TCGAbiolinks-GBM.Rmd].
** getBM() from [https://stackoverflow.com/a/58875340 "biomaRt"] package
** [https://rdrr.io/bioc/tidybulk/man/ensembl_symbol_mapping.html ensembl_to_symbol()] from tidybulk package.
** [https://github.com/stemangiola/bioc_2020_tidytranscriptomics A Tidy Transcriptomics introduction to RNA sequencing analyses] (Bioc 2020).


=== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/refGenome/index.html refGenome] ===
== How to use [http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgTables UCSC Table Browser] ==
The packge contains functionality for import and managing of downloaded genome annotation Data from Ensembl genome browser (European Bioinformatics Institute) and from UCSC genome browser (University of California, Santa Cruz) and annotation routines for genomic positions and splice site positions.
* An instruction from [http://bitseq.github.io/howto/index BitSeq] software
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/93011/ How To Get Bed File Containing Exons Of Canonical Transcripts And Their Corresponding Gene Symbols]
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/156637/ Where to download refseq gene coding regions data?]
** http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgTables OR
** Download '''refGene.txt.gz''' file from UCSC directly using http links
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/94823/ Where To Download Genome Annotation Including Exon, Intron, Utr, Intergenic Information?]


=== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/WhopGenome/index.html WhopGenome] ===
[[:File:Tablebrowser.png]] [[:File:Tablebrowser2.png]]
Provides very fast access to whole genome, population scale variation data from VCF files and sequence data from FASTA-formatted files. It also reads in alignments from FASTA, Phylip, MAF and other file formats. Provides easy-to-use interfaces to genome annotation from UCSC and Bioconductor and gene ontology data from AmiGO and is capable to read, modify and write PLINK .PED-format pedigree files.


=== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/TCGA2STAT/index.html TCGA2STAT] ===
Note
Simple TCGA Data Access for Integrated Statistical Analysis in R
# the UCSC browser will return the output on browser by default. Users need to use the browser to save the file with self-chosen file name.
# the output does not have a header
# The bed format is explained in https://genome.ucsc.edu/FAQ/FAQformat.html#format1


TCGA2STAT depends on Bioconductor package CNTools which cannot be installed automatically.  
If I select "Whole Genome", I will get a file with 75,893 rows. If I choose "Coding Exons", I will get a file with 577,387 rows.
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
$ wc -l hg38Tables.bed
biocLite("CNTools")
75893 hg38Tables.bed
$ head -2 hg38Tables.bed
chr1 67092175 67134971 NM_001276352 0 - 67093579 67127240 0 9 1429,70,145,68,113,158,92,86,42, 0,4076,11062,19401,23176,33576,34990,38966,42754,
chr1 201283451 201332993 NM_000299 0 + 201283702 201328836 0 15 453,104,395,145,208,178,63,115,156,177,154,187,85,107,2920, 0,10490,29714,33101,34120,35166,36364,36815,38526,39561,40976,41489,42302,45310,46622,
$ tail -2 hg38Tables.bed
chr22_KI270734v1_random 131493 137393 NM_005675 0 + 131645 136994 0 5 262,161,101,141,549, 0,342,3949,4665,5351,
chr22_KI270734v1_random 138078 161852 NM_016335 0 - 138479 161586 0 15 589,89,99,176,147,93,82,80,117,65,150,35,209,313,164, 0,664,4115,5535,6670,6925,8561,9545,10037,10335,12271,12908,18210,23235,23610,


install.packages("TCGA2STAT")
$ wc -l hg38CodingExon.bed
</syntaxhighlight>
577387 hg38CodingExon.bed
$ head -2 hg38CodingExon.bed
chr1 67093579 67093604 NM_001276352_cds_0_0_chr1_67093580_r 0 -
chr1 67096251 67096321 NM_001276352_cds_1_0_chr1_67096252_r 0 -
$ tail -2 hg38CodingExon.bed
chr22_KI270734v1_random 156288 156497 NM_016335_cds_12_0_chr22_KI270734v1_random_156289_r 0 -
chr22_KI270734v1_random 161313 161586 NM_016335_cds_13_0_chr22_KI270734v1_random_161314_r 0 -


The getTCGA() function allows to download various kind of data:
# Focus on one NCBI refseq (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/444741698)
* '''gene expression''' which includes mRNA-microarray gene expression data (data.type="mRNA_Array") & RNA-Seq gene expression data (data.type="RNASeq")
$ grep NM_001276352 hg38Tables.bed
* '''miRNA expression''' which includes miRNA-array data (data.type="miRNA_Array") & miRNA-Seq data (data.type="miRNASeq")
chr1 67092175 67134971 NM_001276352 0 - 67093579 67127240 0 9 1429,70,145,68,113,158,92,86,42, 0,4076,11062,19401,23176,33576,34990,38966,42754,
* '''mutation''' data (data.type="Mutation")
$ grep NM_001276352 hg38CodingExon.bed
* '''methylation expression''' (data.type="Methylation")
chr1 67093579 67093604 NM_001276352_cds_0_0_chr1_67093580_r 0 -
* '''copy number changes''' (data.type="CNA_SNP")
chr1 67096251 67096321 NM_001276352_cds_1_0_chr1_67096252_r 0 -
chr1 67103237 67103382 NM_001276352_cds_2_0_chr1_67103238_r 0 -
chr1 67111576 67111644 NM_001276352_cds_3_0_chr1_67111577_r 0 -
chr1 67115351 67115464 NM_001276352_cds_4_0_chr1_67115352_r 0 -
chr1 67125751 67125909 NM_001276352_cds_5_0_chr1_67125752_r 0 -
chr1 67127165 67127240 NM_001276352_cds_6_0_chr1_67127166_r 0 -
</pre>


=== [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/caOmicsV.html caOmicsV] ===
This can be compared to '''refGene'''(?) directly downloaded via http
http://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-016-0989-6 Data from TCGA ws used
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
$ wget -c -O hg38.refGene.txt.gz http://hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg38/database/refGene.txt.gz
--2018-10-09 15:44:43--  http://hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg38/database/refGene.txt.gz
Resolving hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu (hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu)... 128.114.119.163
Connecting to hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu (hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu)|128.114.119.163|:80... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 7457957 (7.1M) [application/x-gzip]
Saving to: ‘hg38.refGene.txt.gz’


Visualize multi-dimentional cancer genomics data including of patient information, gene expressions, DNA methylations, DNA copy number variations, and SNP/mutations in matrix layout or network layout.
hg38.refGene.txt.gz                100%[===============================================================>]  7.11M  901KB/s    in 10s


=== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/Map2NCBI/index.html Map2NCBI] ===
2018-10-09 15:44:54 (708 KB/s) - ‘hg38.refGene.txt.gz’ saved [7457957/7457957]
The GetGeneList() function is useful to download Genomic Features (including gene features/symbols) from NCBI (ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/genomes/MapView/).


<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
$ zcat hg38.refGene.txt.gz | wc -l
> library(Map2NCBI)
75893
> GeneList = GetGeneList("Homo sapiens", build="ANNOTATION_RELEASE.107", savefiles=TRUE, destfile=path.expand("~/"))
15:45PM /tmp$ zcat hg38.refGene.txt.gz | head -2
  # choose [2], [n], and [1] to filter the build and feature information.
1072 NM_003288 chr20 + 63865227 63891545 63865365 63889945 7 63865227,63869295,63873667,63875815,63882718,63889189,63889849, 63865384,63869441,63873816,63875875,63882820,63889238,63891545, 0 TPD52L2 cmpl cmpl 0,1,0,2,2,2,0,
  # The destination folder will contain seq_gene.txt, seq_gene.md.gz and GeneList.txt files.
1815 NR_110164 chr2 + 161244738 161249050 161249050 161249050 2 161244738,161246874, 161244895,161249050, 0 LINC01806 unk unk -1,-1,
> str(GeneList)
'data.frame': 52157 obs. of  15 variables:
$ tax_id      : chr  "9606" "9606" "9606" "9606" ...
$ chromosome  : chr  "1" "1" "1" "1" ...
$ chr_start    : num  11874 14362 17369 30366 34611 ...
$ chr_stop    : num  14409 29370 17436 30503 36081 ...
$ chr_orient  : chr  "+" "-" "-" "+" ...
$ contig      : chr  "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" ...
$ ctg_start    : num  1874 4362 7369 20366 24611 ...
$ ctg_stop    : num  4409 19370 7436 20503 26081 ...
$ ctg_orient  : chr  "+" "-" "-" "+" ...
$ feature_name : chr  "DDX11L1" "WASH7P" "MIR6859-1" "MIR1302-2" ...
$ feature_id  : chr  "GeneID:100287102" "GeneID:653635" "GeneID:102466751" "GeneID:100302278" ...
$ feature_type : chr  "GENE" "GENE" "GENE" "GENE" ...
$ group_label  : chr  "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" ...
$ transcript  : chr  "Assembly" "Assembly" "Assembly" "Assembly" ...
$ evidence_code: chr  "-" "-" "-" "-" ...
> GeneList$feature_name[grep("^NAP", GeneList$feature_name)]
</syntaxhighlight>


=== TCseq: Time course sequencing data analysis ===
$ zcat hg38.refGene.txt.gz | tail -2
http://bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/TCseq.html
1006 NM_130467 chrX + 55220345 55224108 55220599 55224003 5 55220345,55221374,55221766,55222620,55223986, 55220651,55221463,55221875,55222746,55224108, 0 PAGE5 cmpl cmpl 0,1,0,1,1,
637 NM_001364814 chrY - 6865917 6874027 6866072 6872608 7 6865917,6868036,6868731,6868867,6870005,6872554,6873971, 6866078,6868462,6868776,6868909,6870053,6872620,6874027, 0 AMELY cmpl cmpl 0,0,0,0,0,0,-1,
</pre>


== Simulate RNA-Seq ==
== Where to download reference genome ==
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RNA-Seq_bioinformatics_tools#RNA-Seq_simulators
* [http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/downloads.html UCSC] and [https://genome.ucsc.edu/goldenpath/help/twoBit.html twoBitToFa] to [https://www.biostars.org/p/9700/ UCSC] convert .2bit to fasta.
* [http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg19/chromosomes/ hg19] from UCSC (chromosome-wise).


=== BEERS/Grant G.R. 2011 ===
== Which human reference genome to use? ==
http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/27/18/2518.long#sec-2. The simulation method is called [http://cbil.upenn.edu/BEERS/ BEERS] and it was used in the STAR software paper.
http://lh3.github.io/2017/11/13/which-human-reference-genome-to-use (11/13/2017)


<pre>
== UHR, HBR ==
sudo apt-get install cpanminus
In RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), Universal Human Reference (UHR) and Human Brain Reference (HBR) are two types of commercially available RNA samples that are often used as control samples and assess the performance and accuracy of RNA-seq assays. See [https://rnabio.org/module-01-inputs/0001/05/01/RNAseq_Data/ this] ([https://github.com/griffithlab/rnaseq_tutorial/wiki/RNAseq-Data github]) and [https://bioinformatics.ccr.cancer.gov/docs/b4b/Module2_RNA_Sequencing/Lesson13/ Lesson 13: Aligning raw sequences to reference genome].
sudo cpanm Math::Random
wget http://cbil.upenn.edu/BEERS/beers.tar
wget http://itmat.rum.s3.amazonaws.com/simulator_config_human.tar.gz # 1.2GB
tar -xvf beers.tar      # two perl files
perl reads_simulator.pl # Help
</pre>


=== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/SimSeq/index.html SimSeq] ===
== GENCODE transcript database ==
[http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/02/26/bioinformatics.btv124.abstract Bioinformatics]
* [https://www.gencodegenes.org/ GENCODE]
* [https://chitka-kalyan.blogspot.com/2014/02/creating-gencode-transcript-database-in.html Create a GENCODE transcript database in R]


A data-based simulation algorithm for rna-seq data. The vector of read counts simulated for a given experimental unit has a joint distribution that closely matches the distribution of a source rna-seq dataset provided by the user.
== [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RefSeq#RefSeq_categories RefSeq categories] ==
See Table 1 of [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK21091/ Chapter 18The Reference Sequence (RefSeq) Database].


=== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/empiricalFDR.DESeq2/index.html empiricalFDR.DESeq2] ===
{| class="wikitable centered" style="text-align:center"
http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/12/05/012211
|+
|- class="hintergrundfarbe6"
! Category
! Description
|-
| NC
| Complete genomic molecules
|-
| NG
| Incomplete genomic region
|-
| NM
| [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MRNA mRNA]
|-
| NR
| [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-coding_RNA ncRNA]
|-
| NP
| [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein Protein]
|-
| XM
| predicted [[mRNA]] model
|-
| XR
| predicted [[ncRNA]] model
|-
| XP
| predicted [[Protein]] model (eukaryotic sequences)
|-
| WP
| predicted [[Protein]] model (prokaryotic sequences)
|}


The key function is '''simulateCounts''', which takes a fitted DESeq2 data object as an input and returns a simulated data object (DESeq2 class) with the same sample size factors, total counts and dispersions for each gene as in real data, but without the effect of predictor variables.  
== UCSC version & NCBI release corresponding ==
* http://genome.ucsc.edu/FAQ/FAQreleases.html


Functions fdrTable, fdrBiCurve and empiricalFDR compare the DESeq2 results obtained for the real and simulated data, compute the empirical false discovery rate (the ratio of the number of differentially expressed genes detected in the simulated data and their number in the real data) and plot the results.
== Gene Annotation ==
* [http://www.genecards.org/ GeneCards]
* [http://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/GenesBySymbol Genetics Home Reference] from National Library of Medicine
* [http://www.mycancergenome.org/ My Cancer Genome]
* [http://cancer.sanger.ac.uk/cosmic Cosmic]
* [http://www.gettinggeneticsdone.com/2015/11/annotables-convert-gene-ids.html annotables] R package.
* [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/advance-article/doi/10.1093/bioinformatics/btz031/5301311?rss=1 ensembldb] R package
* https://www.gencodegenes.org/human/releases.html
* For gene symbols, there are NCBI and HUGO. See an example from GSE6532 (annot.tam object).


=== [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/polyester.html polyester] ===
{{Pre}}
http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/12/05/012211
library(rtracklayer)
genes <- readGFF("gencode.v27.annotation.gff3.gz")
genes[1:2, 1:5]
# DataFrame with 2 rows and 5 columns
#      seqid  source      type    start      end
#  <factor> <factor>  <factor> <integer> <integer>
# 1    chr1  HAVANA gene          11869    14409
# 2    chr1  HAVANA transcript    11869    14409
genes[1:100, ] %>% filter(type == "gene") %>% dim()
# Error in UseMethod("filter") :
#  no applicable method for 'filter' applied to an object of class "c('DFrame', 'DataFrame', 'RectangularData', 'SimpleList', 'DataFrame_OR_NULL', 'List', 'Vector', 'list_OR_List', 'Annotated', 'vector_OR_Vector')"


Given a set of annotated transcripts, polyester will simulate the steps of an RNA-seq experiment (fragmentation, reverse-complementing, and sequencing) and produce files containing simulated RNA-seq reads.
library(ape)
genes2 <- read.gff("gencode.v27.annotation.gff3.gz")
genes2[1:2, 1:5]
#  seqid source      type start  end
# 1  chr1 HAVANA      gene 11869 14409
# 2  chr1 HAVANA transcript 11869 14409
genes2[1:100,]  %>% filter(type == "gene") %>% dim()
# [1] 11  9
</pre>


'''Input''': reference FASTA file (containing names and sequences of transcripts from which reads should be simulated) OR a GTF file denoting transcript structures, along with one FASTA file of the DNA sequence for each chromosome in the GTF file.
=== Genecards ===
<ul>
<li>https://www.genecards.org/
<li>Q: What are genes with gene symbols starting with LINC?; eg [https://www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=LINC00491 LINC00491] </br>
A: Genes with gene symbols starting with "LINC" are long intergenic non-coding RNA (lncRNA) genes. lncRNAs are RNA molecules that are transcribed from the genome but '''do not encode proteins'''. Unlike protein-coding genes, lncRNAs do not have a well-defined coding sequence, but they do play important regulatory roles in cellular processes such as gene expression, chromatin structure, and genome stability. Some lncRNAs are specifically expressed in cancer cells and have been implicated in tumor development and progression, making them of interest for cancer research.
</ul>


'''Output''': FASTA files. Reads in the FASTA file will be labeled with the transcript from which they were simulated.
== How many [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA DNA] strands are there in humans? ==
* http://www.numberof.net/number-of-dna-strands/
* http://www.answers.com/Q/How_many_DNA_strands_are_there_in_humans
 
== How many base pairs in human ==
* 3 billion base pairs. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_genome
* chromosome 22 has the smallest number of bps (~50 million).
* chromosome 1 has the largest number of bps (245 million base pairs).
* Illumina iGenome '''Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa''' file is 3.0GB (so is other genome.fa from human).
 
== Gene, Transcript, Coding/Non-coding exon ==
* https://hslnews.wordpress.com/2015/07/02/bioinformatics-bite-how-to-find-the-transcription-start-site-of-a-gene/
* According to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exon, in the human genome only
** 1.1% of the genome is spanned by exons,
** 24% is in introns,
** 75% of the genome being intergenic DNA.
* https://twitter.com/ensembl/status/1276469013707665410?s=20


=== [http://deweylab.biostat.wisc.edu/rsem/ RSEM] ===
== SNP ==
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-nucleotide_polymorphism Types of SNPs and number of SNPs in each chromosomes]


== GEO ==
== NGS technology ==
See the internal link at [[R#GEO_.28Gene_Expression_Omnibus.29|R-GEO]].
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illumina_(company) Illumina - Solexa]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABI_Solid_Sequencing ABI - SOLiD]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/454_Life_Sciences Roche 454]


= DNA Seq Data =
== DNA methylation, Epigenetics ==
== NIH ==
* Relation of methylation genes and gene expression
* Go to [http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?view=search_obj SRA/Sequence Read Archive]and type the keywords 'Whole Genome Sequencing human'. An example of the procedures to search whole genome sequencing data from human samples:
** Methylation of genes can have different effects on gene expression, depending on where the methylation occurs in the gene and the specific context of the gene and the cellular environment. Generally, '''methylation of ''promoter regions'' of genes is associated with reduced gene expression''', whereas methylation of ''gene body'' regions is less clearly associated with gene expression changes.
*# Enter 'Whole Genome Sequencing human' in ncbi/sra search sra objects at http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?view=search_obj
** When DNA is methylated at the promoter region of a gene, it can prevent the binding of transcription factors and RNA polymerase, which are necessary for transcription initiation. Methylation at the promoter region can also recruit proteins that block transcription or promote histone modifications that lead to chromatin compaction, further limiting access to the gene for transcriptional machinery.
*# The webpage will return the result in terms of SRA experiments, SRA studies, Biosamples, GEO datasets. I pick SRA studies from Public Access.
** However, methylation in other regions of the gene, such as the gene body, can have more complex effects on gene expression. In some cases, gene body methylation can be associated with increased expression, while in other cases it may have no effect or even lead to decreased expression. It is thought that gene body methylation may be involved in regulating alternative splicing or RNA stability, among other possible mechanisms.
*# The result is sorted by the Accession number (does not take the first 3 letters like DRP into account). The Accession number has a format SRPxxxx. So I just go to the Last page (page 98)
** Therefore, the effect of methylation on gene expression is not always straightforward and depends on various factors, including the specific gene, the location of methylation, and the cellular context.
*# I pick the first one Accession:SRP066837 from this page. The page shows the '''Study type''' is whole genome sequence. http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?study=SRP066837
*# <span style="color: red">(Important trick)</span> Click the number next to '''Run'''. It will show a summary (SRR #, library name, MBases, age, biomaterial provider, isolate and sex) about all samples. http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP066837
*# Download the raw data from any one of them (eg SRR2968056). For whole genome, the '''Strategy''' is ''WGS''. For whole exome, the '''Strategy''' is called ''WXS''.
* Search the keywords 'nonsynonymous' and 'human' in [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/?term=nonsynonymous+human PMC]


=== Use [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK158900/ SRATool Kit] instead of wget to download ===
* [https://wikidiff.com/hypermethylation/hypomethylation Hypermethylation vs Hypomethylation - What's the difference?]
Don't use the ''wget'' command since it requires the specification of right http address.


[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK158899/ Downloading SRA data using command line utilities]
[https://youtu.be/e4caywLliW0 DNA Methylation - Biochemistry (USMLE Step 1)]  
** DNA methylation = InActivates DNA transcription


(Method 1) Use the '''[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?view=toolkit_doc&f=fastq-dump fastq-dump]''' command. For example, the following command (modified from the [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK158899/#SRA_download.downloading_sra_data_using document] will download the first 5 reads and save it to a file called <SRR390728.fastq> ('''NOT sra format)''' in the current directory.
* The level of mRNA expression is inversely related to the extent of methylation. See [https://www.future-science.com/doi/suppl/10.2144/btn-2018-0179/suppl_file/supplementary_figure_s6.pdf this screenshot example from TCGA]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/sratoolkit.2.3.5-2-ubuntu64/bin/fastq-dump -X 5 SRR390728 -O .
# OR
/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/sratoolkit.2.3.5-2-ubuntu64/bin/fastq-dump --split-3 SRR390728 # no progress bar
</syntaxhighlight>
This will download the files in FASTQ format.


(Method 2) If we need to downloading by wget or FTP (works for ‘SRR’, ‘ERR’, or ‘DRR’ series):
* [http://nathansheffield.com/wordpress/what-is-hemimethylated-dna/ hemimethylated DNA vs allele-specific methylation]. DNA-hemimethylation is when only one of two (complementary) strands is methylated.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/devel/workflows/vignettes/methylationArrayAnalysis/inst/doc/methylationArrayAnalysis.html methylationArrayAnalysis ]: A cross-package Bioconductor workflow for analysing methylation array data
wget ftp://ftp-trace.ncbi.nih.gov/sra/sra-instant/reads/ByRun/sra/SRR/SRR304/SRR304976/SRR304976.sra
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2105-11-587 Comparison of Beta-value and M-value methods for quantifying methylation levels by microarray analysis] Du 2010. Figure 3 shows scatterplots of SD vs mean based on technical replicates of using beta or M-value. It can be seen M-value satisfies homoscedasticity but beta does not.
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://health.usnews.com/health-care/for-better/articles/is-your-dna-your-destiny-a-primer-on-epigenetics Is Your DNA Your Destiny? A Primer on Epigenetics]
It will download the file in SRA format. In the case of SRR590795, the sra is 240M and fastq files are 615*2MB.
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GC-content GC content]  = (G+C)/(A+T+G+C) x 100%
* How many CpGs (C follows by G)?
* Some papers
** [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-021-04416-w Identification of prostate cancer specific methylation biomarkers from a multi-cancer analysis] 2021. Within all bootstrapped datasets, sites with non-zero coefficients in more than 99% LASSO models were kept.
* [http://genomicsclass.github.io/book/pages/methylation.html Analyzing DNA methylation data] (part of the book [http://genomicsclass.github.io/book/ Biomedical Data Science]) and the [https://www.class-central.com/mooc/1615/edx-ph525x-data-analysis-for-genomics PH525x: Data Analysis for Genomics] (edX course). The Github website is on https://github.com/genomicsclass/labs. The source code may not be correct. See also http://www.biostat.jhsph.edu/~iruczins/teaching/kogo/html/ml/week8/methylation.Rmd. The paper [http://ije.oxfordjournals.org/content/41/1/200.long Bump hunting to identify differentially methylated regions in epigenetic epidemiology studies] the tutorial has mentioned.
<source lang="rsplus">
devtools::install_github("coloncancermeth","genomicsclass")
library(coloncancermeth) # 485512 x 26
data(coloncancermeth) # load meth (methylation data), pd (sample info ) and gr objects
dim(meth)
dim(pd)
length(gr)
colnames(pd)
table(pd$Status) # 9 normals, 17 cancers
normalIndex <- which(pd$Status=="normal")
cancerlIndex <- which(pd$Status=="cancer")


(Method 3) Download Ubuntu x86_64 tarball from http://downloads.asperasoft.com/en/downloads/8?list
i=normalIndex[1]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
plot(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),main="",ylim=c(0,3),type="n")
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ tar xzvf aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.tar.gz
for(i in normalIndex){
aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.sh
  lines(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),col=1)
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ ./aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.sh
}
### Add the cancer samples
for(i in cancerlIndex){
  lines(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),col=2)
}


Installing Aspera Connect
# finding regions of the genome that are different between cancer and normal samples
library(limma)
X<-model.matrix(~pd$Status)
fit<-lmFit(meth,X)
eb <- ebayes(fit)


Deploying Aspera Connect (/home/brb/.aspera/connect) for the current user only.
# plot of the region surrounding the top hit
Restart firefox manually to load the Aspera Connect plug-in
library(GenomicRanges)
i <- which.min(eb$p.value[,2])
middle <- gr[i,]
Index<-gr%over%(middle+10000)
cols=ifelse(pd$Status=="normal",1,2)
chr=as.factor(seqnames(gr))
pos=start(gr)


Install complete.
plot(pos[Index],fit$coef[Index,2],type="b",xlab="genomic location",ylab="difference")
matplot(pos[Index],meth[Index,],col=cols,xlab="genomic location")
# http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22422453


brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ ~/.aspera/connect/bin/ascp -QT -l640M \
# within each chromosome we usually have big gaps creating subgroups of regions to be analyzed
  -i ~/.aspera/connect/etc/asperaweb_id_dsa.openssh \
chr1Index <- which(chr=="chr1")
  [email protected]:/sra/sra-instant/reads/ByRun/sra/SRR/SRR590/SRR590795/SRR590795.sra .
hist(log10(diff(pos[chr1Index])),main="",xlab="log 10 method")
SRR590795.sra                                                                          100%  239MB  535Mb/s    00:06
Completed: 245535K bytes transferred in 7 seconds
(272848K bits/sec), in 1 file.
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $
</syntaxhighlight>
''Aspera is typically 10 times faster than FTP'' according to the website. For this case, wget takes 12s while ascp uses 7s.


Note that the URL on the website's is wrong. I got the correct URL from emailing to ncbi help. Google: ascp "anonftp@ftp-private.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov"
library(bumphunter)
cl=clusterMaker(chr,pos,maxGap=500)
table(table(cl)) ##shows the number of regions with 1,2,3, ... points in them
#consider two example regions#
...
</source>


=== SRAdb package ===
=== Integrate DNA methylation and gene expression ===
https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/SRAdb.html
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/iNETgrate.html iNETgrate]: Integrates DNA methylation data with gene expression in a single gene network. [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-48237-8 Paper] 2023.
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/ELMER.html ELMER] Inferring Regulatory Element Landscapes and Transcription Factor Networks Using Cancer Methylomes and [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6546131/ Paper] 2019.
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41392-019-0081-6 Integrative analysis of DNA methylation and gene expression identified cervical cancer-specific diagnostic biomarkers] 2019
* [https://bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12864-018-4625-x EnrichedHeatmap: an R/Bioconductor package for comprehensive visualization of genomic signal associations] 2018
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/TCGAbiolinks/inst/doc/casestudy.html#Case_study_n_3:_Integration_of_methylation_and_expression_for_ACC TCGAbiolinks vignette]. Case 3. Create a scatterplot of log10(FDR gene expression) vs log10(FDR dna methylation). Case 4. ELMER - Identify putative target genes for differentially methylated distal probes, using methylation vs. expression correlation. Identify master regulatory Transcription Factors (TF) whose expression associate with DNA methylation changes at multiple regulatory regions.


First we install some required package for XML and RCurl.
== Whole Genome Sequencing, Whole Exome Sequencing, Transcriptome (RNA) Sequencing ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* http://www.rna-seqblog.com/exome-sequencing-vs-rna-seq-to-identify-coding-region-variants/
sudo apt-get update
* http://www.rna-seqblog.com/combined-use-of-exome-and-transcriptome-sequencing/
sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev
* [http://www.genomebiology.com/2010/11/5/R57 A comparison of whole genome and whole transcriptome sequencing]
sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev
</syntaxhighlight>
and then
<syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("SRAdb")
</syntaxhighlight>


== SRA ==
== Sequence + Expression ==
Only the cancer types with expected cases > 10^5 in the US in 2015 are considered here. http://www.cancer.gov/types/common-cancers
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26177635 Integrated sequence and expression analysis of ovarian cancer structural variants underscores the importance of gene fusion regulation]


=== SRP066363 - lung cancer ===
== Integrate RNA-Seq and DNA-Seq ==
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP066363
* [https://www.jci.org/articles/view/96153 Integrated RNA and DNA sequencing reveals early drivers of metastatic breast cancer] by Perou. An R code is provided.
* http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE74866


=== SRP015769 or SRP062882 - prostate cancer ===
== Immunohistochemistry/IHC ==
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP015769 5 are from normal and 5 are from tumor. Whole Exome Seq.  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunohistochemistry. Protein expression by IHC.
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP062882 6 normal and the rest are tumor.  


=== SRP053134 - breast cancer ===
== Deconvolve bulk tumor tissue ==
* http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?run=SRR1785051
[https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.12.04.519045v1 Performance of computational algorithms to deconvolve heterogeneous bulk tumor tissue depends on experimental factors]. [https://twitter.com/ariel_hippen/status/1602379847187107841 Twitter].


Look at the MBases value column. It determines the coverage for each run.
== Tumor purity ==
* [https://aacrjournals.org/cancerrescommun/article/2/5/353/696472/Tumor-Purity-in-Preclinical-Mouse-Tumor Tumor Purity in Preclinical Mouse Tumor Models] 2022
* [https://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/PO.20.00016 Systematic Assessment of Tumor Purity and Its Clinical Implications] Haider 2020.
** With the exception of naive miRNA profiles, ''' ''purity estimates'' were inversely correlated with ''molecular profiles'' '''regardless of the underlying purity estimation profile .
** ''These data suggest that the presence of genomic and transcriptomic correlates of tumor purity are likely to confound biologic and clinical interpretations.''
* Estimators:
** DNA: ABSOLUTE, ASCAT, CLONET, INTEGER, OncoSNP
** RNA: DeMix, ISOpure-R (matlab/R), ESTIMATE ([https://bioinformatics.mdanderson.org/public-software/estimate/ Yoshihara, R])
** miRNA/microRNA: ISOpure-I
* TCGA purity estimate by Aran 2015 [https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms9971 Systematic pan-cancer analysis of tumour purity] - Supplementary Data 1 (xlsx file with columns: Sample ID,Cancer type,ESTIMATE,ABSOLUTE,LUMP,IHC & CPE).
* [https://rdrr.io/bioc/TCGAbiolinks/man/Tumor.purity.html Tumor.purity: TCGA samples with their Tumor Purity measures] (a data frame with 9364 rows and 7 variables) from [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/TCGAbiolinks.html TCGAbiolinks] package
* [https://academic.oup.com/bib/article/22/6/bbab163/6265216#312129108 Prediction of tumor purity from gene expression data using machine learning] 2021.
** We selected the '''CPE''' as the target variable, which is the median purity value after normalizing values from the other four purity estimates (ESTIMATE, ABSOLUTE, LUMP and IHC).
** our data set consisted of 8405 tumor samples.
* How VAF is related to tumor purity?
** '''Variant allelic fraction''' (VAF) is related to tumor purity because it reflects the proportion of cells in a sample that carry a specific genetic variant. In the context of cancer, '''VAF can be used as a surrogate marker for tumor purity''', as the fraction of cells in the sample that carry the variant will depend on the proportion of cancer cells relative to normal cells.
** The VAF of a specific genetic variant in a cancer sample can be calculated as the ratio of the number of reads supporting the variant to the total number of reads covering that locus. '''In a sample that is purely composed of cancer cells, the VAF should approach 1''', as all cells will carry the variant. In a sample that is mixed with normal cells, the VAF will be lower and proportional to the proportion of cancer cells in the sample.
** Therefore, by measuring the VAF of one or more genetic variants, it is possible to estimate the tumor purity, which is the proportion of cancer cells in the sample relative to normal cells. This information is important for a variety of downstream analyses, including '''variant calling''', gene expression analysis, and the estimation of the '''mutational burden''', as it can affect the interpretation of the results and the accuracy of the analysis.
* How gene expression can be used to estimate tumor purity?
** Gene expression analysis can be used to estimate tumor purity by comparing the expression levels of genes known to be specific to either '''normal or cancer cells'''. In a sample that is mixed with normal and cancer cells, the expression levels of these genes will reflect the proportion of normal and cancer cells present in the sample.
** For example, genes that are highly expressed in '''normal cells''', such as '''housekeeping genes''', can be used as a reference to estimate the proportion of normal cells in the sample. Similarly, genes that are highly expressed in '''cancer cells''', such as '''oncogenes''', can be used to estimate the proportion of cancer cells in the sample.
** The relative expression levels of these genes can then be used to estimate the tumor purity, either by comparing the expression levels to a reference sample of known purity, or by using mathematical models to estimate the proportion of normal and cancer cells in the sample.
** It is important to note that this method is not without limitations, as the expression levels of specific genes can be influenced by various factors, such as the presence of cell-to-cell heterogeneity, gene amplification, and epigenetic modifications, among others. Therefore, gene expression analysis should be used in combination with other methods, such as copy number analysis and variant allelic fraction analysis, to obtain a more accurate estimate of tumor purity.
* Some papers
** [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/cam4.3505 Tumor purity as a prognosis and immunotherapy relevant feature in gastric cancer]
** [https://genomemedicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/gm524 Identifying driver mutations in sequenced cancer genomes: computational approaches to enable precision medicine]. Tumor purity affects the detection of somatic mutations. Explain in plot about what are heterozygous somatic SNV and one hetererozygous germline SNV.
<ul>
<li>ISOpureR (Quon 2013): intensity or count data. Error term <math>e_n</math> multinomial distribution.
<pre>
library(ISOpureR)


=== [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE64016 SRP050992] single cell RNA-Seq ===
# For reproducible results, set the random seed
Used in [https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-016-0927-y Design and computational analysis of single-cell RNA-sequencing experiments]
set.seed(123);


=== Single cell RNA-Seq ===
# Run ISOpureR Step 1 - Cancer Profile Estimation
[http://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-016-0964-6 Exploiting single-cell expression to characterize co-expression replicability]
system.time(ISOpureS1model <- ISOpure.step1.CPE(
  tumor.expression.data,  # intensity or count data
  normal.expression.data  # intensity or count data
))
ISOpureS1model$alphapurities  # tumor purity estimates
</pre>
</li>
<li>ESTIMATE (Yoshihara 2013): normalized data.
* Since it is based ssGSEA, only ranks are used. It does not matter we used the log transformed or count data.
* ssGSEA is based on two gene signatures: Stromal signature (141 genes) and immune signature (141 genes)
* The formula for calculating ESTIMATE tumor purity was developed in TCGA Affymetrix data (n=1001) including both the '''ESTIMATE score''' and '''ABSOLUTE-based tumor purity'''.
* An evolutionary algorithm was used for the mathematical model.
* Nonlinear least squares method was used to determine the final model estimate.
* Tumor purity = cos(0.6 + 0.000146 * ESTIMATE score)
<pre>
library(estimate)
OvarianCancerExpr <- system.file("extdata", "sample_input.txt", package="estimate")
filterCommonGenes(input.f=OvarianCancerExpr, output.f="OV_10412genes.gct", id="GeneSymbol")
estimateScore("OV_10412genes.gct", "OV_estimate_score.gct", platform="affymetrix")
 
plotPurity(scores="OV_estimate_score.gct", samples="s516", platform="affymetrix")


=== SRP040626 or SRP040540 - Colon and rectal cancer ===
scan("OV_estimate_score.gct", "", skip=6)[-c(1:2)] |> as.numeric() # tumor purity estimates
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP040626
</pre>
* http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP040540
</li>
<li>[https://wwylab.github.io/DeMixT/tutorial.html DeMixT] (Wang 2018): count data. [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41587-022-01342-x Estimation of tumor cell total mRNA expression in 15 cancer types predicts disease progression], [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41587-022-01342-x Cao 2022] for profile likelihood method & supplementary information for more information about the benchmarking between DeMixT_DE and DeMixT_GS.
<pre>
library(DeMixT)
source("DeMixT_preprocessing.R")
 
count.mat <- cbind(normal.expression.data, tumor.expression.data)
colnames(count.mat) <- paste0("sample", 1:ncol(count.mat))


== Tutorials ==
label = factor(c(rep('Normal', ncol(normal.expression.data)),
See the [[#BWA|BWA]] section.  
                rep('Tumor', ncol(tumor.expression.data))))
set.seed(1234) # not sure if this is needed
preprocessed_data = DeMixT_preprocessing(count.mat, label)
PRAD_filter = preprocessed_data$count.matrix


== Whole Exome Seq ==
set.seed(1234)
* [http://www.1000genomes.org/category/exome 1000genomes]. 1000genomes and tcga are two places to get vcf files too.
Normal.id <- paste0("sample", 1:n1)
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4179624/ Review of Current Methods, Applications, and Data Management for the Bioinformatics Analysis of Whole Exome Sequencing] (Bao 2014)
Tumor.id <- paste0("sample", (n1+1):(n1+n2))
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3083463/ A framework for variation discovery and genotyping using next-generation DNA sequencing data]. See the table 1 there.
data.Y = SummarizedExperiment(assays = list(counts = PRAD_filter[, Tumor.id]))
* Some data from SRA repository.
data.N1 <- SummarizedExperiment(assays = list(counts = PRAD_filter[, Normal.id]))
** http://sra.dnanexus.com/?q=cancer+exome&result_type=Study
res = DeMixT(data.Y = data.Y,
** http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/?term=WXS
            data.N1 = data.N1,
** [http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?study=SRP008740 SRP008740] See [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3956068/ A survey of tools for variant analysis of next-generation sequencing data] (Pabinger 2014)
            nthread = 64,
            gene.selection.method = "DE") # default is "GS"
res$pi[2, ] # tumor purity estimates
</pre>
</li>
<li>[https://cibersortx.stanford.edu/ CIBERSORTx] (Newman 2019). Web only. [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41587-019-0114-2 Determining cell type abundance and expression from bulk tissues with digital cytometry]
<li>PUREE (Revkov 2023). [https://github.com/skandlab/PUREE Python-based]. Only API, no source code.
</li>
</ul>


== SraRunTable.txt ==
== Integrate/combine Omics ==
# http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/?term=SRA059511
* [https://github.com/mikelove/awesome-multi-omics?s=09 awesome-multi-omics] by Michael Love
# http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX194938[accn] and click ''SRP004077''
* [https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371%2Fjournal.pcbi.1011224 Ten quick tips for avoiding pitfalls in multi-omics data integration analyses] 2023
# http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?study=SRP004077 and click '''Runs''' from the RHS
* [http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/data/experiment/html/BloodCancerMultiOmics2017.html BloodCancerMultiOmics2017]. "Drug-perturbation-based stratification of blood cancer" by Dietrich S, Oles M, Lu J et al. - experimental data and complete analysis.
# http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP004077 and click '''RunInfoTable'''
* [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/OmicsPLS/index.html OmicsPLS] & [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-018-2371-3 the paper] in BMC Bioinformatics 2018
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/MultiAssayExperiment.html MultiAssayExperiment] & [http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/77/21/e39 the paper] in AACR 2017
** [https://waldronlab.io/MultiAssayWorkshop/ Multi-omic Integration and Analysis of cBioPortal and TCGA data with MultiAssayExperiment] from [https://bioc2020.bioconductor.org/workshops.html Bioc2020]
* [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/mixOmics/index.html mixOmics], http://mixomics.org/, [https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005752 the paper] on PLOS 2017
* [https://academic.oup.com/biostatistics/advance-article/doi/10.1093/biostatistics/kxy044/5092386 The impact of different sources of heterogeneity on loss of accuracy from genomic prediction models] Biostatistics 2018
* [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/tweedie/ Tweedieverse], [https://github.com/himelmallick/Tweedieverse/ Github]
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms6901#Sec17 Combining gene mutation with gene expression data improves outcome prediction in myelodysplastic syndromes] 2015, [https://github.com/gerstung-lab/MDS-expression R code for Supplementary Data 2 and 4] and [https://github.com/mg14/mg14 mg14.R].
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-021-04268-4 A comprehensive database for integrated analysis of omics data in autoimmune diseases] 2021
* [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/37/17/2601/6157728 Integrative survival analysis of breast cancer with gene expression and DNA methylation data] Bichindaritz, 2021
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-022-05127-6 Machine learning to analyse omic-data for COVID-19 diagnosis and prognosis] 2023


Note that (For this study, it has 2377 rows)
== Gene expression ==
* Column A (AssemblyName_s) eg GRCh37
Expression level is the amount of RNA in cell that was transcribed from that gene. [https://speakerdeck.com/alyssafrazee/high-resolution-gene-expression-analysis Slides] from Alyssa Frazee.
* Column I (library_name_s) eg
* column N (header=Run_s) shows all SRR or ERR accession numbers.
* Column P (Sample_Name)
* Column Y (header=Assay_Type_s) shows '''WGS'''.  
* Column AB (LibraryLayout_s): PAIRED


= Public Data =
== Fusion gene ==
== ISB Cancer Genomics Cloud (ISB-CGC) ==
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fusion_gene
http://cgc.systemsbiology.net/ Leveraging Google Cloud Platform for TCGA Analysis
* https://github.com/STAR-Fusion/STAR-Fusion,
* Gene fusion discovery
** [https://youtu.be/TzjxFkDHO4M?t=3713 Fusion prediction accuracy] comparison.
** [https://youtu.be/TzjxFkDHO4M?t=4686 Fusion gene visualized in IGV]
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/chimeraviz.html chimeraviz] Visualization tools for gene fusions
* [https://youtu.be/5V-NMDvR2l8?t=1432 Tools to call fusions] & Common issues with fusion calling, [https://youtu.be/5V-NMDvR2l8?t=3151 visualizing fusion events in IGV]


== [https://gdc.nci.nih.gov/ NCI's Genomic Data Commons (GDC)] ==
== Structural variation ==
The GDC supports several cancer genome programs at the NCI Center for Cancer Genomics (CCG), including The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), Therapeutically Applicable Research to Generate Effective Treatments (TARGET), and the Cancer Genome Characterization Initiative (CGCI).
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_variation
* https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/dbvar/content/overview/
* [https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2018/02/01/200170.full.pdf Detection of complex structural variation from paired-end sequencing data] Joseph G. Arthur, 2018


= Gene set analysis =
[https://github.com/arq5x/lumpy-sv LUMPY], [https://github.com/dellytools/delly DELLY], [https://sites.google.com/site/sebatlab/software-data ForestSV], [http://gmt.genome.wustl.edu/packages/pindel/ Pindel], [http://breakdancer.sourceforge.net/ breakdancer] , [http://svdetect.sourceforge.net/Site/Home.html SVDetect].
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/88926/ Over Representation Vs Enrichment Analysis]


== Hypergeometric test ==
== Covid-19 ==
* [http://mygoblet.org/training-portal/courses/pathway-and-network-analysis-omics-data-2014 A course from bioinformatics.ca] and [http://mygoblet.org/sites/default/files/materrials/Pathways_2014_Module2.pdf over-represented pathway].
[https://www.rna-seqblog.com/bulk-rna-sequencing-for-analysis-of-post-covid-19-condition/ Bulk RNA sequencing for analysis of post COVID-19 condition] 2024. 13 differentially expressed genes associated with PCC (long Covid) were found. Enriched pathways were related to interferon-signalling and anti-viral immune processes.
* [http://blog.nextgenetics.net/?e=94 How informative are enrichment analyses really?]


== Next-generation sequencing data ==
== RNASeq + ChipSeq ==
* [http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/32/17/i611.full Gene-set association tests for next-generation sequencing data]
* [http://www.nature.com/jhg/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/jhg201584a.html Elucidating the mechanisms of transcription regulation during heart development by next-generation sequencing]


= Misc =
== Labs ==
== High Performance ==
* [http://salzberg-lab.org/courses/ Steven Salzberg]
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3RVfv6lUtc NYCMC


== Cloud Computing ==
== Biowulf2 at NIH ==
* [https://github.com/VCCRI/Falco/ '''Falco''': A quick and flexible single-cell RNA-seq processing framework on the cloud]
* Main site: http://hpc.nih.gov
 
* User guide: https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/user_guides.html
== Merge different datasets (different genechips) ==
* Unlock account (60 days inactive) https://hpc.nih.gov/dashboard/
* https://support.bioconductor.org/p/65506/
* Transitioning from PBS to Slurm: https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/pbs2slurm.html
* Job Submission 'cheat sheet': https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/biowulf2-handout.pdf
* STAR: https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/STAR.html


== Normalization ==
== [https://github.com/DecodeGenetics/BamHash BamHash] ==
* [http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/07/21/nar.gkv736.long How data analysis affects power, reproducibility and biological insight of RNA-seq studies in complex datasets]
Hash BAM and FASTQ files to verify data integrity. The C++ code is based on OpenSSL and seqan libraries.
* [http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/16/347 Comparing the normalization methods for the differential analysis of Illumina high-throughput RNA-Seq data]


== How to use [http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgTables UCSC Table Browser] ==
== Reproducibility ==
* An instruction from [http://bitseq.github.io/howto/index BitSeq] software
* [https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007881 Improving reproducibility in computational biology research]
* [http://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/07/19/165191 SnakeChunks: modular blocks to build Snakemake workflows for reproducible NGS analyses] by Claire Rioualen et al, 2017.


== Where to download reference genome ==
== Selected Papers ==
* [http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/downloads.html UCSC] and [https://genome.ucsc.edu/goldenpath/help/twoBit.html twoBitToFa] to [https://www.biostars.org/p/9700/ UCSC] convert .2bit to fasta.
* [http://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-016-0961-5 Testing for association between RNA-Seq and high-dimensional data] and the Bioconductor package globalSeq.
* [http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg19/chromosomes/ hg19] from UCSC (chromosome-wise).
* [http://link.springer.com/article/10.1208%2Fs12248-016-9917-y The FDA’s Experience with Emerging Genomics Technologies—Past, Present, and Future]
* [http://www.nature.com/nbt/journal/v31/n1/abs/nbt.2450.html Differential analysis of gene regulation at transcript resolution with RNA-seq] Trapnell et al, Nature Biotechnology 31, 46–53 (2013)
* [http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/early/2016/12/01/0008-5472.CAN-16-1624.long A Study of TP53 RNA Splicing Illustrates Pitfalls of RNA-seq Methodology]
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/top-rna-seq-articles-2016/ Top RNA-Seq Articles – 2016] from RNA-Seq blog
* [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/biom.12745/full Multivariate association analysis with somatic mutation data] by He 2017 Biometrics.
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-020-3433-x RASflow – An RNA-Seq Analysis Workflow with Snakemake] Zhang 2019
* [http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0157989 A Survey of Bioinformatics Database and Software Usage through Mining the Literature]
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41576-021-00431-y Computational analysis of cancer genome sequencing data] Cortés-Ciriano 2021. Focus on point mutations, copy number alterations, structural variations. For RNA-seq data, it focused on gene fusion detection.


== UCSC version & NCBI release corresponding ==
== Pictures ==
* http://genome.ucsc.edu/FAQ/FAQreleases.html
https://www.flickr.com/photos/genomegov


== Gene Annotation ==
== FISH/Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization ==
* [http://www.genecards.org/ GeneCards]
* [https://www.genome.gov/genetics-glossary/Fluorescence-In-Situ-Hybridization
* [http://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/GenesBySymbol Genetics Home Reference] from National Library of Medicine
* [https://youtu.be/b81DcJC1jAs Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization (FISH) Assay]
* [http://www.mycancergenome.org/ My Cancer Genome]
* [http://cancer.sanger.ac.uk/cosmic Cosmic]
* [http://www.gettinggeneticsdone.com/2015/11/annotables-convert-gene-ids.html annotables] R package.


== How many [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA DNA] strands are there in humans? ==
== 用DNA做身分鑑識 ==
* http://www.numberof.net/number-of-dna-strands/
[https://www.worldjournal.com/5120826/article-《社會傳真》用dna做身分鑑識/ 用DNA做身分鑑識]
* http://www.answers.com/Q/How_many_DNA_strands_are_there_in_humans
 
== 如何自学入门生物信息学 ==
* https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/32065916
* [http://juang.bst.ntu.edu.tw/JRH/biotech.htm 生物技術簡介]
 
== CRISPR ==
[https://health.udn.com/health/story/6008/6028809 基因編輯的原理是什麼?一次看懂基因神剪CRISPR]
 
== Staying current ==
[http://www.gettinggeneticsdone.com/2017/02/staying-current-in-bioinformatics-genomics-2017.html Staying Current in Bioinformatics & Genomics: 2017 Edition]


== How many base pairs in human ==
== Papers ==
* chromosome 22 has the smallest number of bps (~50 million).  
* [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature24286.html DNA sequencing at 40: past, present and future]
* chromosome 1 has the largest number of bps (245 base pairs).


== NGS technology ==
== Common issues in algorithmic bioinformatics papers ==
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illumina_(company) Illumina - Solexa]
[http://medvedevgroup.com/2019/08/11/what-are-some-common-issues-i-find-when-reviewing-algorithmic-bioinformatics-conference-papers/ What are some common issues I find when reviewing algorithmic bioinformatics conference papers?]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABI_Solid_Sequencing ABI - SOLiD]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/454_Life_Sciences Roche 454]


== DNA methylation ==
== Precision Medicine courses ==
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GC-content GC content] = (G+C)/(A+T+G+C) x 100%
* [https://gmi.ucsf.edu/cme-outreach/ UCSF]
* How many CpGs (C follows by G)?
* [http://openonlinecourses.com/ehr/PrecisionAndPredictiveMedicine.asp Precision & Predictive Medicine]
* [http://genomicsclass.github.io/book/pages/methylation.html Analyzing DNA methylation data] (part of the book [http://genomicsclass.github.io/book/ Biomedical Data Science]) and the [https://www.class-central.com/mooc/1615/edx-ph525x-data-analysis-for-genomics PH525x: Data Analysis for Genomics] (edX course). The Github website is on https://github.com/genomicsclass/labs. The source code may not be correct. See also http://www.biostat.jhsph.edu/~iruczins/teaching/kogo/html/ml/week8/methylation.Rmd. The paper [http://ije.oxfordjournals.org/content/41/1/200.long Bump hunting to identify differentially methylated regions in epigenetic epidemiology studies] the tutorial has mentioned.
<source lang="rsplus">
devtools::install_github("coloncancermeth","genomicsclass")
library(coloncancermeth) # 485512 x 26
data(coloncancermeth) # load meth (methylation data), pd (sample info ) and gr objects
dim(meth)
dim(pd)
length(gr)
colnames(pd)
table(pd$Status) # 9 normals, 17 cancers
normalIndex <- which(pd$Status=="normal")
cancerlIndex <- which(pd$Status=="cancer")


i=normalIndex[1]
== Personalized medicine ==
plot(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),main="",ylim=c(0,3),type="n")
* [https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/30/health/gene-therapy-cancer.html F.D.A. Approves First Gene-Altering Leukemia Treatment]
for(i in normalIndex){
* [http://time.com/4989537/blood-cancer-gene-therapy/ The FDA Just Approved a New Way of Fighting (lymphoma) Cancer Using Personalized Gene Therapy]
  lines(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),col=1)
* [https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/primer/precisionmedicine/precisionvspersonalized What is the difference between precision medicine and personalized medicine? What about pharmacogenomics?] "personalized medicine" is an older term. [https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/primer Help Me Understand Genetics]
}
* [https://academic.oup.com/jnci/article/113/12/1601/6212056 Predictive Biomarkers: Progress on the Road to Personalized Cancer Immunotherapy] Emens 2021
### Add the cancer samples
 
for(i in cancerlIndex){
== Cancer and gene markers ==
  lines(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),col=2)
* '''Colorectal cancer''' patients without '''KRAS mutations''' have far better outcomes with '''EGFR treatment''' than those with KRAS mutations.
}
** Two '''EGFR inhibitors''', cetuximab and panitumumab are not recommended for the treatment of colorectal cancer in patients with KRAS mutations in codon 12 and 13.
* '''Breast cancer'''. 
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trastuzumab Trastuzumab]
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamoxifen Tamoxifen]


# finding regions of the genome that are different between cancer and normal samples
== The shocking truth about space travel ==
library(limma)
[https://www.morningticker.com/2018/03/the-shocking-truth-about-space-travel/ 7 percent of DNA belonging to NASA astronaut Scott Kelly changed in the time he was aboard the International Space Station]
X<-model.matrix(~pd$Status)
fit<-lmFit(meth,X)
eb <- ebayes(fit)


# plot of the region surrounding the top hit
== bioSyntax: syntax highlighting for computational biology ==
library(GenomicRanges)
https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-018-2315-y
i <- which.min(eb$p.value[,2])
middle <- gr[i,]
Index<-gr%over%(middle+10000)
cols=ifelse(pd$Status=="normal",1,2)
chr=as.factor(seqnames(gr))
pos=start(gr)


plot(pos[Index],fit$coef[Index,2],type="b",xlab="genomic location",ylab="difference")
== Deep learning ==
matplot(pos[Index],meth[Index,],col=cols,xlab="genomic location")
[https://www.nature.com/articles/s41576-019-0122-6 Deep learning: new computational modelling techniques for genomics]
# http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22422453


# within each chromosome we usually have big gaps creating subgroups of regions to be analyzed
== HRD/homologous recombination deficiency 同源重组修复缺陷 ==
chr1Index <- which(chr=="chr1")
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homologous_recombination
hist(log10(diff(pos[chr1Index])),main="",xlab="log 10 method")
** Homologous recombination proficient (HRP) cancer cells can repair DNA damage caused by chemotherapy, making them difficult to treat.
** drugs have been developed to target homologous recombination via c-Abl inhibition and to exploit (take advantage of) deficiencies in homologous recombination in cancer cells with BRCA mutations.
** One such drug is Olaparib, a PARP1 inhibitor that targets cancer cells by inhibiting base-excision repair (BER) in HR-deficient cells. However, cancer cells can become resistant to PARP1 inhibitors if they undergo deletions of mutations in BRCA2, restoring their ability to repair DNA by HR.
* https://www.genome.gov/genetics-glossary/homologous-recombination (graphical illustration). Homologous recombination is a type of genetic recombination in which nucleotide sequences are exchanged between two similar or identical molecules of DNA.


library(bumphunter)
* BRCA1 and BRCA2 are genes that produce proteins responsible for repairing damaged DNA within cells. Mutations in these genes can lead to errors in the DNA repair process, resulting in an accumulation of mutations that can cause cancer. This '''condition''' is known as '''Homologous Recombination Deficiency (HRD)'''. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PARP_inhibitor PARP inhibitors] are a type of targeted therapy that blocks the enzyme Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), which helps repair DNA damage in (cancer) cells. By inhibiting PARP, these drugs prevent cancer cells from repairing their DNA, leading to cell death.
cl=clusterMaker(chr,pos,maxGap=500)
 
table(table(cl)) ##shows the number of regions with 1,2,3, ... points in them
* The '''inability to repair DNA damage''' is referred to as homologous recombination deficiency (HRD). [https://www.qiagen.com/us/applications/oncology/solid-tumor/dna-damage-response/hrd DNA damage response] from Qiagen.
#consider two example regions#
 
...
* FDA approved for HRD assessment: 1) [https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/cdrh_docs/pdf17/P170019S043C.pdf Foundation Medicine's FoundationOne CDx] in 2020, 2) [https://investor.myriad.com/news-releases/news-release-detail/20741/ Myriad myChoice CDx] in 2019. PS:
</source>
** '''CDx''' stands for '''Companion Diagnostic'''. They help identify patients who might benefit from specific treatments, particularly in the context of certain cancer therapies. In the case of HRD (Homologous Recombination Deficiency) assessment, these CDx tests help identify patients who might respond well to PARP inhibitors or other targeted therapies.
** In the case of HRD (Homologous Recombination Deficiency) assessment, these CDx tests help identify patients who might respond well to PARP inhibitors or other targeted therapies.


== Whole Genome Sequencing, Whole Exome Sequencing, Transcriptome (RNA) Sequencing ==
* How '''HRD''' and '''PARP inhibitors''' relate:
* http://www.rna-seqblog.com/exome-sequencing-vs-rna-seq-to-identify-coding-region-variants/
** Cancer cells with HRD are already struggling to repair DNA damage.
* http://www.rna-seqblog.com/combined-use-of-exome-and-transcriptome-sequencing/
** When these cells are treated with PARP inhibitors, it becomes even harder for them to repair DNA damage.
* [http://www.genomebiology.com/2010/11/5/R57 A comparison of whole genome and whole transcriptome sequencing]
** This combination can lead to cancer cell death, a concept known as "synthetic lethality."
** In other words, PARP inhibitors (PARPi) are primarily used in patients who are HRD-positive.  


== Sequence + Expression ==
* Role of '''CDx tests''' in '''HRD''' assessment:
* [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26177635 Integrated sequence and expression analysis of ovarian cancer structural variants underscores the importance of gene fusion regulation]
** These tests analyze tumor samples for signs of HRD.
** They may look for specific gene mutations (like BRCA1/2) or broader genomic patterns indicative of HRD.
** The results help predict whether a patient's cancer is likely to respond to PARP inhibitors.


== RNASeq + ChipSeq ==
* Clinical implications:
* [http://www.nature.com/jhg/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/jhg201584a.html Elucidating the mechanisms of transcription regulation during heart development by next-generation sequencing]
** Patients who test positive for HRD are more likely to benefit from PARP inhibitors.
** Those without HRD might be better suited for other treatment options.


== Labs ==
* Beyond PARP inhibitors:
* [http://salzberg-lab.org/courses/ Steven Salzberg]
** HRD status can also inform the use of '''platinum-based chemotherapies''' and potentially other DNA-damaging agents.


== Biowulf2 at NIH ==
* Cancer types:
* Main site: http://hpc.nih.gov
** This approach is particularly relevant in ovarian, breast, prostate, and pancreatic cancers, among others.
* User guide: https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/user_guides.html
* Unlock account (60 days inactive) https://hpc.nih.gov/dashboard/
* Transitioning from PBS to Slurm: https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/pbs2slurm.html
* Job Submission 'cheat sheet': https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/biowulf2-handout.pdf
* STAR: https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/STAR.html


== [https://github.com/DecodeGenetics/BamHash BamHash] ==
* openai
Hash BAM and FASTQ files to verify data integrity. The C++ code is based on OpenSSL and seqan libraries.
**  Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase '''(PARP) inhibitors''' are a class of '''drugs''' that are designed to '''inhibit the activity of PARP enzymes'''. PARP enzymes are proteins that are involved in DNA repair pathways. They help to repair DNA damage and maintain the stability of the genome by adding a chemical group called poly(ADP-ribose) to other proteins.
** PARP inhibitors work by blocking the activity of PARP enzymes, which can interfere with the ability of cells to repair damaged DNA. This can be especially useful in '''cancer cells''', which often rely on PARP enzymes to repair DNA damage and maintain genomic stability. By inhibiting PARP enzymes, PARP inhibitors can sensitizize cancer cells to chemotherapy and other treatments, making them more vulnerable to cell death.
** is there drug targeting HRP cancer patients? One approach is to target homologous recombination via c-Abl inhibition. For example, [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34635996/ Niraparib] is a PARP inhibitor that has been shown to be effective in treating advanced ovarian cancer in both homologous recombination deficient (HRD) and homologous recombination proficient (HRP) patients.
** is there any drugs target HRD cancer patients? Yes, there are several drugs that have been developed to target HRD cancer cells. One approach is to use PARP inhibitors, which exploit deficiencies in homologous recombination in cancer cells with BRCA mutations. For example, Olaparib is a PARP1 inhibitor that has been shown to be effective in shrinking or stopping the growth of tumors from breast, ovarian and prostate cancers caused by mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. By inhibiting base-excision repair (BER) in HR-deficient cells, Olaparib applies the concept of synthetic lethality to specifically target cancer cells. PS: '''Examples of PARP inhibitors''' include niraparib (Zejula), olaparib (Lynparza), talazoparib (Talzenna), and rucaparib (Rubraca).
** PARP1 is a ''member'' of the PARP family of proteins. PARP stands for Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase. The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poly_%28ADP-ribose%29_polymerase PARP] family comprises 17 members.


== Selected Papers ==
* '''Loss-of-function''' genes involved in this pathway can '''sensitize''' tumors to poly(adenosine diphosphate [ADP]-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors and '''platinum-based (Pt)''' chemotherapy
* [http://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-016-0961-5 Testing for association between RNA-Seq and high-dimensional data] and the Bioconductor package globalSeq.
** Certain genes that are involved in a process called Homologous Recombination Repair (HRR) can make cancer cells more '''susceptible''' to certain treatments. Specifically, it says that when these loss-of-function genes are present, the cancer cells become more sensitive to two types of chemotherapy: PARP inhibitors and platinum-based chemotherapy.
* [http://link.springer.com/article/10.1208%2Fs12248-016-9917-y The FDA’s Experience with Emerging Genomics Technologies—Past, Present, and Future]
** '''Loss-of-function''' genes are genes that have mutations that prevent them from functioning properly or at all. By disrupting the normal functioning of the HRR pathway, these loss-of-function genes can make cancer cells more sensitive to PARP inhibitors and platinum-based chemotherapy.
* [http://www.nature.com/nbt/journal/v31/n1/abs/nbt.2450.html Differential analysis of gene regulation at transcript resolution with RNA-seq] Trapnell et al, Nature Biotechnology 31, 46–53 (2013)
* [http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/early/2016/12/01/0008-5472.CAN-16-1624.long A Study of TP53 RNA Splicing Illustrates Pitfalls of RNA-seq Methodology]


== Pictures ==
* [https://github.com/sztup/scarHRD scarHRD] package. Note for the 2 test samples, the return object is a 1x4 matrix.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/genomegov
** HRD-LOH/Loss of Heterozygosity
** LST/Large Scale Transitions
** Number of Telomeric Allelic Imbalances
** HRD-sum (sum of the above 3)


= Terms =
* [https://academic.oup.com/oncolo/article/27/3/167/6515681 Homologous Recombination Deficiency: Concepts, Definitions, and Assays] Stewart 2022
== RNA sequencing 101 ==
Web
* [http://ctehr.tamu.edu/media/864063/jason-seq-pres.pdf Introduction to RNA-Seq] including biology overview (DNA, Alternative splcing, mRNA structure, human genome) and sequencing technology.
* [http://www.chem.agilent.com/Library/eseminars/Public/RNA%20Sequencing%20101.pdf RNA Sequencing 101] by Agilent Technologies. Includes the definition of sequencing depth (number of reads per sample) and coverage (number of reads/locus).
* Where do we get reads(A,C,T,G) from sample RNA? See page 12 of this [https://www.biostat.wisc.edu/bmi776/lectures/rnaseq.pdf pdf] from Colin Dewey in U. Wisc.
* Quantification of RNA-Seq data (see the above pdf)
* Convert read counts into expression: RPKM (see the above pdf)
* RPKM and FPKM ([https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B23nQZpa5ce0ak9jNEdlMEVqemc/edit Data analysis of RNA-seq from new generation sequencing] by 張庭毓) RNA-Seq資料分析研討會與實作課程 / RNA Seq定序 / 次世代定序(NGS) / 高通量基因定序 分析.
* [http://yourgene.pixnet.net/blog/post/66237799 First vs Second] generation sequence.
* [http://sfg.stanford.edu/SFG.pdf The Simple Fool’s Guide to Population Genomics via RNA­Seq]: An Introduction to High­Throughput Sequencing Data Analysis. This covers QC, De novo assembly, BLAST, mapping reads to reference sequences, gene expression analysis and variant (SNP) detection.
* [http://nihlibrary.nih.gov/Services/Bioinformatics/Documents/Lipsett100928talk_web.pdf An Introduction to Bioinformatics Resources and their Practical Applications] from [http://nihlibrary.nih.gov/Services/Bioinformatics/Pages/default.aspx NIH library Bioinformatics Support Program].
* [http://www.rnaseqforthenextgeneration.org/resources/index.html Teaching material] from rnaseqforthenextgeneration.org which includes Designing RNA-Seq experiments, Processing RNA-Seq data, and Downstream analyses with RNA-Seq data.


Books
* [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959804924007834 Harmonization of homologous recombination deficiency testing in ovarian cancer: Results from the MITO16A/MaNGO-OV2 trial] 2024
* [http://www.amazon.com/RNA-seq-Data-Analysis-Mathematical-Computational/dp/1466595000 RNA-seq Data Analysis: A Practical Approach]. The pdf version is available on slideshare.net.
** BRCA mutation status: the BRCA status was defined positive (BRCA+) when a clinically significant mutation ('''pathogenic/likely pathogenic''') was found in BRCA genes, and negative (BRCA-) if no clinically significant mutation was found. NOTE: Pathogenicity 致病性 refers to the ability of an organism to cause disease or damage in a host.
* [http://www.amazon.com/Statistical-Generation-Sequencing-Frontiers-Probability/dp/3319072110/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_y Statistical Analysis of Next Generation Sequencing Data]
** '''Genomic instability/GI''' score (same as '''HRD score''')
** HRD status
** Sensitivty, Specificity, Agreement, Cohen kappa are used to compare new assays/tests vs reference test (Myriad)
** RECIST response rate, PFS, OS


== strand-specific vs non-strand specific experiment ==
* [https://pzweuj.github.io/2021/06/10/HRD.html 同源重组修复缺陷HRD 分析]
* http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28025. According to this message and the [http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0126545 article] (under the paragraph of '''Read counting''') from PLOS, ''most of the RNA-seq protocols that are used nowadays are not strand-specific''.
* [https://cloud.tencent.com/developer/article/1701897 这篇只有两个Figure的10分+SCI是靠什么取胜的?]
* http://biology.stackexchange.com/questions/1958/difference-between-strand-specific-and-not-strand-specific-rna-seq-data
* [https://blog.csdn.net/fanyucai1/article/details/119741040 HRD检测方法]
* https://www.biostars.org/p/61625/ how to find if this public rnaseq data are prepared by strand-specific assay?
* [https://github.com/ucscXena/gitbookdocs/blob/master/overview-of-features/genomic-signatures.md Link] to HRD score, genome-wide DNA damage footprint. The HRD value has a range 0 to 101. Most are 0 and the rest follows an exponential distribution.
* https://www.biostars.org/p/62747/ Discussion of using IGV to view strand-specific coverage. See also the similar posts on the right hand side.
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8640082/ Dynamically Accumulating Homologous Recombination Deficiency Score Served as an Important Prognosis Factor in High-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer] Su 2021
* https://www.biostars.org/p/44319/ How To Find Stranded Rna-Seq Experiments Data. The text ''dUTP 2nd strand marking'' includes a link to stranded rna-seq data.
** A combined HRD score ≥42 was associated with shorter OS in 33 cancer types.
* forward (+)/ reverse(-) strand in GAlignments objects ([http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/manuals/GenomicAlignments/man/GenomicAlignments.pdf p68 of the pdf manual] and [https://samtools.github.io/hts-specs/SAMv1.pdf page 7 of sam format specification].
** However, in ovarian cancer, which ranked the highest HRD score among other cancers, HRD ≥42 cohort was significantly associated with longer OS.
** An HRD score of ≥42 was determined to signify HRD (HR-deficient), and a score of <42 was considered HR-proficient in clinical trials.
** The datasets including 1. signatures–HRD score and genome-wide DNA damage footprint; 2. phenotype-curated clinical data; and 3. gene expression RNAseq-TOIL RSEM TPM were downloaded from https://xenabrowser.net/.
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-03432-3 Identification of molecular subtypes and prognostic signature for hepatocellular carcinoma based on genes associated with homologous recombination deficiency] Lin 2021.  
** the combat function of R software package SVA was used for batch effect removal.
* https://xenabrowser.net/datapages/ has one set called "TCGA Pan-Cancer (PANCAN) (41 datasets)" -> HRD score, genome-wide DNA damage footprint (n=10,647) Pan-Cancer Atlas Hub.
* https://github.com/GerkeLab/TCGAhrd  where HDR can be downloaded from https://gdc.cancer.gov/about-data/publications/PanCan-DDR-2018. Choose 'Zip file with TSV files of DDR Data Resources'. Pay attention to "DDRscores.tsv" and "Scores.tsv", "Samples.tsv".
<ul>
<li>[https://github.com/GerkeLab/TCGAhrd Homologous recombination deficiency in TCGA PanCancer Atlas]
<pre>
> load("clinical_and_hrd.RData")
> dim(full_dat)
[1] 9105  792
> full_dat[1:5, c("HRD_Score", "HRD_LOH", "HRD_LST", "HRD_TAI")]
  HRD_Score HRD_LOH HRD_LST HRD_TAI
1        7       2      2      3
2        9      3      2      4
3        0      0      0      0
4        8      4      2      2
5        5      1      1      3
> summary( full_dat[1:5, c("HRD_Score", "HRD_LOH", "HRD_LST", "HRD_TAI")])
  HRD_Score      HRD_LOH    HRD_LST      HRD_TAI
Min.  :0.0  Min.  :0  Min.  :0.0  Min.  :0.0
1st Qu.:5.0  1st Qu.:1  1st Qu.:1.0  1st Qu.:2.0
Median :7.0  Median :2  Median :2.0  Median :3.0
Mean  :5.8  Mean  :2  Mean  :1.4  Mean  :2.4
3rd Qu.:8.0  3rd Qu.:3  3rd Qu.:2.0  3rd Qu.:3.0
Max.  :9.0  Max.  :4  Max.  :2.0  Max.  :4.0


Understand this info is necessary when we want to use summarizeOverlaps() function (GenomicAlignments) or htseq-count python program to get count data.
> load("DDRscores.RData")
> ls()
[1] "dat"      "full_dat"
> dim(dat)
[1] 9125  46
> colnames(dat)
[1] "patient_id"            "acronym"                "mutLoad_silent"
[4] "mutLoad_nonsilent"      "mutSig1"                "mutSig2"
[7] "mutSig3"                "mutSig4"                "mutSig5"
[10] "mutSig6"                "mutSig7"                "mutSig8"
[13] "mutSig9"                "mutSig10"              "mutSig11"
[16] "mutSig12"              "mutSig13"              "mutSig14"
[19] "mutSig15"              "mutSig16"              "mutSig17"
[22] "mutSig18"              "mutSig19"              "mutSig20"
[25] "mutSig21"              "CNA_n_segs"            "CNA_frac_altered"
[28] "CNA_n_focal_amp_del"    "aneuploidy_score"      "aneuploidy_score_prime"
[31] "LOH_n_seg"              "LOH_frac_altered"      "purity"
[34] "ploidy"                "genome_doublings"      "subclonal_frac"
[37] "HRD_TAI"                "HRD_LST"                "HRD_LOH"
[40] "HRD_Score"              "eCARD"                  "PARPi7"
[43] "PARPi7_bin"            "RPS"                    "tp53_score"
[46] "rppa_ddr_score"
</pre>
<li>[https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fonc.2021.746571/full#h13 HRD status is highly '''correlated''' with platinum chemotherapy sensitivity in patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC)] 2022. Findings showed that the HRD score of platinum treatment-sensitive patients was slightly higher than that of Pt-resistant patients. Analysis showed that [https://ecancer.org/en/news/23005-hrd-detection-predicts-sensitivity-to-platinum-based-chemotherapy-for-ovarian-cancer-patients-in-china patients with positive HRD status had a significantly longer progression-free survival (PFS) compared to those with negative HRD status].
* [https://ovarianresearch.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13048-019-0511-7 Effect of BRCA mutational status on survival outcome in advanced-stage high-grade serous ovarian cancer] 2019. The median PFS was 22.9 months for the BRCA mutation group compared to 16.9 months for the wild-type BRCA group. 6 months was used as a cutoff.
* [https://www.healthday.com/health-news/cancer/ovarian-cancer-prognosis-may-depend-on-gene-mutations-651331.html Ovarian Cancer Prognosis May Depend on Gene Mutations]. Five-year survival rates were 61 percent for those with the BRCA2 mutation, 46 percent for those with the BRCA1 mutation and 36 percent for those with neither mutation, the investigators found.
* [https://ovarianresearch.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13048-023-01129-x Homologous recombination deficiency status predicts response to platinum-based chemotherapy in Chinese patients with high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma] 2023.
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10232447/ HRD effects on first-line adjuvant chemotherapy and PARPi maintenance therapy in Chinese ovarian cancer patients] 2023
 
<li>[https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-19406-4 Pan-cancer landscape of homologous recombination deficiency] 2020
 
<li>[https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/hrd-positive-ovarian-cancer What to know about HRD testing for ovarian cancer]
 
<li>[https://www.azprecisionmed.com/tumor-type/ovarian-cancer/hrd-testing.html HRD in Ovarian Cancer]
 
<li>SAP for [https://classic.clinicaltrials.gov/ProvidedDocs/44/NCT01891344/SAP_001.pdf from Clovis Oncology] & Rucaparib (a PARP inhibitor)
 
<li>gLOH vs LOH: The gLOH score and the LOH score are two different measures of Homologous Recombination Deficiency (HRD) in tumors. The gLOH score measures genomic loss of heterozygosity (gLOH) while the LOH score measures loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in a specific region or gene.
 
<li>[https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/hrd-positive-ovarian-cancer What to know about HRD testing for ovarian cancer]
 
<li>Labs:
* ACTHRD from [https://www.actgenomics.com/patients_product.php?id=5 ACT Genomics 行動基因]. ACTHRD™ detects HRD status by LOH score and 24 HRR-related genes to evaluate whether a tumor is suitable for PARP inhibitors.
* AmoyDx. [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36136896/ In-house testing for homologous recombination repair deficiency (HRD) testing in ovarian carcinoma: a feasibility study comparing AmoyDx HRD Focus panel with Myriad myChoiceCDx assay]
* [https://bionano.com/hrd-testing/ Bionano]
* [https://www.webull.com/news/25116275 Burning Rock]宣佈在中國獲得MyChoice®腫瘤檢測的許可
* [https://info.foundationmedicine.com/hubfs/FMI%20Labels/FoundationOne_CDx_Label_Technical_Info.pdf FoundationMedicine (?FMI) technical information]. ''Positive homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) status (F1CDx HRD defined as tBRCA-positive and/or LOH high) in ovarian cancer patients is associated with improved progression-free survival (PFS) from Rubraca (rucaparib) maintenance therapy in accordance with the Rubraca product label. '' [https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/cdrh_docs/pdf17/P170019S006C.pdf FDA doc]. [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8926248/ Clinical and analytical validation of FoundationOne®CDx, a comprehensive genomic profiling assay for solid tumors] 2022.
* [https://support-docs.illumina.com/SW/DRAGEN_Analysis_Workflows/Content/SW/Informatics/APP/HRD_appT500ctDNAlocal.htm Illumina]
* [https://myriad.com/genetic-tests/mychoicecdx-tumor-test/ Myriad]
* [https://pillarbiosci.com/news/xing-genomic-services-receives-nata-accreditation-for-pillar-biosciences-hrd-gene-panel-enabling-cost-effective-parpi-response-prediction/ Pillar Biosciences]
* [https://www.sophiagenetics.com/press-releases/sophia-genetics-launches-new-deep-learning-capabilities-to-support-the-detection-of-homologous-recombination-deficiencies/ Sophia Genetics]
* Tempus [https://www.tempus.com/oncology/algorithmic-tests/ AI-DRIVEN HRD TEST]
* Thermo fisher scientific [https://assets.thermofisher.com/TFS-Assets/CSD/Reference-Materials/hrd-biomarker-guide.pdf Everything you need to know about homologous recombination repair (HRR) and homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) testing]
</ul>
 
== Computational Pathology ==
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6852275/ Computational pathology definitions, best practices, and recommendations for regulatory guidance: a white paper from the Digital Pathology Association] 2019
* [https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-030-80962-1_334-1 Challenges in Computational Pathology of Biomarker-Driven Predictive and Prognostic Immunotherapy]
 
== Bi-allelic, monoallelic ==
[https://www.nature.com/scitable/content/bi-allelic-and-monoallelic-expression-8816761/ Bi-allelic and monoallelic expression]. In most cases, both alleles (the two chromosomal copies) are transcribed; this is known as bi-allelic expression (left). However, a minority of genes show monoallelic expression (right). In these cases, only one allele of a gene is expressed (right).
 
== SOMAscan assay (proteomic) ==
<ul>
<li>https://somalogic.com/somascan-discovery/, https://somalogic.com/somascan-platform/, https://somalogic.com/user-manuals/
* [https://somalogic.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/SL00000572_Rev4_2022-01_SomaScan-Assay-v4.1.pdf SomaScan Assay v4.1] 7k
* [https://github.com/SomaLogic/SomaDataIO SomaDataIO] R package (currently 6.0.0), [https://somalogic.github.io/SomaDataIO/ Documentation including Vignettes].
:<syntaxhighlight lang='r'>
f <- "SS-1234567_v4.1_Serum.hybNorm.medNormInt.plateScale.calibration.anmlQC.qcCheck.anmlSMP.adat"
my_adat <- read_adat(f)
eset <- adat2eSet(my_adat)
 
exprs(eset) |> dim() # 7596 x ns


[https://www.biostars.org/p/98756/ This post] mentioned to use [http://rseqc.sourceforge.net/ infer_experiment.py script] to check whether the rna-seq run is stranded or not.
pData(phenoData(eset)) # ns x 33
table(pData(phenoData(eset))$SampleType)


The rna-seq experiment used in [http://www.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/rnaseqGene/ this tutorial] is not stranded-specific.
pData(featureData(eset)) # 7596 x 19
j2 <- pData(featureData(eset))$Organism == "Human" &
    (pData(featureData(eset))$Type %in% c("Protein", "Non-Human")) 
sum(j2) # 7289
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://somalogic.github.io/SomaScan.db/ SomaScan.db] R package. v4.0 is 5K.
* [https://investors.somalogic.com/news-releases/news-release-details/somalogic-announces-new-somascanr-11k-platform SomaScan 11K Assay v5.0]


== FASTQ ==
<li>[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27146037/ readat: An R package for reading and working with SomaLogic ADAT files]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FASTQ_format FASTQ=FASTA + Qual]. FASTQ format is a text-based format for storing both a biological sequence (usually nucleotide sequence) and its corresponding quality scores.
* https://bitbucket.org/graumannlabtools/readat/src/master/. The R package is not in Bioconductor.
=== Phred quality score ===
 
q = -10log10(p) where p = <span style="color: red">error</span> probability for the base.
<li>[https://rdrr.io/github/andreagrioni/ToolViz/ ToolViz] package.
{| class="wikitable"
<li>[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gds/?term=somascan NCBI-GEO], [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/browse/?view=platforms&search=somascan&display=20 All list]
! q
! <span style="color: red">error</span> probability
! base call accuracy
|-
| 10
| 0.1
| 90%
|-
| 13
| 0.05
| 95%
|-
| 20
| 0.01
| 99%
|-
| 30
| 0.001
| 99.9%
|-
| 40
| 0.0001
| 99.99%
|-
| 50
| 0.00001
| 99.999%
|}


== FASTA <=> FASTQ conversion ==
<li>[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9561184/ Assessment of variability in the plasma 7k SomaScan proteomics assay] 2022
</ul>


=== Convert FASTA to FASTQ without quality scores ===
== Scandal ==
[https://www.techbang.com/posts/98333-alzheimers-papers-are-suspected-of-being-fraudulent-setting 阿茲海默症關鍵論文被揭發疑似造假,16年來全球醫學專家可能都被呼弄] & [https://news.ltn.com.tw/news/world/breakingnews/4000907 阿茲海默症關鍵論文疑造假 誤導外界16年]


[https://www.biostars.org/p/99886/ Biostars]. For example, the [https://github.com/lh3/bioawk bioawk] by lh3 (Heng Li) worked.
= Terms =
== RNA vs DNA ==
* [https://medcitynews.com/2020/09/why-rna-is-a-better-measure-of-a-patients-current-health-than-dna/ Why RNA is a better measure of a patient’s current health than DNA]
* [http://www.hkcna.hk/content/2020/1216/868269.shtml 英美接種疫苗,陰謀論隨之盛行]. 核糖核酸=RNA. 脱氧核糖核酸=DNA. 輝瑞公司開發的新冠疫苗,是使用mRNA疫苗原理,即抽取病毒內部分核糖核酸編碼蛋白(或者稱信使核糖核酸)制成疫苗。
** [https://vitals.lifehacker.com/how-mrna-vaccines-work-1845895792 How mRNA Vaccines Work]
** [https://www.acsh.org/news/2020/10/21/how-pfizers-rna-vaccine-works-15104 How Pfizer's RNA Vaccine Works]
** Pfizer’s Covid Vaccine: 11 Things You Need to Know
** [https://blog.ephorie.de/covid-19-vaccine-95-effective-it-doesnt-mean-what-you-think-it-means COVID-19 vaccine “95% effective”: It doesn’t mean what you think it means!]
** [https://www.courthousenews.com/vaccine-technology-how-mrna-changed-the-fight-against-covid-19/ Vaccine Technology: How MRNA Changed the Fight Against Covid-19]


=== Convert FASTA to FASTQ with quality score file ===  
== 基因结构 ==
See the links on the above post.
https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/49601643


=== Convert FASTQ to FASTA using Seqtk ===
== Pseudogene ==
Use the [https://github.com/lh3/seqtk Seqtk] program; see [https://www.biostars.org/p/85929/ this post].
https://www.genome.gov/genetics-glossary/Pseudogene. An example: [https://www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=OR7E47P OR7E47P] with alias [https://genome.weizmann.ac.il/horde/card/index/symbol:OR7E47P bpl 41-16 or bpl41-16].
 
== PCR ==
[https://unclegene6666.pixnet.net/blog/post/302562043 什麼是PCR? 聚合酶鏈鎖反應?] 基因叔叔
 
== Epidemiology ==
[https://www.bmj.com/about-bmj/resources-readers/publications/epidemiology-uninitiated Epidemiology for the uninitiated]


The '''Seqtk''' program by lh3 can be used to sample reads from a fastq file including paired-end; see [https://www.biostars.org/p/69348/ this post].
== Cell lines ==
* cell line (體外). tumor samples (體內)
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/nature14397 A resource for cell line authentication, annotation and quality control]
* [https://www.biologydiscussion.com/cell/cell-lines/cell-lines-types-nomenclature-selection-and-maintenance-with-statistics/10517 Cell Lines: Types, Nomenclature, Selection and Maintenance (With Statistics)]
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5001206/ Comprehensive comparison of molecular portraits between cell lines and tumors in breast cancer] Jiang 2016
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3715866/ Evaluating cell lines as tumour models by comparison of genomic profiles] Domcke 2013
* Google: tumor cell line vs tumor samples


== RPKM (Mortazavi et al. 2008) ==
== in vivo, in vitro, and in situ ==
Reads per Kilobase of Exon per Million of Mapped reads.
=== In silico 電腦模擬 (in silicon, s=simulation) ===
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_silico An in silico experiment is one performed on computer or via computer simulation.
* The main difference between '''in silico''' gene expression analysis and '''experimental''' gene expression analysis is the method used to study the patterns and levels of gene expression.
** In silico gene expression analysis involves the use of computational tools and algorithms to analyze large datasets of gene expression data obtained from techniques such as microarrays, RNA sequencing, or single-cell RNA sequencing. This analysis can include identifying differentially expressed genes between samples, clustering genes with similar expression patterns, and predicting the functional roles of genes based on their expression profiles.
** On the other hand, experimental gene expression analysis involves directly measuring the levels and patterns of gene expression using laboratory techniques. These techniques can include real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR), northern blotting, western blotting, and immunohistochemistry, among others. These experimental techniques allow researchers to directly measure the levels of specific RNA or protein molecules in biological samples.
** While in silico gene expression analysis is a rapid and cost-effective way to analyze large datasets of gene expression data, it relies on the accuracy and completeness of the data being analyzed. Experimental gene expression analysis provides a more direct and accurate view of gene expression but can be more time-consuming and expensive. In practice, both in silico and experimental gene expression analysis are valuable tools that can be used to complement each other in the study of gene expression and its role in various biological processes and diseases.
* [https://molecular-cancer.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1476-4598-6-50 In silico gene expression analysis--an overview] Murray 2007
* [https://www.future-science.com/doi/10.2144/btn-2018-0179 A simple in silico approach to generate gene-expression profiles from subsets of cancer genomics data] 2019
** TCGA from cbioportal was used
** Details steps including screenshots are available at [https://www.future-science.com/doi/suppl/10.2144/btn-2018-0179 Supplementary material]


* rpkm function in [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/59317/ edgeR] package.
=== In situ 原處 (介於in vivo與in vitro之間) ===
* RPKM function in [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/50413/ easyRNASeq] package.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_situ 意義大致介於in vivo與in vitro之間。
* Something that’s performed in situ means that it’s observed in its natural context, but '''outside of a living organism'''. In vivo is Latin for “within the living.” It refers to work that’s performed in a whole, living organism .
* A good example of this is a technique called '''in situ hybridization (ISH)'''. ISH can be used to look for a specific '''nucleic acid''' (DNA or RNA) within something like a tissue sample. Specialized probes are used to bind to a specific nucleic acid sequence that the researcher is looking to find. These probes are tagged with things like radioactivity or fluorescence. This allows the researcher to see where the nucleic acid is located within the tissue sample. ISH allows the researcher to observe where a nucleic acid is located within its natural context, yet outside of a living organism. Examples are microarray experiments.


Idea
=== in vivo 活体内 ===
* The more we sequence, the more reads we expect from each gene. '''This is the most relevant correction of this method.'''
* IN VIVO describes a medical experiment or a test that is performed on a '''living organism''', e.g. a human being or a laboratory animal.
* Longer transcript are expected to generate more reads. '''The latter is only relevant for comparisons among different genes which we rarely perform!'''. As such, the DESeq2 only creates a size factor for each library and normalize the counts by dividing counts by a size factor (scalar) for each library. Note that: H0: mu1=mu2 is equivalent to H0: c*mu1=c*mu2 where c is gene length.
* [https://www.promocell.com/in-the-lab/human-primary-cells-and-immortal-cell-lines/ Human primary cells and immortal cell lines: differences and advantages]
* [https://pediaa.com/what-is-the-difference-between-primary-cell-culture-and-cell-line/ What is the Difference Between Primary Cell Culture and Cell Line]


Calculation
'''Syngenic'''
# Count up the total reads in a sample and divide that number by 1,000,000 – this is our “per million” scaling factor.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syngenic
# Divide the read counts by the “per million” scaling factor. This normalizes for sequencing depth, giving you reads per million (RPM)
* [https://www.crownbio.com/model-systems/in-vivo Syngeneic models]
# Divide the RPM values by the length of the gene, in kilobases. This gives you RPKM.


Formula
''Syngeneic tumor models'' are experimental models used in cancer research that use '''genetically identical animals''' to study the growth and spread of cancer cells. In these models, a malignant tumor is induced in one animal and then transplanted into another animal of the same genetic background. This allows researchers to study the interactions between the host immune system and the cancer cells, as well as the response of the tumor to various treatments.
<pre>
RPKM = (10^9 * C)/(N * L), with


C = Number of reads mapped to a gene
''Syngeneic tumor models'' are often used in combination with other experimental models, such as '''xenograft models''' (where the cancer cells are transplanted into a genetically different animal) or '''cell line models''' (where the cancer cells are grown in a laboratory). By using a combination of these models, researchers can gain a more complete understanding of the biology of cancer and develop new treatments for cancer patients.
N = Total mapped reads in the experiment
L = gene length in base-pairs for a gene
</pre>


<syntaxhighlight lang="rsplus">
The ''syngeneic model'' is an important tool for studying the role of the immune system in cancer, as the genetically identical animals allow researchers to control for genetic differences that might impact the immune response. Additionally, because the host immune system in these models is functional and can mount a response against the transplanted cancer cells, the syngeneic model provides a more realistic representation of the host-tumor interaction than other models that rely on immunodeficient animals.
source("http://www.bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("edgeR")
library(edgeR)


set.seed(1234)
=== in vitro 试管内/体外 ===
y <- matrix(rnbinom(20,size=1,mu=10),5,4)
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_vitro
    [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4]
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_silico
[1,]    0    0    5    0
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA-Seq
[2,]    6    2    7    3
 
[3,]    5  13    7    2
== RUO: research use only ==
[4,]    3    3    9  11
'''RUO''' stands for "Research Use Only". In the context of clinical trials and laboratory research, it refers to in vitro diagnostic products (IVDs) that are intended to be used in non-clinical studies, including to gather data for submission as required by regulatory authorities³. These products are not intended for use in diagnostic procedures. They are often used by medical laboratories and other institutions for research purposes. However, if these products are used for purposes other than research, it could have legal implications. It's important to note that RUO products are not subject to the same regulatory controls as in-vitro diagnostic medical devices (CE-IVDs) that must comply with the applicable legal requirements.
[5,]    1    2    1  15


d <- DGEList(counts=y, lib.size=1001:1004)
* [https://www.fda.gov/regulatory-information/search-fda-guidance-documents/distribution-in-vitro-diagnostic-products-labeled-research-use-only-or-investigational-use-only Distribution of In Vitro Diagnostic Products Labeled for Research Use Only or Investigational Use Only]
# Note that lib.size is optional
* [https://blog.microbiologics.com/ivd-in-vitro-diagnostic-versus-ruo-research-use-only/ In Vitro Diagnostic Use (IVD) versus Research Use Only (RUO) in the Clinical Laboratory]
# By default, lib.size = colSums(counts)
cpm(d) # counts per million
  Sample1  Sample2  Sample3  Sample4
1    0.000    0.000 4985.045    0.000
2 5994.006  1996.008 6979.063  2988.048
3 4995.005 12974.052 6979.063  1992.032
4 2997.003  2994.012 8973.081 10956.175
5  999.001  1996.008  997.009 14940.239
> cpm(d,log=TRUE)
    Sample1  Sample2  Sample3  Sample4
1  7.961463  7.961463 12.35309  7.961463
2 12.607393 11.132027 12.81875 11.659911
3 12.355838 13.690089 12.81875 11.129470
4 11.663897 11.662567 13.17022 13.451207
5 10.285119 11.132027 10.28282 13.890078


d$genes$Length <- c(1000,2000,500,1500,3000)
== RNA sequencing 101 ==
rpkm(d)
Web
    Sample1  Sample2    Sample3  Sample4
* [https://www.edx.org/course/introduction-to-biology-the-secret-of-life-24 Introduction to Biology - The Secret of Life] from edX. It's one of the top 100 best [https://www.classcentral.com/collection/top-free-online-courses free online courses] posted by ClassCentral.
1    0.0000    0.000  4985.0449    0.000
* [http://ctehr.tamu.edu/media/864063/jason-seq-pres.pdf Introduction to RNA-Seq] including biology overview (DNA, Alternative splcing, mRNA structure, human genome) and sequencing technology.
2 2997.0030  998.004  3489.5314 1494.024
* [https://youtu.be/7BLS_YY9HeM Introduction to RNA-Seq for Researchers] (youtube)
3 9990.0100 25948.104 13958.1256 3984.064
* [http://www.chem.agilent.com/Library/eseminars/Public/RNA%20Sequencing%20101.pdf RNA Sequencing 101] by Agilent Technologies. Includes the definition of sequencing depth (number of reads per sample) and coverage (number of reads/locus).
4 1998.0020  1996.008  5982.0538 7304.117
** [https://www.ecseq.com/support/ngs/what-is-a-good-sequencing-depth-for-bulk-rna-seq What is a good sequencing depth for bulk RNA-Seq?] In general 5 M mapped reads is a good bare minimum for a differential gene expression (DGE) analysis in human. In many cases 5 M – 15 M mapped reads are sufficient. Many published human RNA-Seq experiments have been sequenced with a sequencing depth between 20 M - 50 M reads per sample.
5  333.0003  665.336  332.3363 4980.080
** [https://www.biostars.org/p/139006/ How to count fastq reads] ''echo $(zcat yourfile.fastq.gz | wc -l)/4 | bc''
* Where do we get reads(A,C,T,G) from sample RNA? See page 12 of this [https://www.biostat.wisc.edu/bmi776/lectures/rnaseq.pdf pdf] from Colin Dewey in U. Wisc.
* Quantification of RNA-Seq data (see the above pdf)
* Convert read counts into expression: RPKM (see the above pdf)
* RPKM and FPKM ([https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B23nQZpa5ce0ak9jNEdlMEVqemc/edit Data analysis of RNA-seq from new generation sequencing] by 張庭毓) RNA-Seq資料分析研討會與實作課程 / RNA Seq定序 / 次世代定序(NGS) / 高通量基因定序 分析.
* [http://yourgene.pixnet.net/blog/post/66237799 First vs Second] generation sequence.
* [http://sfg.stanford.edu/SFG.pdf The Simple Fool’s Guide to Population Genomics via RNA­Seq]: An Introduction to High­Throughput Sequencing Data Analysis. This covers QC, De novo assembly, BLAST, mapping reads to reference sequences, gene expression analysis and variant (SNP) detection.
* [http://nihlibrary.nih.gov/Services/Bioinformatics/Documents/Lipsett100928talk_web.pdf An Introduction to Bioinformatics Resources and their Practical Applications] from [http://nihlibrary.nih.gov/Services/Bioinformatics/Pages/default.aspx NIH library Bioinformatics Support Program].
* [http://www.rnaseqforthenextgeneration.org/resources/index.html Teaching material] from rnaseqforthenextgeneration.org which includes Designing RNA-Seq experiments, Processing RNA-Seq data, and Downstream analyses with RNA-Seq data.


> cpm
== Books ==
function (x, ...)
* [http://www.amazon.com/RNA-seq-Data-Analysis-Mathematical-Computational/dp/1466595000 RNA-seq Data Analysis: A Practical Approach]. The pdf version is available on slideshare.net.
UseMethod("cpm")
* [http://www.amazon.com/Statistical-Generation-Sequencing-Frontiers-Probability/dp/3319072110/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_y Statistical Analysis of Next Generation Sequencing Data]
<environment: namespace:edgeR>
* [https://www.huber.embl.de/msmb/ Modern Statistics for Modern Biology] (free, see [[Statistics#Books_2|Statistics books]]) by Holmes and Huber. Plots are based on ggplot2.
> showMethods("cpm")
* [https://github.com/harvardinformatics/learning-bioinformatics-at-home Learning Bioinformatics At Home] - some resources gathered by the Harvard Informatics group.
** Install all required packages using [https://www.huber.embl.de/msmb/ the R script] gives me errors. It would be great if there is a Docker image. Another solution is to run install.packages(pkgsToInstall, Ncpus=4) manually.
* [https://compgenomr.github.io/book/?s=09 Computational Genomics with R] by Altuna Akalin


Function "cpm":
== strand-specific vs non-strand specific experiment ==
<not an S4 generic function>
* http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28025. According to this message and the [http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0126545 article] (under the paragraph of '''Read counting''') from PLOS, ''most of the RNA-seq protocols that are used nowadays are not strand-specific''.
> cpm.default
* http://biology.stackexchange.com/questions/1958/difference-between-strand-specific-and-not-strand-specific-rna-seq-data
function (x, lib.size = NULL, log = FALSE, prior.count = 0.25,
* https://www.biostars.org/p/61625/ how to find if this public rnaseq data are prepared by strand-specific assay?
    ...)
* https://www.biostars.org/p/62747/ Discussion of using IGV to view strand-specific coverage. See also the similar posts on the right hand side.
{
* https://www.biostars.org/p/44319/ How To Find Stranded Rna-Seq Experiments Data. The text ''dUTP 2nd strand marking'' includes a link to stranded rna-seq data.
    x <- as.matrix(x)
* forward (+)/ reverse(-) strand in GAlignments objects ([http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/manuals/GenomicAlignments/man/GenomicAlignments.pdf p68 of the pdf manual] and  [https://samtools.github.io/hts-specs/SAMv1.pdf page 7 of sam format specification].
    if (is.null(lib.size))
 
        lib.size <- colSums(x)
Understand this info is necessary when we want to use summarizeOverlaps() function (GenomicAlignments) or htseq-count python program to get count data.
    if (log) {
 
        prior.count.scaled <- lib.size/mean(lib.size) * prior.count
[https://www.biostars.org/p/98756/ This post] mentioned to use [http://rseqc.sourceforge.net/ infer_experiment.py script] to check whether the rna-seq run is stranded or not.
        lib.size <- lib.size + 2 * prior.count.scaled
 
    }
The rna-seq experiment used in [http://www.bioconductor.org/help/workflows/rnaseqGene/ this tutorial] is not stranded-specific.
    lib.size <- 1e-06 * lib.size
 
    if (log)
== FASTQ ==
        log2(t((t(x) + prior.count.scaled)/lib.size))
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FASTQ_format FASTQ=FASTA + Qual]. FASTQ format is a text-based format for storing both a biological sequence (usually nucleotide sequence) and its corresponding quality scores.
    else t(t(x)/lib.size)
=== Phred quality score ===
}
q = -10log10(p) where p = <span style="color: red">error</span> probability for the base.
<environment: namespace:edgeR>
{| class="wikitable"
> rpkm.default
! q
function (x, gene.length, lib.size = NULL, log = FALSE, prior.count = 0.25,
! <span style="color: red">error</span> probability
    ...)
! base call accuracy
{
|-
    y <- cpm.default(x = x, lib.size = lib.size, log = log, prior.count = prior.count)
| 10
    gene.length.kb <- gene.length/1000
| 0.1
    if (log)
| 90%
        y - log2(gene.length.kb)
|-
     else y/gene.length.kb
| 13
}
| 0.05
<environment: namespace:edgeR>
| 95%
|-
| 20
| 0.01
| 99%
|-
| 30
| 0.001
| 99.9%
|-
| 40
| 0.0001
| 99.99%
|-
| 50
| 0.00001
| 99.999%
|}
 
== FASTA ==
fasta/fa files can be used as reference genome in IGV. But we cannot load these files in order to view them.
 
=== Download sequence files ===
* ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/genomes/H_sapiens/RNA/ Assembled genome sequence and annotation data for RefSeq genome assemblies
* ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/H_sapiens/
 
=== Compute the sequence length of a FASTA file ===
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23992646/sequence-length-of-fasta-file
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
awk '/^>/ {if (seqlen){print seqlen}; print ;seqlen=0;next; } { seqlen += length($0)}END{print seqlen}' file.fa
 
head -2 file.fa | \
     awk '/^>/ {if (seqlen){print seqlen}; print ;seqlen=0;next; } { seqlen += length($0)}END{print seqlen}'  | \
    tail -1
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Here for example the 1st sample and the 2nd gene, its rpkm value is calculated as
== FASTA <=> FASTQ conversion ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="rsplus">
According to [https://www.quora.com/Bioinformatics-What-is-the-difference-between-fasta-fastq-and-sam-files this post],  
# step 1:
6/(1.0e-6 *1001) = 5994.006    # cpm, compute column-wise
# step 2:
5994.006/ (2000/1.0e3) = 2997.003 # rpkm, compute row-wise


# Another way
* FastA are text files containing multiple DNA* seqs each with some text, some part of the text might be a name.
# step 1 (RPK)
* FastQ files are like  fasta, but they also have quality scores for each base of each seq, making them appropriate for reads from an Illumina machine (or other brands)
6/ (2000/1.0e3) = 3
# step 2 (RPKM)
3/ (1.0e-6 * 1001) = 2997.003
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Critics ===
=== Convert FASTA to FASTQ without quality scores ===
* [http://faculty.ucr.edu/~tgirke/HTML_Presentations/Manuals/Workshop_Dec_12_16_2013/Rrnaseq/Rrnaseq.pdf RPKM/FPKM is not suitable for statistical testing] (p11):


''Consider the following example: in two libraries, each with one million reads, gene X may have 10 reads for treatment A and 5 reads for treatment B, while it is 100x as many after sequencing 100 millions reads from each library. In the latter case we can be much more confident that there is a true difference between the two treatments than in the first one. However, the RPKM values would be the same for both scenarios. Thus, RPKM/FPKM are useful for reporting expression values, but not for statistical testing!''
[https://www.biostars.org/p/99886/ Biostars]. For example, the [https://github.com/lh3/bioawk bioawk] by lh3 (Heng Li) worked.


* [http://blog.nextgenetics.net/?e=51 RPKM measure is inconsistent among samples]
=== Convert FASTA to FASTQ with quality score file ===
See the links on the above post.


=== (another critic) Union Exon Based Approach ===
=== Convert FASTQ to FASTA using Seqtk ===
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0141910
Use the [https://github.com/lh3/seqtk Seqtk] program; see [https://www.biostars.org/p/85929/ this post].


In general, the methods for gene quantification can be largely divided into two categories: transcript-based approach and ‘union exon’-based approach.
The '''Seqtk''' program by lh3 can be used to sample reads from a fastq file including paired-end; see [https://www.biostars.org/p/69348/ this post].


It was found that the gene expression levels are significantly underestimated by ‘union exon’-based approach, and the average of RPKM from ‘union exons’-based method is less than 50% of the mean expression obtained from transcript-based approach.
== RPKM (Mortazavi et al. 2008) and cpm (counts per million) ==
Reads per Kilobase of Exon per Million of Mapped reads.


== FPKM (Trapnell et al. 2010) ==
* RPKMs can only be calculated for those genes for which the '''gene length''' and '''GC content''' information is available; see the vignette of [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/GSVA/inst/doc/GSVA.pdf#page=17  GSVA]
* rpkm function in [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/59317/ edgeR] package.
* RPKM function in [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/50413/ easyRNASeq] package.
* TMM > cpm > log2 transformation on the paper [https://bmccancer.biomedcentral.com/track/pdf/10.1186/s12885-018-4546-8#page=3 Gene expression profiling of 1200 pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma reveals novel subtypes]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA-Seq#Gene_expression_quantification Gene expression quantification] from RNA-Seq wikipedia page
** Sequencing depth/coverage: the total number of reads generated in a single experiment is typically normalized by converting counts to fragments, reads, or counts per million mapped reads ('''FPM, RPM, or CPM''').
** Gene length: '''FPKM, TPM'''. Longer genes will have more fragments/reads/counts than shorter genes if transcript expression is the same. This is adjusted by dividing the FPM by the length of a gene, resulting in the metric fragments per kilobase of transcript per million mapped reads (FPKM). When looking at groups of genes across samples, FPKM is converted to transcripts per million (TPM) by dividing each FPKM by the sum of FPKMs within a sample.
* [https://bioinformatics.stackexchange.com/a/2299 Difference between CPM and TPM and which one for downstream analysis?]. '''CPM''' is basically depth-normalized counts whereas '''TPM''' is length normalized (and then normalized by the length-normalized values of the other genes).
* [http://robpatro.com/blog/?p=235 The RNA-seq abundance zoo]. The counts per million ('''CPM''') metric takes the raw (or estimated) counts, and performs the first type of normalization I mention in the previous section.  That is, it normalized the count by the library size, and then multiplies it by a million (to avoid scary small numbers).
* See also the [[ScRNA#Normalization|log(CPM)]] implemented in Seurat::NormalizeData() for scRNA-seq data.


Fragment per Kilobase of exon per Million of Mapped fragments (Cufflinks).
Idea
FPKM is very similar to RPKM. RPKM was made for single-end RNA-seq, where every read corresponded to a single fragment that was sequenced. FPKM was made for paired-end RNA-seq. With paired-end RNA-seq, two reads can correspond to a single fragment, or, if one read in the pair did not map, one read can correspond to a single fragment. The only difference between RPKM and FPKM is that FPKM takes into account that two reads can map to one fragment (and so it doesn’t count this fragment twice).
* The more we sequence, the more reads we expect from each gene. '''This is the most relevant correction of this method.'''
* Longer transcript are expected to generate more reads. '''The latter is only relevant for comparisons among different genes which we rarely perform!'''. As such, the DESeq2 only creates a size factor for each library and normalize the counts by dividing counts by a size factor (scalar) for each library. Note that: H0: mu1=mu2 is equivalent to H0: c*mu1=c*mu2 where c is gene length.


== [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/rpkm-fpkm-and-tpm-clearly-explained/ RPKM, FPKM and TPM] ==
Calculation
* The youtube video is on [https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=119&v=TTUrtCY2k-w here]
# Count up the total reads in a sample and divide that number by 1,000,000 – this is our “per million” scaling factor.
* [https://haroldpimentel.wordpress.com/2014/05/08/what-the-fpkm-a-review-rna-seq-expression-units/ R code for computing effective counts, TPM, and FPKM]
# Divide the read counts by the “per million” scaling factor. This normalizes for sequencing depth, giving you reads per million (RPM)
# Divide the RPM values by the length of the gene, in kilobases. This gives you RPKM.


This is for the read normalization
Formula
<pre>
<pre>
P -- per
RPKM = (10^9 * C)/(N * L), with
K -- kilobase (related to gene length)
 
M -- million (related to sequencing depth)
C = Number of reads mapped to a gene
N = Total mapped reads in the experiment
L = gene length in base-pairs for a gene
</pre>
</pre>


== TMM (Robinson and Oshlack, 2010) ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="rsplus">
Trimmed Means of M values (EdgeR).
source("http://www.bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("edgeR")
library(edgeR)


== Coverage ==
set.seed(1234)
* [http://bedtools.readthedocs.org/en/latest/content/tools/coverage.html bedtools]. The bedtools is now hosted on [https://github.com/arq5x/bedtools2 github]
y <- matrix(rnbinom(20,size=1,mu=10),5,4)
* https://github.com/alyssafrazee/polyester
    [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4]
<pre>
[1,]    0    0    5    0
~20x coverage ----> reads per transcript = transcriptlength/readlength * 20
[2,]    6   2    7    3
</pre>
[3,]   5  13    7    2
* Page 18 of this [http://www.chem.agilent.com/Library/eseminars/Public/RNA%20Sequencing%20101.pdf RNA-Seq 101] from Agilent or [http://res.illumina.com/documents/products/technotes/technote_coverage_calculation.pdf Estimating Sequencing Coverage] from Illumina.
[4,]   3    3    9  11
<pre>
[5,]    1    2    1  15
C = L N / G
</pre>
where L=read length, N =number of reads and G=haploid genome length. So, if we take one lane of single read human sequence with v3 chemistry, we get C = (100 bp)*(189×10^6)/(3×10^9 bp) = 6.3. This tells us that each base in the genome will be sequenced between six and seven times on average.
* coverage() function in IRanges package.
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/6571/ Coverage and read depth]
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/638/ What Is The Sequencing 'Depth' ?] Coverage = (total number of bases generated) / (size of genome sequenced). So a 30x coverage means, on an average each base has been read by 30 sequences.
* [http://www.nature.com/nrg/journal/v15/n2/full/nrg3642.html Sequencing depth and coverage: key considerations in genomic analyses]
* https://www.biostars.org/p/5165/
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# Assume the bam file is sorted by chromosome location
# took 40 min on 5.8G bam file
samtools depth  *bamfile*  |  awk '{sum+=$3} END { print "Average = ",sum/NR}'
</syntaxhighlight>


== SAM/Sequence Alignment Format and BAM format specification ==
d <- DGEList(counts=y, lib.size=1001:1004)
* https://samtools.github.io/hts-specs/SAMv1.pdf and [http://samtools.sourceforge.net/ samtools] webpage.
# Note that lib.size is optional
* http://genome.sph.umich.edu/wiki/SAM
# By default, lib.size = colSums(counts)
 
cpm(d) # counts per million
== Germline vs Somatic mutation ==
  Sample1  Sample2  Sample3  Sample4
Germline: inherit from parents. See the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germline Wikipedia] page.
1    0.000    0.000 4985.045    0.000
2 5994.006  1996.008 6979.063  2988.048
3 4995.005 12974.052 6979.063  1992.032
4 2997.003  2994.012 8973.081 10956.175
5  999.001  1996.008  997.009 14940.239
> cpm(d,log=TRUE)
    Sample1  Sample2  Sample3  Sample4
1  7.961463  7.961463 12.35309  7.961463
2 12.607393 11.132027 12.81875 11.659911
3 12.355838 13.690089 12.81875 11.129470
4 11.663897 11.662567 13.17022 13.451207
5 10.285119 11.132027 10.28282 13.890078


== Driver vs passenger mutation ==
d$genes$Length <- c(1000,2000,500,1500,3000)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatic_evolution_in_cancer
rpkm(d)
    Sample1  Sample2    Sample3  Sample4
1    0.0000    0.000  4985.0449    0.000
2 2997.0030  998.004  3489.5314 1494.024
3 9990.0100 25948.104 13958.1256 3984.064
4 1998.0020  1996.008  5982.0538 7304.117
5  333.0003  665.336  332.3363 4980.080


== Missense variants ==
> cpm
aminoacid changing variants
function (x, ...)
UseMethod("cpm")
<environment: namespace:edgeR>
> showMethods("cpm")


== Simulate Whole genome ==
Function "cpm":
* [https://github.com/nh13/dwgsim DWGSIM] mentioned by [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3785481/ Variant Callers for Next-Generation Sequencing Data: A Comparison Study]. For its usage, see http://davetang.org/wiki/tiki-index.php?page=DWGSIM
<not an S4 generic function>
 
> cpm.default
== Allele vs Gene ==
function (x, lib.size = NULL, log = FALSE, prior.count = 0.25,
http://www.diffen.com/difference/Allele_vs_Gene
    ...)
 
{
* A gene is a stretch of DNA or RNA that determines a certain trait.  
    x <- as.matrix(x)
* Genes mutate and can take two or more alternative forms; an '''allele''' is one of these forms of a gene. For example, the gene for eye color has several variations (alleles) such as an allele for blue eye color or an allele for brown eyes.
    if (is.null(lib.size))
* An allele is found at a fixed spot on a chromosome?
        lib.size <- colSums(x)
* Chromosomes occur in pairs so organisms have two alleles for each gene — one allele in each chromosome in the pair. Since each chromosome in the pair comes from a different parent, organisms inherit one allele from each parent for each gene. The two alleles inherited from parents may be same (homozygous) or different (heterozygotes).
    if (log) {
 
        prior.count.scaled <- lib.size/mean(lib.size) * prior.count
== Locus ==
        lib.size <- lib.size + 2 * prior.count.scaled
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locus_(genetics)
    }
 
    lib.size <- 1e-06 * lib.size
== [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplotype Haplotypes] ==
    if (log)
* http://www.brown.edu/Research/Istrail_Lab/proj_cmsh.php
        log2(t((t(x) + prior.count.scaled)/lib.size))
* http://www.nature.com/nri/journal/v5/n1/fig_tab/nri1532_F2.html
    else t(t(x)/lib.size)
* https://www.sciencenews.org/article/seeking-genetic-fate
}
* http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/553400_3
<environment: namespace:edgeR>
> rpkm.default
function (x, gene.length, lib.size = NULL, log = FALSE, prior.count = 0.25,
    ...)
{
    y <- cpm.default(x = x, lib.size = lib.size, log = log, prior.count = prior.count)
    gene.length.kb <- gene.length/1000
    if (log)
        y - log2(gene.length.kb)
    else y/gene.length.kb
}
<environment: namespace:edgeR>
</syntaxhighlight>


== Base quality, Mapping quality, Variant quality ==
Here for example the 1st sample and the 2nd gene, its rpkm value is calculated as
* Fastq base quality: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FASTQ_format
<syntaxhighlight lang="rsplus">
* Mapping quality: http://genome.cshlp.org/content/18/11/1851.long
# step 1:
* Variant quality: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21903627
6/(1.0e-6 *1001) = 5994.006    # cpm, compute column-wise
# step 2:
5994.006/ (2000/1.0e3) = 2997.003 # rpkm, compute row-wise


== Mapping quality (MAPQ) vs Alignment score (AS) ==
# Another way
http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=66634
# step 1 (RPK)  
6/ (2000/1.0e3) = 3
# step 2 (RPKM)
3/ (1.0e-6 * 1001) = 2997.003
</syntaxhighlight>


* MAPQ (5th column): MAPping Quality. It equals '''−10 log10 Pr{mapping position is wrong}''' (defined by SAM documentation), rounded to the nearest integer. A value 255 indicates that the mapping quality is not available. MAPQ is a metric that tells you how confident you can be that the read comes from the reported position. So given 1000, for example, read alignments with mapping quality being 30, one of them will be wrong in average.
Another example. [https://github.com/oxwang/fda_scRNA-seq/blob/master/3_Normalization/Code/HCC1395/10X_LLU.R#L52 source code] of calc_cpm().
* AS (14th column in my case): Alignment score is a metric that tells you how similar the read is to the reference. AS increases with the number of matches and decreases with the number of mismatches and gaps (rewards and penalties for matches and mismatches depend on the scoring matrix you use)
<pre>
library(edgeR)
set.seed(1234)
y <- matrix(rnbinom(20,size=1,mu=10),5,4)
cpm(y)
#          [,1]  [,2]      [,3]      [,4]
#[1,]      0.00      0 172413.79      0.00
#[2,] 400000.00 100000 241379.31  96774.19
#[3,] 333333.33 650000 241379.31  64516.13
#[4,] 200000.00 150000 310344.83 354838.71
#[5,]  66666.67 100000  34482.76 483870.97


Note:
calc_cpm <- function (expr_mat) {
# MAPQ scores produced by the aligners typically involves the alignment score and other information.
    norm_factor <- colSums(expr_mat)
# You can have high AS and low MAPQ if the read aligns perfectly at multiple positions, and you can have low AS and high MAPQ if the read aligns with mismatches but still the reported position is still much more probable than any other.
    return(t(t(expr_mat)/norm_factor) * 10^6)
# You probably want to filter for MAPQ, but "good" alignment may refer to AS if what you care is similarity between read and reference.
    # Fix a bug in the original code
# [https://sequencing.qcfail.com/articles/mapq-values-are-really-useful-but-their-implementation-is-a-mess/ MAPQ values are really useful but their implementation is a mess] by Simon Andrews
    # Not affect silhouette()
}


== Nonsynonymous mutation ==
calc_cpm(y)
It is related to the [http://www.chemguide.co.uk/organicprops/aminoacids/dna4.html genetic code].  
#          [,1]  [,2]      [,3]      [,4]
#[1,]      0.00      0 172413.79      0.00
#[2,] 400000.00 100000 241379.31  96774.19
#[3,] 333333.33 650000 241379.31  64516.13
#[4,] 200000.00 150000 310344.83 354838.71
#[5,] 66666.67 100000  34482.76 483870.97
</pre>


See
=== Critics ===
* http://evolution.about.com/od/Overview/a/Synonymous-Vs-Nonsynonymous-Mutations.htm
* [http://faculty.ucr.edu/~tgirke/HTML_Presentations/Manuals/Workshop_Dec_12_16_2013/Rrnaseq/Rrnaseq.pdf RPKM/FPKM is not suitable for statistical testing] (p11):
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonsynonymous_substitution


= Other software =
''Consider the following example: in two libraries, each with one million reads, gene X may have 10 reads for treatment A and 5 reads for treatment B, while it is 100x as many after sequencing 100 millions reads from each library. In the latter case we can be much more confident that there is a true difference between the two treatments than in the first one. However, the RPKM values would be the same for both scenarios. Thus, RPKM/FPKM are useful for reporting expression values, but not for statistical testing!''
== Partek ==
* Partek Flow Software http://youtu.be/-6aeQPOYuHY


== [http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/cli/complab/dchip/ dCHIP] ==
* [http://blog.nextgenetics.net/?e=51 RPKM measure is inconsistent among samples]
 
=== CPM vs TPM ===
Both has the property that the sumof reads is 1 million(10^6). But TPM includes gene length normalization (TPM accounts for variations in gene length (done first) and sequencing depth (done second)). So if want to find DE genes between samples, it is common to use the TPM normalization method.
 
=== (another critic) Union Exon Based Approach ===
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0141910
 
In general, the methods for gene quantification can be largely divided into two categories: transcript-based approach and ‘union exon’-based approach.
 
It was found that the gene expression levels are significantly underestimated by ‘union exon’-based approach, and the average of RPKM from ‘union exons’-based method is less than 50% of the mean expression obtained from transcript-based approach.


== [http://www.tm4.org/mev/ MeV] ==
== FPKM (Trapnell et al. 2010) ==


MeV v4.8 (11/18/2011) allows annotation from Bioconductor
* Fragment per Kilobase of exon per Million of Mapped fragments (Cufflinks).
* FPKM is very similar to RPKM. RPKM was made for single-end RNA-seq, where every read corresponded to a single fragment that was sequenced. FPKM was made for paired-end RNA-seq. With paired-end RNA-seq, two reads can correspond to a single fragment, or, if one read in the pair did not map, one read can correspond to a single fragment. The only difference between RPKM and FPKM is that FPKM takes into account that two reads can map to one fragment (and so it doesn’t count this fragment twice).
* [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9154302/ Differential expression analysis with only FPKM matrix available from total newbie in R]


== IPA from Ingenuity ==
== [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/rpkm-fpkm-and-tpm-clearly-explained/ RPKM, FPKM, TPM and DESeq] ==
Login:
* RPKM can be calculated using the '''edgeR''' package if we have the raw count data (e.g. Rsubread::'''featureCount'''()). [http://combine-australia.github.io/RNAseq-R/07-rnaseq-day2.html Rsubread is the only R package that can run in R].
There are web started version https://analysis.ingenuity.com/pa and Java applet version https://analysis.ingenuity.com/pa/login/choice.jsp. We can double click the file <IpaApplication.jnlp> in my machine's download folder.
* The youtube video is on [https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=119&v=TTUrtCY2k-w here]. TPM 比 RPKM/FPKM 好因為 total reads in each experiments are the same.
* [https://reneshbedre.github.io/blog/expression_units.html Relationship (formula) between RPKM and TPM]
* [https://arxiv.org/pdf/1804.06050.pdf#page=5 Differences]
** The main difference between RPKM and FPKM is that the former is a unit based on single-end reads, while the latter is based on paired-end reads and counts the two reads from the same RNA fragment as one instead of two.
** The difference between RPKM/FPKM and TPM is that the former calculates sample-scaling factors before dividing read counts by gene lengths, while the latter divides read counts by gene lengths first and calculates samples calling factors based on the length-normalized read counts.
** If researchers would like to interpret gene expression levels as the proportions of RNA molecules from different genes in a sample,
* [https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/55988984 为什么说FPKM和RPKM都错了?]
* [http://diytranscriptomics.com/Reading/files/wagnerTPM.pdf Measurement of mRNA abundance using RNA-seq data: RPKM measure is inconsistent among samples] (TPM method) by Wagner 2012.
* Between samples normalization.
** [https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/sailfish-users/jBf9SGiH1AM How to Normalize Salmon TPM output?]
** [https://www.biostars.org/p/287296/ How do I normalize for my RNA-seq data across different samples in different conditions]. Using DESeq2 ([https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/track/pdf/10.1186/s13059-014-0550-8 paper], [https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/DESeq2/versions/1.12.3/topics/estimateSizeFactors estimateSizeFactors()]). [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3218662/pdf/gb-2010-11-10-r106.pdf DESeq] paper by Anders 2010 where the NB model and size factor was first used.
: <syntaxhighlight lang='rsplus'>
> set.seed(1)
> dds <- makeExampleDESeqDataSet(m=4)
> head(counts(dds))
      sample1 sample2 sample3 sample4
gene1      14      1      1      4
gene2      5      17      13      14
gene3      0      12      8      6
gene4    152      62    149    110
gene5      23      36      33      94
gene6      0      1      1      4
> dds <- estimateSizeFactors(dds)
> sizeFactors(dds)
sample1  sample2  sample3  sample4
1.068930 1.014687 1.010392 1.033559
> head(counts(dds))
      sample1 sample2 sample3 sample4
gene1      14      1      1      4
gene2      5      17      13      14
gene3      0      12      8      6
gene4    152      62    149    110
gene5      23      36      33      94
gene6      0      1      1      4
> head(counts(dds, normalized=TRUE))
        sample1    sample2    sample3    sample4
gene1  13.097206  0.9855256  0.9897147  3.870122
gene2  4.677574 16.7539354  12.8662916  13.545427
gene3  0.000000 11.8263073  7.9177179  5.805183
gene4 142.198237 61.1025878 147.4674957 106.428358
gene5  21.516838 35.4789219  32.6605863  90.947869
gene6  0.000000  0.9855256  0.9897147  3.870122


Features:
# normalized counts is calculated as the following
* easily search the scientific literature/integrate diverse biological information.
R> head(scale(counts(dds, normalized=F), F, sizeFactors(dds)))
* build dynamic pathway models
        sample1    sample2    sample3    sample4
* quickly analyze experimental data/Functional discovery: assign function to genes
gene1  13.097206  0.9855256  0.9897147  3.870122
* share research and collaborate. On the other hand, IPA is web based, so it takes time for running analyses. Once submitted analyses are done, an email will be sent to the user.
gene2  4.677574 16.7539354  12.8662916  13.545427
gene3  0.000000 11.8263073  7.9177179  5.805183
gene4 142.198237 61.1025878 147.4674957 106.428358
gene5  21.516838 35.4789219  32.6605863  90.947869
gene6  0.000000  0.9855256  0.9897147  3.870122


Start Here
# The situation of DESeqDataSet object created using 'tximport()' is different. See the next item.
<pre>
</syntaxhighlight>
Expression data -> New core analysis -> Functions/Diseases -> Network analysis
* [https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/DESeq2/versions/1.12.3/topics/estimateSizeFactors ?estimateSizeFactors()]. If tximport is used, the information in <nowiki>assays(dds)[["avgTxLength"]] </nowiki> is automatically used to create appropriate normalization factors. In this case, sizeFactors(dds) will return NULL. See also [[R#Debug_an_S4_function|Debug an S4 function]] for the source code.
                                        Canonical pathways        |
* TPM (generated by [https://deweylab.github.io/RSEM/ RSEM] or [https://combine-lab.github.io/salmon/ Salmon] or [https://pachterlab.github.io/kallisto/starting Kallisto]) has been suggested as a better unit than RPKM/FPKM. But it cannot be used to do comparison between samples.
                                              |                  |
** [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3163565/ RSEM: accurate transcript quantification from RNA-Seq data with or without a reference genome] Li 2011, 8k citations from google scholar.
Simple or advanced search --------------------+                   |
** RPKM or TPM only corrects for library size, but not composition. [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9159683/ Size factor normalized counts for between sample comparisons]
                                              |                  |
** [http://www.arrayserver.com/wiki/index.php?title=TPM_and_FPKM TPM and FPKM] from array suite wiki
                                              v                  |
** [https://haroldpimentel.wordpress.com/2014/05/08/what-the-fpkm-a-review-rna-seq-expression-units/ What the FPKM? A review of RNA-Seq expression units]. R code for computing effective counts, TPM, and FPKM.
                                        My pathways, Lists <------+
** [https://haroldpimentel.wordpress.com/2014/12/08/in-rna-seq-2-2-between-sample-normalization/ In RNA-Seq, 2 != 2: Between-sample normalization]. Among the most popular and well-accepted BSN (between-sample normalization) methods are TMM and DESeq normalization.
                                              ^
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
                                              |
P -- per
Creating a custom pathway --------------------+
K -- kilobase (related to gene length)
M -- million (related to sequencing depth)
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/329625/ How to convert transcript level TPM to gene level TPM ?]
* [https://github.com/crazyhottommy/RNA-seq-analysis/blob/master/salmon_kalliso_STAR_compare.md R scripts to convert HTseq counts to TPM]
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/171766/ Calculating TPM from featureCounts output], [https://gist.github.com/slowkow/c6ab0348747f86e2748b A simpler version]. It seems CPM and TPM 差別再 TPM 考慮gene length.
* [https://hbctraining.github.io/DGE_workshop_salmon/lessons/02_DGE_count_normalization.html Comparison of common normalization methods] from a workshop from Harvard Chan Bioinformatics Core.
* [https://rnajournal.cshlp.org/content/early/2020/04/13/rna.074922.120 Misuse of RPKM or TPM normalization when comparing across samples and sequencing protocols] Zhao 2020
** It can be reasonable to assume that the partitioning of total RNA among the different compartments ('''ribosomal RNA, pre-mRNA, mitochondrial RNA, genomic pre-mRNA and poly(A)+ RNA''') of the transcriptome is '''comparable''' across samples in a given RNA-seq project.
* [https://reneshbedre.github.io/blog/expression_units.html#tmm-trimmed-mean-of-m-values Gene expression units explained: RPM, RPKM, FPKM, TPM, DESeq, TMM, SCnorm, GeTMM, and ComBat-Seq]
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34158060/ TPM, FPKM, or Normalized Counts? A Comparative Study of Quantification Measures for the Analysis of RNA-seq Data from the NCI Patient-Derived Models Repository] Zhao 2021
 
== TMM (Robinson and Oshlack, 2010) ==
Trimmed Means of M values (edgeR).
<ul>
<li>TMM relies on the assumption that most genes are not differentially expressed. See the [https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/gb-2010-11-3-r25 paper]. DESeq2 does not rely on this assumption. <li>
<li>TMM will not work well for samples where the library size is so small that most of the counts become zero. A library size of 1 million is on the small side, but is probably ok. [https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9149967/ Is there any reason to think that normalization (e.g. TMM) doesn't work well with samples that that have very different raw counts?]
<li>Many normalization RNA-Seq normalization methods perform poorly on samples with '''extreme composition bias'''. For instance, in one sample a large number of reads comes from rRNAs while in another they have been removed more efficiently. Most scaling based methods, including RPKM and CPM, will underestimate the expression of weaker expressed genes in
the presence of extremely abundant mRNAs (less sequencing real estate available for them). The TMM methods tries to correct this bias.
</li>
 
<li>[https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9156103/ Does EdgeR trimmed mean of M values (TMM) account for gene length?] '''No'''. ''In general, edgeR does not need to adjust for gene length in DE analyses because gene length cancels out of DE comparisons.''
<li>[https://www.reneshbedre.com/blog/expression_units.html Gene expression units explained: RPM, RPKM, FPKM, TPM, DESeq, TMM, SCnorm, GeTMM, and ComBat-Seq]
 
<li>Q: Does TMM method require count data?
* A: Yes, the TMM method requires RNA-seq count data as input.
* The TMM method uses these count data to calculate the scaling factors that adjust for differences in library size <strike>and gene length</strike>, as well as the effects of highly expressed genes.
* Before applying the TMM method, it is important to ensure that the count data has been properly preprocessed and filtered to remove low-quality reads, adapter sequences, and other artifacts.
</li>
<li>Q: can TMM method be applied to non-integer data?
* A: It is possible to apply TMM to non-integer data, such as normalized expression values or FPKM (fragments per kilobase of transcript per million mapped reads) values, by rounding the values to the nearest integer.
* In practice, the TMM method can be applied to non-integer data by first converting the data to counts, for example, by multiplying the expression values by a scaling factor that represents the average library size, and then rounding the resulting values to the nearest integer. The TMM method can then be applied to the rounded count data as usual.
</li>
<li>[https://youtu.be/Wdt6jdi-NQo StatQuest: edgeR, part 1, Library Normalization]. Good explanation about reference sample selection. </li>
<li>[https://www.tutorialspoint.com/statistics/trimmed_mean.htm Trimmed Mean] </li>
<li>[https://web.stanford.edu/class/bios221/labs/rnaseq/lab_4_rnaseq.html RNA Sequence Analysis in R: edgeR]
</li>
<li>[https://davetang.org/muse/2011/01/24/normalisation-methods-for-dge-data/ Normalisation methods implemented in edgeR]. TMM, RLE, Upper-quartile. </li>
<li>Using [https://stats.stackexchange.com/a/421903 edgeR] package
<pre>
library(magrittr)
library(edgeR)
set.seed(1)
M <- matrix(rnbinom(10000,mu=5,size=2), ncol=4)
 
out <- DGEList(M) %>% calcNormFactors() %>% cpm()
</pre> </li>
<li>Using [https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/NOISeq/inst/doc/NOISeq.pdf#page=15 NOISeq] package
<pre>
library(NOISeq)
out2 <- tmm(M, long = 1000, lc = 0, k = 0)
out[1:3, 1:3] / out2[1:3, 1:3]
#    Sample1  Sample2  Sample3
# 1 80.81611 81.32609      NaN
# 2 80.81611 81.32609 80.81611
# 3 80.81611      NaN 80.81611
</pre> </li>
<li>
</ul>
 
== Sample size ==
[[Power#RNA-seq|Power-> RNA-seq]]
 
== Coverage ==
* [https://genohub.com/recommended-sequencing-coverage-by-application/ Recommended Coverage and Read Depth for NGS Applications] from @Genohub.
* [http://bedtools.readthedocs.org/en/latest/content/tools/coverage.html bedtools]. The bedtools is now hosted on [https://github.com/arq5x/bedtools2 github]
* https://github.com/alyssafrazee/polyester
<pre>
~20x coverage ----> reads per transcript = transcriptlength/readlength * 20
</pre>
</pre>
 
* Page 18 of this [http://www.chem.agilent.com/Library/eseminars/Public/RNA%20Sequencing%20101.pdf RNA-Seq 101] from Agilent or [http://res.illumina.com/documents/products/technotes/technote_coverage_calculation.pdf Estimating Sequencing Coverage] from Illumina.
Resource:
<pre>
* http://bioinformatics.mdanderson.org/MicroarrayCourse/Lectures09/Pathway%20Analysis.pdf
C = L N / G
* http://libguides.mit.edu/content.php?pid=14149&sid=843471
</pre>
* http://people.mbi.ohio-state.edu/baguda/PathwayAnalysis/
where L=read length, N =number of reads and G=haploid genome length. So, if we take one lane of single read human sequence with v3 chemistry, we get C = (100 bp)*(189×10^6)/(3×10^9 bp) = 6.3. This tells us that each base in the genome will be sequenced between six and seven times on average.
* IPA 5.5 manual http://people.mbi.ohio-state.edu/baguda/PathwayAnalysis/ipa_help_manual_5.5_v1.pdf
* coverage() function in IRanges package.
* [https://github.com/fbreitwieser/bamcov bamcov] - Quickly calculate and visualize sequence coverage in alignment files
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/6571/ Coverage and read depth]
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/638/ What Is The Sequencing 'Depth' ?] Coverage = (total number of bases generated) / (size of genome sequenced). So a 30x coverage means, on an average each base has been read by 30 sequences.
* [http://www.nature.com/nrg/journal/v15/n2/full/nrg3642.html Sequencing depth and coverage: key considerations in genomic analyses]
* [http://qualimap.bioinfo.cipf.es/doc_html/index.html Qualimap]
* https://www.biostars.org/p/5165/
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# Assume the bam file is sorted by chromosome location
# took 40 min on 5.8G bam file. samtools depth has no threads option:(
# it is not right since it only account for regions that were covered with reads
samtools depth  *bamfile*  |  awk '{sum+=$3} END { print "Average = ",sum/NR}'    # maybe 42
 
# The following is the right way! The result matches with Qualimap program.
samtools depth -a *bamfile*  |  awk '{sum+=$3} END { print "Average = ",sum/NR}'  # maybe 8
# OR
LEN=`samtools view -H bamfile | grep -P '^@SQ' | cut -f 3 -d ':' | awk '{sum+=$1} END {print sum}'`  # 3095693981
SUM=`samtools depth bamfile | awk '{sum+=$3} END { print "Sum = ", sum}'`  # 24473867730
echo $(( $LEN/$SUM ))
</syntaxhighlight>
 
== 5 common genomics file formats ==
[https://youtu.be/MrVpn0vpIYU 5 genomics file formats you must know] (video)
* fastq,
* fastq,
* bam,
* vcf,
* [https://m.ensembl.org/info/website/upload/bed.html bed] (genomic intervals regions)
 
== SAM/Sequence Alignment Format and BAM format specification ==
* https://samtools.github.io/hts-specs/SAMv1.pdf and [http://samtools.sourceforge.net/ samtools] webpage.
* http://genome.sph.umich.edu/wiki/SAM
 
== Single-end, pair-end, fragment, insert size ==
* [http://thegenomefactory.blogspot.com/2013/08/paired-end-read-confusion-library.html Paired-end read confusion - library, fragment or insert size?]
* https://www.biostars.org/p/95803/
 
== Germline vs Somatic mutation ==
* Germline: inherit from parents. See the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germline Wikipedia] page.
* Somatic SNVs are mutations that occur in the cells of a tumor. These mutations can be found in '''multiple copies of the same gene''', while germline SNVs are mutations that are found in '''a single copy of the gene''', usually the original copy.
* [https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/body/23067-somatic--germline-mutations Somatic & Germline Mutations]
 
== Pathogenic mutation ==
* A [https://www.thinkgenetic.com/reference/genetic-testing/genetic-testing/358 pathogenic mutation] is a change in the genetic sequence that causes a specific genetic disease. To determine if a change found in the gene is something that causes disease, a laboratory looks at many different factors. For example, they look at the type of change found. Some changes, like nonsense mutations or frameshift mutations, almost always result in a major problem with the protein produced, so they are often labeled as pathogenic mutations. Laboratories will also check the scientific literature and databases to see if the particular change has been reported in other individuals with the genetic disease. Lastly, they look to see if the change is in an area of the gene that is conserved across species, meaning that the area where the change is located is the same in lots of animals, thus may be an important area for the function of the protein.
* pathogenic variant. See [https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21751-genetic-disorders Genetic Disorders]
* [https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/pathogenic-mutations Pathogenic] means ''able to cause or produce disease''.
* What are some examples of genetic diseases caused by pathogenic mutations? Cystic fibrosis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, Familial hypercholesterolemia, Hemochromatosis, Sickle cell disease, Tay-Sachs disease ...
 
== Driver vs passenger mutation ==
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatic_evolution_in_cancer
 
== Nonsynonymous mutation ==
It is related to the [http://www.chemguide.co.uk/organicprops/aminoacids/dna4.html genetic code], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_code Wikipedia]. There are 20 amino acids though there are 64 codes.
 
See
* http://evolution.about.com/od/Overview/a/Synonymous-Vs-Nonsynonymous-Mutations.htm
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonsynonymous_substitution
* [http://thegenomefactory.blogspot.com/2013/10/understanding-snps-and-indels-in.html Understanding SNPs and INDELs in microbial genomes]
* An example from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silent_mutation
** nonsynonymous: ATG to GTG mutation (AUG = Met, GUG = Val)
** synonymous: CAT to CAC mutation (CAU = His, CAC = His)
 
== isma: analysis of mutations detected by multiple pipelines ==
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-019-2701-0 isma]: an R package for the integrative analysis of mutations detected by multiple pipelines
 
== mutSignatures: analysis of cancer mutational signatures ==
* [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-75062-0#data-availability MutSignatures]: an R package for extraction and analysis of cancer mutational signatures
* https://github.com/dami82/mutSignatures
 
== Rediscover: identify mutually exclusive mutations ==
[https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article-abstract/38/3/844/6401995 Rediscover: an R package to identify mutually exclusive mutations]
 
== Tumor mutational burden ==
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumor_mutational_burden
** '''Treatment Response''': An analysis of a large cohort of patients receiving ''ICI (immune checkpoint inhibitors)'' therapy revealed that higher TMB levels (≥ 20 mutations/Mb) corresponded to a 58% response rate to ICIs while lower TMB levels (<20 mutations/Mb) reduced response to 20%.
** '''Cut-offs (High and low TMB status)''': Different studies have assigned different cut-offs to delineate between high and low TMB status.
* Tumor Mutation Burden (TMB) is typically calculated '''per sample''', not per gene. It is defined as the number of non-synonymous somatic mutations (single nucleotide variants and small insertions/deletions) per megabase in coding regions.
** The data range of TMB can vary widely depending on the '''type of cancer''' and the individual patient’s tumor. For example, one study showed that TMB can range from 0.03 to 14.13 mutations per megabase in a prostate cancer cohort, while this range is from 0.04-99.68 mutations per megabase in a bladder cancer cohort.
** '''Different sources''' may categorize TMB levels differently. For instance, one source suggests that a TMB score lower than 10 is considered low, between 10 and 15 is intermediate, and larger than 15 is high. Another source suggests that low TMB is less than or equal to 5 mutations/Mb, intermediate TMB is greater than 5 and less than 20, high TMB is greater than or equal to 20 and less than 50, and very high TMB is greater than or equal to 50.
* [https://bmcimmunol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12865-018-0285-5 Correlate tumor mutation burden with immune signatures in human cancers] Wang 2019
** Definition of cutoff: higher-TMB samples (the samples with TMB scores of ''upper quartile'') and lower-TMB samples (the samples with TMB scores of ''lower quartile'')
** '''Higher TMB was associated with better survival prognosis''' in numerous cancer types while was associated with worse prognosis in a few cancer types.
** Our data implicate that '''higher-TMB patients could gain a more favorable prognosis in diverse cancer types if treated with immunotherapy''', otherwise would have a poorer prognosis compared to lower-TMB patients.
** '''Higher nonsynonymous mutation burden in tumors''' is inclined to form more neoantigens that make tumors to have higher immunogenicity, and thus result to improved clinical response to '''immunotherapy'''.
** Address several questions:
*** Is the '''immune activity''' (expression levels of immune-related genes) of the higher-TMB subtype different from that of the lower-TMB subtype of cancers?  Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Fisher’s exact test & OR.
*** Are there any immune-related genes or gene-sets which are differentially expressed between the lower-TMB subtype and the higher-TMB subtype of cancers and whose expression is associated with clinical outcomes in cancer? Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Fisher’s exact test & OR.
*** Is the TMB itself associated with clinical outcomes in cancer? Log-rank tests.
* [https://cancerci.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12935-020-01472-9 Significance of tumor mutation burden combined with immune infiltrates in the progression and prognosis of ovarian cancer] Bi 2020
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33125859/ The Challenges of Tumor Mutational Burden as an Immunotherapy Biomarker] 2020
* [https://aacrjournals.org/cancerdiscovery/article/10/12/1808/2595/Tumor-Mutational-Burden-as-a-Predictive-Biomarker Tumor Mutational Burden as a Predictive Biomarker in Solid Tumors] 2020
* [https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/vignettes/maftools/inst/doc/maftools.html maftools] Summarize, Analyze and Visualize MAF Files
* [https://www.biomedcentral.com/search?query=TMB&searchType=publisherSearch 2449 result(s) for 'TMB'] from BMC
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/431067/ How to calculate TMB for somatic data TCGA]
* [https://www.biostars.org/p/299549/ Question: TMB Tumor Mutation Burden]
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32239176/ Mining TCGA database for tumor mutation burden and their clinical significance in bladder cancer]
* [https://jitc.bmj.com/content/8/1/e000147.long Establishing guidelines to harmonize tumor mutational burden (TMB): in silico assessment of variation in TMB quantification across diagnostic platforms] 2020
* [https://github.com/bioinfo-pf-curie/TMB TMB (python] - This tool was designed to calculate a Tumor Mutational Burden (TMB) score from a VCF file.
* [https://acc-bioinfo.github.io/TMBleR/index.html TMBleR] R package, docker, shiny.
* [https://github.com/jasonwong-lab/TMB TMB prediction App] R, shiny
* [https://www.r-bloggers.com/2023/01/an-r-function-to-compute-tumor-mutational-burden-tmb/ An R function to compute Tumor Mutational Burden (TMB)]
* [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0923753421044951 Aligning tumor mutational burden (TMB) quantification across diagnostic platforms: phase II of the Friends of Cancer Research TMB Harmonization Project] 2021.
** TMB can be determined by '''selected targeted panels''' in most cases, and '''whole-exome sequencing (WES)''' is the gold standard for quantifying TMB. TMB derived from panels was consistently and significantly lower than that derived from a whole exome. See this paper [https://jitc.bmj.com/content/8/1/e000613 Comparison of commonly used solid tumor targeted gene sequencing panels for estimating tumor mutation burden shows analytical and prognostic concordance within the cancer genome atlas cohort] 2020.
 
== Types of mutations ==
* [https://www.technologynetworks.com/genomics/articles/missense-nonsense-and-frameshift-mutations-a-genetic-guide-329274 Missense, Nonsense and Frameshift Mutations: A Genetic Guide]
* [https://bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Introductory_and_General_Biology/Principles_of_Biology/02%3A_Chapter_2/14%3A_Mutations/14.05%3A_Types_of_Mutations 4.5: Types of Mutations] by LibreTexts biology.
** While these mutation types are distinct, they can overlap in the sense that a single event (like an insertion or deletion) can result in a frameshift mutation.
 
== Cytogenetic alternations ==
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25574665/ Combining gene mutation with gene expression data improves outcome prediction in myelodysplastic syndromes] Gerstung 2015
* [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/37/23/4589/6380545 RCytoGPS: an R package for reading and visualizing cytogenetics data]
 
== Alternative and differential splicing ==
* [http://www.rna-seqblog.com/best-practices-and-appropriate-workflows-to-analyse-alternative-and-differential-splicing/ Best practices and appropriate workflows to analyse alternative and differential splicing]
* [https://www.rna-seqblog.com/as-cmc-a-pan-cancer-database-of-alternative-splicing-for-molecular-classification-of-cancer/ AS-CMC – a pan-cancer database of alternative splicing for molecular classification of cancer]
 
== Allele vs Gene ==
http://www.diffen.com/difference/Allele_vs_Gene
 
* A gene is a stretch of DNA or RNA that determines a certain trait.
* Genes mutate and can take two or more alternative forms; an '''allele''' is one of these forms of a gene. For example, the gene for eye color has several variations (alleles) such as an allele for blue eye color or an allele for brown eyes.
* An allele is found at a fixed spot on a chromosome?
* Chromosomes occur in pairs so organisms have two alleles for each gene — one allele in each chromosome in the pair. Since each chromosome in the pair comes from a different parent, organisms inherit one allele from each parent for each gene. The two alleles inherited from parents may be same (homozygous) or different (heterozygotes).
 
== Locus ==
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locus_(genetics)
 
== [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplotype Haplotypes] ==
* http://www.brown.edu/Research/Istrail_Lab/proj_cmsh.php
* http://www.nature.com/nri/journal/v5/n1/fig_tab/nri1532_F2.html
* https://www.sciencenews.org/article/seeking-genetic-fate
* http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/553400_3
 
== Base quality, Mapping quality, Variant quality ==
* Fastq base quality: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FASTQ_format
* Mapping quality: http://genome.cshlp.org/content/18/11/1851.long
* Variant quality: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21903627
 
== VarSAP ==
[https://bioinformatics.georgetown.edu/internships/enrichment-of-variant-information-for-the-variant-standardization-and-annotation-pipeline/ Enrichment of Variant Information for the Variant Standardization and Annotation Pipeline]
 
== The Clinical Knowledgebase (CKB) ==
https://ckb.jax.org/gene/show?geneId=7157  (TP53)
 
== Mapping quality (MAPQ) vs Alignment score (AS) ==
http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=66634 & [https://samtools.github.io/hts-specs/SAMv1.pdf SAM format specification]
 
* MAPQ (5th column): MAPping Quality. It equals '''−10 log10 Pr{mapping position is wrong}''' (defined by SAM documentation), rounded to the nearest integer. A value 255 indicates that the mapping quality is not available. MAPQ is a metric that tells you how confident you can be that the read comes from the reported position. So given 1000 reads, for example, read alignments with mapping quality being 30, one of them will be wrong in average (10^(30/-10)=.001). Another example, if MAPQ=70, then the probability mapping position is wrong is 10^(70/-10)=1e-7. We can use 'samtools view -q 30 input.bam' to keep reads with MAPQ at least 30. Users should refer to the alignment program for the 'MAPQ' value it uses.
* AS (optional, 14th column in my case): Alignment score is a metric that tells you how similar the read is to the reference. AS increases with the number of matches and decreases with the number of mismatches and gaps (rewards and penalties for matches and mismatches depend on the scoring matrix you use)
 
Note:
# '''MAPQ scores produced by the aligners typically involves the alignment score and other information.'''
# You can have high AS and low MAPQ if the read aligns perfectly at multiple positions, and you can have low AS and high MAPQ if the read aligns with mismatches but still the reported position is still much more probable than any other.
# You probably want to filter for MAPQ, but "good" alignment may refer to AS if what you care is similarity between read and reference.
# [https://sequencing.qcfail.com/articles/mapq-values-are-really-useful-but-their-implementation-is-a-mess/ MAPQ values are really useful but their implementation is a mess] by Simon Andrews
 
== gene's isoform ==
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA-Seq#Alternative_splicing
* [https://www.longdom.org/open-access/bioinformatics-tools-for-rnaseq-gene-and-isoform-quantification-2469-9853-1000140.pdf Bioinformatics Tools for RNA-seq Gene and Isoform Quantification] 2016. Figure 1 gives an illustration how isoform can affect the computation of RPKM.
* [https://bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12864-017-4002-1 Evaluation and comparison of computational tools for RNA-seq isoform quantification] BMC Genomics 2017.
* [https://www.gettinggeneticsdone.com/2012/12/differential-isoform-expression-cuffdiff2.html Differential Isoform Expression With RNA-Seq: Are We Really There Yet?]
* An example of unidentified transcript-level estimates while gene-level estimation is still possible. Figure 1C in [https://f1000research.com/articles/4-1521/v2 Differential analyses for RNA-seq: transcript-level estimates improve gene-level inferences]
* [https://academic.oup.com/bioinformatics/article/38/15/3844/6617821?login=false ggtranscript: an R package for the visualization and interpretation of transcript isoforms using ggplot2] 2022
 
== FFPE Tissue vs Frozen Tissue ==
* [https://www.biochain.com/general/what-is-ffpe-tissue/ What Is FFPE Tissue And What Are Its Uses]
* [https://rna-seqblog.com/a-new-model-to-predict-survival-in-colorectal-cancer-from-rna-seq-data/ A new model to predict survival in colorectal cancer from DNA / RNA-Seq data]
 
== Wild type vs mutant ==
* [https://pediaa.com/difference-between-wild-type-and-mutant/ Difference Between Wild Type and Mutant]
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_type
 
== ns ==
Not significant
 
== PARP inhibitor ==
* [https://youtu.be/vwZ07CX7ZKU?t=70 What is a PARP Inhibitor?] Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
* '''PARP''' is an '''enzyme'''/a family of '''proteins''' that help '''repair damaged DNA''' in cells. When DNA is damaged, PARP detects the damage and signals other '''enzymes''' to come and fix it. This helps maintain the stability of the cell’s genetic material and prevent cell death.
* Is PARP good or bad? PARP is neither inherently good nor bad. It is a protein that plays an important role in maintaining the stability of the cell’s genetic material by helping to repair damaged DNA.
** In normal cells, PARP helps prevent cell death and maintain genomic stability.
** In cancer cells, PARP can help the cancer cells survive and continue to grow by repairing their DNA. This is why PARP inhibitors (PARPi) are used in cancer treatment to block the function of PARP and prevent cancer cells from repairing their DNA.
 
* PARP inhibitors are a type of '''targeted cancer therapy''', '''not a traditional chemotherapy'''.
 
* '''PARPi''' therapy is a cancer treatment that blocks the PARP enzyme, which helps repair DNA damage in cancer cells
** [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33015058/ PARP Inhibitors: Clinical Relevance, Mechanisms of Action and Tumor Resistance]
** [https://www.drugs.com/drug-class/parp-inhibitors.html List of PARP inhibitors]: olaparib, niraparib, rucaparib, and talazoparib.
** [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olaparib Olaparib] is a medication for the maintenance treatment of BRCA-mutated advanced ovarian cancer in adults. It is a PARP inhibitor, inhibiting poly ADP ribose polymerase (PARP), an enzyme involved in DNA repair. Others include Letrozole, Avastin.
** '''[https://www.cancer.net/navigating-cancer-care/how-cancer-treated/what-maintenance-therapy Maintenance therapy]''' is called so because it is the ongoing treatment of cancer with medication after the cancer has responded to the first recommended treatment. The main goals of maintenance therapy are
*** To prevent the cancer’s return
*** To delay the growth of advanced cancer after the initial treatment
* '''PARP inhibitors''' are a class of '''drugs''' that inhibit the activity of PARP enzymes. By blocking PARP’s ability to help repair DNA damage, these drugs can make it more difficult for cancer cells to survive DNA damage caused by other treatments, such as chemotherapy or radiation therapy. This can make these treatments more effective against certain types of cancer.
* PARP inhibitors are drugs that block the action of the PARP enzymes, which are involved in DNA repair. There are several PARP inhibitors available, including olaparib (Lynparza), niraparib (Zejula), rucaparib (Rubraca), and talazoparib (Talzenna). These drugs are approved for some types of cancer, such as ovarian and prostate cancer, depending on the presence of certain genetic mutations.
** [https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/parp-inhibitor What is a PARP inhibitor? Uses, how they work, and options].
** PARP inhibitors - [https://www.drugs.com/drug-class/parp-inhibitors.html Drugs.com].
 
== Inhibitor genes and activator genes/enhancer genes ==
* Inhibitor genes: Inhibitor genes are genes that code for proteins that can regulate or inhibit the activity of other genes or proteins in a cell. These inhibitor proteins can interact with other proteins to prevent them from functioning or alter their activity.
** '''TP53''' gene, which codes for the p53 protein, a tumor suppressor protein that plays a critical role in regulating cell division and preventing the formation of cancerous tumors. Mutations in the '''TP53''' gene can result in loss of p53 function and an increased risk of cancer.
 
* Activator genes: Activator genes play crucial roles in a variety of biological processes, including embryonic development, immune system responses, and the regulation of gene expression. For example, the NF-kB gene codes for a transcription factor that activates genes involved in immune system responses.
** The '''MYC''' gene is an oncogene that codes for a transcription factor that promotes cell growth and proliferation. Dysregulation or overexpression of MYC can contribute to the development of many types of cancer.
** Overexpression of the '''HER2''' (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) gene is commonly observed in certain types of cancer, particularly breast cancer. Approximately 20-25% of breast cancer cases overexpress HER2, which is associated with a more aggressive form of the disease.
** Overexpression of the epidermal growth factor receptor ('''EGFR''') gene is a common genetic alteration observed in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) patients.
 
* It's important to note that the distinction between inhibitor and activator genes is not always clear-cut, as many genes can have both inhibitory and activating effects depending on the context and the specific proteins they interact with.
 
* '''Normal/cancer cells and PARP Inhibition''':
** '''Normal cells''' can tolerate DNA damage caused by PARP inhibition due to their efficient '''homologous recombination (HR) mechanism'''.
** In contrast, '''cancer cells''' with a '''deficient HR''' struggle to manage the DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and are '''especially sensitive''' to the effects of PARP inhibitors (PARPi)
** '''PARP''' has been found to be '''overexpressed''' in various types of cancers, including breast, ovarian, and oral cancers, compared to their corresponding normal healthy tissues.
** This overexpression makes '''inhibition of PARP activity''' an attractive strategy for cancer therapeutics. By disrupting PARP functions, it impairs DNA damage repair (DDR) pathways in cancer cells.
** After cancer patients receive PARP inhibitor '''(PARPi) drugs''', the expression of PARP genes in cancer patients tends to be '''lower''' compared to normal patients.
 
== Undifferentiated cancer ==
* [https://www.medicinenet.com/undifferentiated_cancer/definition.htm Medical Definition of Undifferentiated cancer] (不好的 tumor)
* What are undifferentiated cells
** Undifferentiated cells are cells that have not yet developed into a specific type of cell and do not possess the characteristics of a fully differentiated cell. They are also known as '''stem cells''' or '''progenitor cells'''.
** In developmental biology, undifferentiated cells are the cells that have not yet undergone differentiation, the process by which a less specialized cell becomes a more specialized cell, with a specific function and characteristics. These cells have the potential to divide and differentiate into multiple cell types, either through normal development or in response to injury or disease.
** In the context of cancer, '''undifferentiated''' cells refer to cells that have not yet developed into a specific type of cancer cell. These cells are sometimes called '''cancer stem cells''', and they are thought to be the cells that give rise to the various types of cells within a tumor. '''They are believed to be responsible for the maintenance and growth of the tumor''', and for its ability to spread to other parts of the body. They can be found within many types of cancer, and are considered to be an important target for cancer therapy, as ''they are thought to be more resistant to traditional treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation''.
* [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE164174 GSE164174]
 
== NCI Information Technology for Cancer Research program /ITCR ==
https://itcr.cancer.gov/. [https://itcr.cancer.gov/videos Videos]. It sponsors several programs like Bioconductor, GenePattern, UCSC Xena, IGV, PDX Finder, WebMeV, et al.
 
= Other software =
== Partek ==
* [https://www.partek.com/application-page/single-cell-gene-expression/ Single Cell RNA-Seq]
* Partek Flow Software http://youtu.be/-6aeQPOYuHY
* [https://youtu.be/tZ4BhhVCJfU?t=893 RNA Seq Analysis with Partek Flow]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cj9M--9zzgI&list=PLLFT1pfBxZZj8xOCjZTFjt3EX7jqvUgDm A playlist of Single Cell Analysis with Partek Flow Bioinformatics Software] (WTH the videos are 720p only)
* [https://youtu.be/iT63UZGXzu0 Understanding RNA-Seq Data Analysis: A Back-to-basics Overview]
* https://partekflow.cit.nih.gov/
 
== [http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/cli/complab/dchip/ dCHIP] ==
 
== [http://www.tm4.org/mev/ MeV] ==
 
MeV v4.8 (11/18/2011) allows annotation from Bioconductor
 
== IPA from Ingenuity ==
Login:
There are web started version https://analysis.ingenuity.com/pa and Java applet version https://analysis.ingenuity.com/pa/login/choice.jsp. We can double click the file <IpaApplication.jnlp> in my machine's download folder.
 
Features:
* easily search the scientific literature/integrate diverse biological information.
* build dynamic pathway models
* quickly analyze experimental data/Functional discovery: assign function to genes
* share research and collaborate. On the other hand, IPA is web based, so it takes time for running analyses. Once submitted analyses are done, an email will be sent to the user.
 
Start Here
<pre>
Expression data -> New core analysis -> Functions/Diseases -> Network analysis
                                        Canonical pathways        |
                                              |                  |
Simple or advanced search --------------------+                  |
                                              |                  |
                                              v                  |
                                        My pathways, Lists <------+
                                              ^
                                              |
Creating a custom pathway --------------------+
</pre>
 
Resource:
* http://bioinformatics.mdanderson.org/MicroarrayCourse/Lectures09/Pathway%20Analysis.pdf
* http://libguides.mit.edu/content.php?pid=14149&sid=843471
* http://people.mbi.ohio-state.edu/baguda/PathwayAnalysis/
* IPA 5.5 manual http://people.mbi.ohio-state.edu/baguda/PathwayAnalysis/ipa_help_manual_5.5_v1.pdf
* [http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa Help and supports]
* [http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa Help and supports]
* [http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Tutorial/Tutorials Tutorials] which includes
* [http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Tutorial/Tutorials Tutorials] which includes
** Search for genes
** Search for genes
** Analysis results
** Analysis results
** Upload and analyze example data
** Upload and analyze example data
** Upload and analyze your own expression data
** Upload and analyze your own expression data
** Visualize connections among genes
** Visualize connections among genes
** Learn more special features
** Learn more special features
** Human isoform view
** Human isoform view
** Transcription factor analysis
** Transcription factor analysis
** Downstream effects analysis
** Downstream effects analysis
 
 
Notes:
Notes:
* The input data file can be an Excel file with at least one gene ID and expression value at the end of columns (just what BRB-ArrayTools requires in general format importer).
* The input data file can be an Excel file with at least one gene ID and expression value at the end of columns (just what BRB-ArrayTools requires in general format importer).
* The data to be '''uploaded''' (because IPA is web-based; the projects/analyses will not be saved locally) can be in different forms. See http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Feature_Description/Data-Upload-definitions. It uses the term '''Single/Multiple Observation'''. An Observation is a list of molecule identifiers and their corresponding expression values for a given experimental treatment. A dataset file may contain a single observation or multiple observations. A Single Observation dataset contains only one experimental condition (i.e. wild-type). A Multiple Observation dataset contains more than one experimental condition (i.e. a time course experiment, a dose response experiment, etc) and can be uploaded into IPA in a single file (e.g. Excel). A maximum of 20 observations in a single file may be uploaded into IPA.
* The data to be '''uploaded''' (because IPA is web-based; the projects/analyses will not be saved locally) can be in different forms. See http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Feature_Description/Data-Upload-definitions. It uses the term '''Single/Multiple Observation'''. An Observation is a list of molecule identifiers and their corresponding expression values for a given experimental treatment. A dataset file may contain a single observation or multiple observations. A Single Observation dataset contains only one experimental condition (i.e. wild-type). A Multiple Observation dataset contains more than one experimental condition (i.e. a time course experiment, a dose response experiment, etc) and can be uploaded into IPA in a single file (e.g. Excel). A maximum of 20 observations in a single file may be uploaded into IPA.
* The instruction http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Feature_Description/Data-Upload-definitions shows what kind of gene identifier types IPA accepts.
* The instruction http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Feature_Description/Data-Upload-definitions shows what kind of gene identifier types IPA accepts.
* In this [http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Tutorial/upload-analyze-example-data-tutorial prostate example data tutorial], the term 'fold change' was used to replace log2 gene expression. The tutorial also uses 1.5 as the fold change expression cutoff.
* In this [http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Tutorial/upload-analyze-example-data-tutorial prostate example data tutorial], the term 'fold change' was used to replace log2 gene expression. The tutorial also uses 1.5 as the fold change expression cutoff.
* The gene table given on the analysis output contains columns 'Fold change', 'ID', 'Notes', 'Symbol' (with tooltip), 'Entrez Gene Name', 'Location', 'Types', 'Drugs'. See a screenshot below.
* The gene table given on the analysis output contains columns 'Fold change', 'ID', 'Notes', 'Symbol' (with tooltip), 'Entrez Gene Name', 'Location', 'Types', 'Drugs'. See a screenshot below.
 
 
Screenshots:
Screenshots:
 
 
[[File:IngenuityAnalysisOutput.png|100px]]
[[:File:IngenuityAnalysisOutput.png]]
 
 
== [http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov/ DAVID Bioinformatics Resource] ==
== [http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov/ DAVID Bioinformatics Resource] ==
It offers an integrated annotation combining gene ontology, pathways and protein annotations.
It offers an integrated annotation combining gene ontology, pathways and protein annotations.
 
It can be used to identify the pathways associated with a set of genes; e.g. [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2105-9-412#Sec7 this paper].
 
== GOTrapper ==
[https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-018-2581-8 GOTrapper: a tool to navigate through branches of gene ontology hierarchy]
 
== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/qpcR/index.html qpcR] ==
Model fitting, optimal model selection and calculation of various features that are essential in the analysis of quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR).
 
== GSEA ==
* http://www.broadinstitute.org/gsea/doc/desktop_tutorial.jsp
* http://www.hmwu.idv.tw/web/CourseSMDA/MADA/Hank_MicroarrayDataAnalysis-GSEA-20110616.pdf
* [https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-019-2716-6#MOESM20 MGSEA]– a multivariate Gene set enrichment analysis


== [http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/qpcR/index.html qpcR] ==
== sandbox.bio: Interactive bioinformatics tutorials ==
Model fitting, optimal model selection and calculation of various features that are essential in the analysis of quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR).
https://sandbox.bio/. An interactive playground for learning bioinformatics command-line tools like bedtools, bowtie2, and samtools.


== GSEA ==
= GWAS =
* http://www.broadinstitute.org/gsea/doc/desktop_tutorial.jsp
[https://poissonisfish.wordpress.com/2017/10/09/genome-wide-association-studies-in-r/ Genome-wide association studies in R]
* http://www.hmwu.idv.tw/web/CourseSMDA/MADA/Hank_MicroarrayDataAnalysis-GSEA-20110616.pdf

Latest revision as of 19:27, 20 October 2024

Visualization

Ten simple rules

Ten simple rules for developing visualization tools in genomics

IGV

nano ~/binary/IGV_2.3.52/igv.sh # Change -Xmx2000m to -Xmx4000m in order to increase the memory to 4GB
~/binary/IGV_2.3.52/igv.sh

Simulated DNA-Seq

The following shows 3 simulated DNA-Seq data; the top has 8 insertions (purple '|') per read, the middle has 8 deletions (black '-') per read and the bottom has 8 snps per read.

File:Igv dna simul.png

Whole genome

PRJEB1486

File:Igv prjeb1486 wgs.png

Whole exome

  • (Left) GSE48215, UCSC hg19. It is seen there is a good coverage on all exons.
  • (Right) 1 of 3 whole exome data from SRP066363, UCSC hg19.

File:Igv gse48215.png File:Igv srp066363.png

RNA-Seq

  • (Left) Anders2013, Drosophila_melanogaster/Ensembl/BDGP5. It is seen there are no coverages on some exons.
  • (Right) GSE46876, UCSC/hg19.

File:Igv anders2013 rna.png File:Igv gse46876 rna.png

Tell DNA or RNA

  • DNA: no matter it is whole genome or whole exome, the coverage is more even. For whole exome, there is no splicing.
  • RNA: focusing on expression so the coverage changes a lot. The base name still A,C,G,T (not A,C,G,U).

ChromoMap

ChromoMap: an R package for interactive visualization of multi-omics data and annotation of chromosomes

RNA-seq DRaMA

https://hssgenomics.shinyapps.io/RNAseq_DRaMA/ from 2nd Annual Shiny Contest

Gviz

GIVE: Genomic Interactive Visualization Engine

Build your own genome browser

ChromHeatMap

Heat map plotting by genome coordinate.

ggbio

Wondering how to look at the reads of a gene in samples to check if it was knocked out?

NOISeq package

Exploratory analysis (Sequencing depth, GC content bias, RNA composition) and differential expression for RNA-seq data.

rtracklayer

R interface to genome browsers and their annotation tracks

  • Retrieve annotation from GTF file and parse the file to a GRanges instance. See the 'Counting reads with summarizeOverlaps' vignette from GenomicAlignments package.

ssviz

A small RNA-seq visualizer and analysis toolkit. It includes a function to draw bar plot of counts per million in tag length with two datasets (control and treatment).

Sushi

See fig on p22 of Sushi vignette where genes with different strands are shown with different directions when plotGenes() was used. plotGenes() can be used to plot gene structures that are stored in bed format.

cBioPortal, TCGA, PanCanAtlas

See TCGA.

TCPA

Download. Level 4.

Qualimap

Qualimap 2 is a platform-independent application written in Java and R that provides both a Graphical User Inteface (GUI) and a command-line interface to facilitate the quality control of alignment sequencing data and its derivatives like feature counts.

SeqMonk

SeqMonk is a program to enable the visualisation and analysis of mapped sequence data.

dittoSeq

dittoSeq – universal user-friendly single-cell and bulk RNA sequencing visualization toolkit, bioinformatics

SeqCVIBE

SeqCVIBE – interactive analysis, exploration, and visualization of RNA-Seq data

ggcoverage

ggcoverage: an R package to visualize and annotate genome coverage for various NGS data 2023

Copy Number

Copy number work flow using Bioconductor

Detect copy number variation (CNV) from the whole exome sequencing

Whole exome sequencing != whole genome sequencing

Consensus CDS/CCDS

DBS segmentation algorithm

DBS: a fast and informative segmentation algorithm for DNA copy number analysis

modSaRa2

An accurate and powerful method for copy number variation detection

Visualization

reconCNV: interactive visualization of copy number data from high-throughput sequencing 2021

NGS

File:CentralDogmaMolecular.png

See NGS.

mNGS

找出病原菌的新武器 :總基因體次世代定序是什麼?

R and Bioconductor packages

Resources

library(VariantAnnotation)
library(AnnotationHub)
library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene)
library(TxDb.Mmusculus.UCSC.mm10.ensGene)
library(org.Hs.eg.db)
library(org.Mm.eg.db)
library(BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19)

Docker

Bioinstaller: A comprehensive R package to construct interactive and reproducible biological data analysis applications based on the R platform. Package on CRAN.

Some workflows

RNA-Seq workflow

Gene-level exploratory analysis and differential expression. A non stranded-specific and paired-end rna-seq experiment was used for the tutorial.

       STAR       Samtools         Rsamtools
fastq -----> sam ----------> bam  ----------> bamfiles  -|
                                                          \  GenomicAlignments       DESeq2 
                                                           --------------------> se --------> dds
      GenomicFeatures         GenomicFeatures             /        (SummarizedExperiment) (DESeqDataSet)
  gtf ----------------> txdb ---------------> genes -----|

rnaseqGene

rnaseqGene - RNA-seq workflow: gene-level exploratory analysis and differential expression

tximport

CodeOcean - Differential analyses for RNA-seq: transcript-level estimates improve gene-level inferences (version: 1.17.5). Plan.

Sequence analysis

library(ShortRead) or library(Biostrings) (QA)
gtf + library(GenomicFeatures) or directly library(TxDb.Scerevisiae.UCSC.sacCer2.sgdGene) (gene information)
GenomicRanges::summarizeOverlaps or GenomicRanges::countOverlaps(count)
edgeR or DESeq2 (gene expression analysis)
library(org.Sc.sgd.db) or library(biomaRt)

Accessing Annotation Data

Use microarray probe, gene, pathway, gene ontology, homology and other annotations. Access GO, KEGG, NCBI, Biomart, UCSC, vendor, and other sources.

library(org.Hs.eg.db)  # Sample OrgDb Workflow
library("hgu95av2.db") # Sample ChipDb Workflow
library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene) # Sample TxDb Workflow
library(Homo.sapiens)  # Sample OrganismDb Workflow
library(AnnotationHub) # Sample AnnotationHub Workflow
library("biomaRt")     # Using biomaRt
library(BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19) # BSgenome packages
Object type example package name contents
OrgDb org.Hs.eg.db gene based information for Homo sapiens
TxDb TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene transcriptome ranges for Homo sapiens
OrganismDb Homo.sapiens composite information for Homo sapiens
BSgenome BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19 genome sequence for Homo sapiens
refGenome

RNA-Seq Data Analysis using R/Bioconductor

recount2

recount3

  • Intro RNA-seq LCG-UNAM 2022 (Spanish)
  • Recount3: PCR duplicates.
    • PCR duplication can refer to two different things. It can mean the process of making many copies of a specific DNA region using a technique called Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR). PCR relies on a thermostable DNA polymerase and requires DNA primers designed specifically for the DNA region of interest.
    • On the other hand, PCR duplication can also refer to a problem that occurs when the same DNA fragment is amplified and sequenced multiple times, resulting in identical reads that can bias many types of high-throughput-sequencing experiments. These identical reads are called PCR duplicates and can be eliminated using various methods such as removing all but one read of identical sequences or using unique molecular identifiers (UMIs) to enable accurate counting and tracking of molecules.
    • UMI stands for Unique Molecular Identifier. It is a complex index added to sequencing libraries before any PCR amplification steps, enabling the accurate bioinformatic identification of PCR duplicates. UMIs are also known as Molecular Barcodes or Random Barcodes. UMIs are valuable tools for both quantitative sequencing applications and also for genomic variant detection, especially the detection of rare mutations. UMI sequence information in conjunction with alignment coordinates enables grouping of sequencing data into read families representing individual sample DNA or RNA fragments.
    • dedup - Deduplicate reads using UMI and mapping coordinates
    • UMIs can be extracted from a fastq file using awk. For example awk 'NR % 4 == 1 {split($0,a,":"); print a[6]}' input.fastq > umis.txt . Here we assume the read header is @SEQ_ID:LANE:TILE:X:Y:UMI, then the UMI sequence is in the 6th field, following the 5th colon.

dbGap

dbgap2x: an R package to explore and extract data from the database of Genotypes and Phenotypes (dbGaP)

eQTL

Statistics for Genomic Data Science (Coursera) and MatrixEQTL from CRAN

GenomicDataCommons package

Note:

  1. The TCGA data such as TCGA-LUAD are not part of clinical trials (described here).
  2. Each patient has 4 categories data and the 'case_id' is common to them:
    • demographic: gender, race, year_of_birth, year_of_death
    • diagnoses: tumor_stage, age_at_diagnosis, tumor_grade
    • exposures: cigarettes_per_day, alcohol_history, years_smoked, bmi, alcohol_intensity, weight, height
    • main: disease_type, primary_site
  3. The original download (clinical.tsv file) data contains a column 'treatment_or_therapy' but it has missing values for all patients.

Visualization

GenVisR

ComplexHeatmap

Read counts

Read, fragment

  • Meaning of the "reads" keyword in terms of RNA-seq or next generation sequencing. A read refers to the sequence of a cluster that is obtained after the end of the sequencing process which is ultimately the sequence of a section of a unique fragment.
  • What is the difference between a Read and a Fragment in RNA-seq?. Diagram , Pair-end, single-end.
  • In the context of RNA-seq, "read" and "fragment" may refer to slightly different things, but they are related concepts.
    • A read is a short sequence of nucleotides that has been generated by a sequencing machine. These reads are typically around 100-150 bases long. RNA-seq experiments generate millions or billions of reads, and these reads are aligned to a reference genome or transcriptome to determine which reads came from which genes or transcripts, this information is used to quantify gene and transcript expression levels.
    • A fragment is a piece of RNA that has been broken up and converted into a read. In RNA-seq, the first step is to convert the RNA into a library of fragments. To do this, the RNA is typically broken up into smaller pieces using a process called fragmentation. Then, adapters are added to the ends of the fragments to allow them to be sequenced. The fragments are then converted into a library of reads that can be sequenced using a next-generation sequencing platform.
    • In summary, a read is a short sequence of nucleotides that has been generated by a sequencing machine, whereas a fragment is a piece of RNA that has been broken up and converted into a read. The process of fragmentation creates a library of fragments that are then converted into reads that can be sequenced.
  • Does one fragment contain 1 read or multiple reads?
    • One fragment in RNA-seq can contain multiple reads, depending on the sequencing technology and library preparation protocol used.
    • In the process of library preparation, RNA is first fragmented into smaller pieces, then adapters are ligated to the ends of the fragments. The fragments are then amplified using PCR, generating multiple copies of the original fragment. These amplified fragments are then sequenced using a next-generation sequencing platform, generating multiple reads per fragment.
    • For example, in Illumina sequencing, fragments are ligated with adapters, then they are clonally amplified using bridge amplification. This allows for the creation of clusters of identical copies of the original fragment on a sequencing flow cell. Then, each cluster is sequenced, generating a large number of reads per fragment.
    • In other technologies like PacBio or Nanopore, the sequencing of a fragment generates only one read, as the technology can read long stretches of DNA, therefore it doesn't need to fragment the RNA prior to sequencing.
    • In summary, one fragment in RNA-seq can contain multiple reads, depending on the sequencing technology and library preparation protocol used. The number of reads per fragment can vary from one to several thousands.
  • How many reads in a fragment on average in illumination sequencing?
    • The number of reads per fragment in Illumina sequencing can vary depending on the sequencing platform and library preparation protocol used, as well as the sequencing depth and the complexity of the sample. However, on average, one fragment can generate several hundred to several thousand reads in Illumina sequencing.
    • When sequencing is performed on the Illumina platform, the process of library preparation includes fragmenting the RNA into smaller pieces, ligating adapters to the ends of the fragments, and then amplifying the fragments using bridge amplification. This allows for the creation of clusters of identical copies of the original fragment on a sequencing flow cell. Then, each cluster is sequenced, generating multiple reads per fragment.
    • The number of reads per fragment can also be affected by the sequencing depth, which refers to the total number of reads generated by the sequencing machine. A higher sequencing depth will result in more reads per fragment, while a lower sequencing depth will result in fewer reads per fragment.
    • In summary, the number of reads per fragment in Illumina sequencing can vary, but on average, one fragment can generate several hundred to several thousand reads. The number of reads per fragment can be influenced by the sequencing platform, library preparation protocol, sequencing depth, and the complexity of the sample.

Rsubread

RSEM

  • RSEM, rsem-calculate-expression
  • RSEM on Biowulf
    $ mkdir SeqTestdata/RNASeqFibroblast/output
    $ sinteractive --cpus-per-task=2 --mem=10g
    $ module load rsem bowtie STAR
    $ rsem-calculate-expression -p 2 --paired-end --star \
    				../test.SRR493366_1.fastq ../test.SRR493366_2.fastq \
    				/fdb/rsem/ref_from_genome/hg19 Sample1 # 12 seconds
    				
    $ ls -lthog
    total 5.8M
    -rw-r----- 1 1.6M Nov 24 13:39 Sample1.genes.results
    -rw-r----- 1 2.5M Nov 24 13:39 Sample1.isoforms.results
    -rw-r----- 1 1.6M Nov 24 13:39 Sample1.transcript.bam
    drwxr-x--- 2 4.0K Nov 24 13:39 Sample1.stat
    
    $ wc -l Sample1.genes.results
    26335 Sample1.genes.results
    $ wc -l Sample1.isoforms.results
    51399 Sample1.isoforms.results
    
    $ head -2 Sample1.genes.results
    gene_id	transcript_id(s)	length	effective_length	expected_count	TPM	FPKM
    A1BG	NM_130786	1766.00	1589.99	0.00	0.00	0.00
    $ head -2 Sample1.isoforms.results
    transcript_id	gene_id	length	effective_length	expected_count	TPM	FPKM	IsoPct
    NM_130786	A1BG	1766	1589.99	0.00	0.00	0.00	0.00
    $ head -1 /fdb/rsem/ref_from_genome/hg19.transcripts.fa
    >NM_130786
    $ grep NM_130786 /fdb/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/transcriptInfo.tab
    NM_130786	2721192635	2721199328	2721188175	2	8	431185
  • RSEM gene level result file (see here for an example) contains 5 essential columns (and the element saved by tximport() function) excluding transcript_id
    • Effective length → length. This is different across samples. This is much shorter than Length (e.g. 105 vs 1).
    • Expected count → count. This is the sum of the posterior probability of each read comes from this transcript over all reads.
    • TPM → abundance. The sum of all transcripts' TPM is 1 million.
    • FPKM (not kept?). FPKM_i = 10^3 / l_bar * TPM_i for gene i. So for each sample FPKM is a scaling of TPM.
    R> dfpkm[1:5, 1:3] / txi.rsem$abundance[1:5, 1:3]
              144126_210-T_JKQFX5 144126_210-T_JKQFX6 144126_210-T_JKQFX8
    5S_rRNA             0.7563603            1.118008           0.8485292
    5_8S_rRNA                 NaN                 NaN                 NaN
    6M1-18                    NaN                 NaN                 NaN
    7M1-2                     NaN                 NaN                 NaN
    7SK                 0.7563751            1.118029           0.8485281
    
  • An example using tximport::tximport() and DESeq2::DESeqDataSetFromTximport. Note it directly uses round(expected_count) to get the integer-value counts. See the source of DESeqDataSetFromTximport() here. The tximport vignette has discussed two suggested ways of importing estimates for use with differential gene expression (DGE) methods in the section of "Downstream DGE in Bioconductor". The vignette does not say anything about "expected_count" from RSEM output.
    txi.rsem <- tximport(files, type = "rsem", txIn = F, txOut = F)
    txi.rsem$length[txi.rsem$length == 0] <- 1
    names(txi.rsem) # a list, 
                    # length = effective_length (matrix)
                    # counts = expected counts column (matrix), non-integer
                    # abundance = TPM (matrix)
                    # countsFromAbundance = "no"
    # [1] "abundance"           "counts"              "length"             
    # [4] "countsFromAbundance"
    
    sampleTable <- pheno[, c("EXPID", "PatientID")]
    rownames(sampleTable) <- colnames(txi.rsem$counts)
    
    dds <- DESeq2::DESeqDataSetFromTximport(txi.rsem, sampleTable, ~ PatientID)
    # using counts and average transcript lengths from tximport
    # 
    # The DESeqDataSet class enforces non-negative integer values in the "counts" 
    #     matrix stored as the first element in the assay list.
    dds@assays@data@listData$counts[1:5, 1:3] # integer values. How to compute?
                                   # https://support.bioconductor.org/p/9134840/
    dds@assays@data@listData$avgTxLength[1:5, 1:3] # effective_length
    
    plot(txi.rsem$counts[,1], dds@assays@data@listData$counts[,1])
    abline(0, 1, col = 'red')      # compare expected counts vs integer-value counts
                                   # a straight line
    
    ddsColl1 <- DESeq2::estimateSizeFactors(dds)
    # using 'avgTxLength' from assays(dds), correcting for library size
    # Question: how does the function correct for library size?
    
    ddsColl2 <- DESeq2::estimateDispersions(ddsColl1)
    # gene-wise dispersion estimates
    # mean-dispersion relationship
    # final dispersion estimates
    # Note: it seems estimateDispersions is not required 
    #       if we only want to get the normalized count (still need estimateSizeFactors())
    # See ArrayTools/R/FilterAndNormalize.R
    
    cnts2 <- DESeq2::counts(ddsColl2, normalized = FALSE)
    all(dds@assays@data@listData$counts == cnts2)
    # [1] TRUE
    
    all(round(txi.rsem$counts) == cnts2 )
    # [1] TRUE.     So in this case round(expected values) = integer-value counts
    
  • RSEM example on Odyssey
  • A Short Tutorial for RSEM
  • Hands-on Training in RNA-Seq Data Analysis* which includes Quantification using RSEM and Perform DE analysis. Note the expected count column was used in edgeR.
  • Understanding RSEM: raw read counts vs expected counts. These “expected counts” can then be provided as a matrix (rows = mRNAs, columns = samples) to programs such as EBSeq, DESeq, or edgeR to identify differentially expressed genes.
  • RSEM: accurate transcript quantification from RNA-Seq data with or without a reference genome. Abundance estimates are given in terms of two measures. The output file (XXX_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results) contains 7 columns: gene_id, transcript_id(s), length, effective_length, expected_count, TPM, FPKM.
    • Expected counts: The is an estimate of the number of fragments that are derived from a given isoform or gene. This count is generally a non-integer value and is the expectation of the number of alignable and unfiltered fragments that are derived from a isoform or gene given the ML abundances. These (possibly rounded) counts may be used by a differential expression method such as edgeR or DESeq.
    • TPM: This is the estimated fraction of transcripts made up by a given isoform or gene. The transcript fraction measure is preferred over the popular RPKM/FPKM measures because it is independent of the mean expressed transcript length and is thus more comparable across samples and species.
  • The length or effective_length are different (though similar) for different samples for the same gene
  • A scatter plot and correlation shows the expected_count and TPM are different
    x <- read.delim("144126_210-T_JKQFX5_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results")
    colnames(x)
    # [1] "gene_id"          "transcript_id.s." "length"           "effective_length"
    # [5] "expected_count"   "TPM"              "FPKM" 
    plot(x[, "TPM"], x[, "expected_count"])
    cor(x[, "TPM"], x[, "expected_count"])
    # [1] 0.4902708
    cor(x[, "TPM"], x[, "expected_count"], method = 'spearman')
    # [1] 0.9886384
    x[1:5, "length"]
    [1] 105.01 161.00 473.00  68.00 304.47
    
    x2 <- read.delim("144126_210-T_JKQFX6_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results")
    x2[1:5, "length"]
    # [1] 105.00 161.00 473.00  68.00 305.27
    x[1:5, "effective_length"]
    # [1]   1.03  16.65 293.88   0.00 129.00
    x2[1:5, "effective_length"]
    # [1]   1.58  17.82 293.05   0.00 128.86
    
  • A benchmark for RNA-seq quantification pipelines. 2016 They compare the STAR, TopHat2, and Bowtie2 mapping methods and the Cufflinks, eXpress , Flux Capacitor, kallisto, RSEM, Sailfish, and Salmon quantification methods. RSEM slightly outperforming the rest.
  • Downsample reads from Evaluation of Cell Type Annotation R Packages on Single Cell RNA-seq Data 2020.

Expected_count

Number of reads mapping to that transcript

  • Understanding RSEM: raw read counts vs expected counts In the ideal case, the expected count estimated by RSEM will be precisely the number of reads mapping to that transcript. However, when counting the number of reads mapped for all transcripts, multireads get counted multiple times, so we can expect that this number will be slightly larger than the expected count for many transcripts.
    R> x <- read.delim("41samples/165739~295-R~AM1I30~RNASEQ.genes.results")
    R> summary(x$expected_count)     # Larger than TPM, contradict to the above statement
       Min. 1st Qu.  Median    Mean 3rd Qu.    Max.
          0       0      10    1346     556  533634
    R> summary(x$TPM)
        Min.  1st Qu.   Median     Mean  3rd Qu.     Max.
        0.00     0.00     0.16    35.58     7.50 70091.93
    R> x[1:5, c("expected_count", "TPM")]
      expected_count      TPM
    1        6190.00 70091.93
    2           0.00     0.00
    3           0.00     0.00
    4           0.00     0.00
    5         795.01   171.67
    
  • Expected counts from RSEM in DESeq2? Yes, RSEM expected counts can be used with DESeq2. Don't use TPM or FPKM because they are already normalized. It seems there is no need to do rounding before calling the tximport() function.
    # adding
    txi$length[txi$length <= 0] <- 1
    # before
    dds <- DESeqDataSetFromTximport(txi, sampleTable, ~condition)
  • Alignment-based的转录本定量-RSEM/ the sum of the posterior probability of each read comes from this transcript over all reads

Examples

$ wc -l 144126_210-T_JKQFX5_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results
   28110 144126_210-T_JKQFX5_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results

$ head -n 4 144126_210-T_JKQFX5_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results | cut -f1,3,4,5,6,7

gene_id	  length  effective_length  expected_count TPM	   FPKM
5S_rRNA	  105.01  1.03	            1513.66	   31450.7 23788.06
5_8S_rRNA 161	  16.65	            0	           0	   0
6M1-18	  473	  293.88	    0	           0	   0

Second example

$ wc -l Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.genes.results
28110
$ head -1 Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.genes.results
gene_id	transcript_id.s.	length	effective_length	expected_count	TPM	FPKM
$ tail -4Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.genes.results
septin 9/TNRC6C fusion	uc010wto.1	41	0	0	0	0
svRNAa	uc022bxg.1	22	0	0	0	0
tRNA Pro	uc022bqx.1	65	0	0	0	0
unknown	uc002afm.3	1117	922.85	0	0	0

$ wc -l Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.isoforms.results
78376
$ head -1 Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.isoforms.results
transcript_id	gene_id	length	effective_length	expected_count	TPM	FPKM	IsoPct
$ tail -4 Sample_HS-578T_CB6CRANXX.isoforms.results
uc010wto.1	septin 9/TNRC6C fusion	41	0	0	0	0	0
uc022bxg.1	svRNAa	22	0	0	0	0	0
uc022bqx.1	tRNA Pro	65	0	0	0	0	0
uc002afm.3	unknown	1117	922.85	0	0	0	0

limma

  • Differential expression analyses for RNA-sequencing and microarray studies
  • Case Study using a Bioconductor R pipeline to analyze RNA-seq data (this is linked from limma package user guide). Here we illustrate how to use two Bioconductor packages - Rsubread' and limma - to perform a complete RNA-seq analysis, including Subread'Bold text read mapping, featureCounts read summarization, voom normalization and limma differential expresssion analysis.
  • Unbalanced data, non-normal data, Bartlett's test for equal variance across groups and SAM tests (assumes equal variances just like limma). See this post.

RSEM

Within-subject correlation

  • Does this RNAseq experiment require a repeated measures approach?
    • Solution 1: 9.7 Multi-level Experiments of LIMMA user guide. duplicateCorrelation(), lmFit(), makeContrasts(), contrasts.fit() and eBayes()
    • Solution 2: Section 3.5 "Comparisons both between and within subjects" in edgeR. model.matrix(), glmQLFit(), glmQLFTtest(), topTags().

Time Course Experiments

  • See Limma's vignette on Section 9.6
    • Few time points (ANOVA, contrast)
      • Which genes respond at either the 6 hour or 24 hour times in the wild-type?
      • Which genes respond (i.e., change over time) in the mutant?
      • Which genes respond differently over time in the mutant relative to the wild-type?
    • Many time points (regression such as cubic spline, moderated F-test)
      • Detect genes with different time trends for treatment vs control.

easyRNASeq

Calculates the coverage of high-throughput short-reads against a genome of reference and summarizes it per feature of interest (e.g. exon, gene, transcript). The data can be normalized as 'RPKM' or by the 'DESeq' or 'edgeR' package.

ShortRead

Base classes, functions, and methods for representation of high-throughput, short-read sequencing data.

Rsamtools

The Rsamtools package provides an interface to BAM files.

The main purpose of the Rsamtools package is to import BAM files into R. Rsamtools also provides some facility for file access such as record counting, index file creation, and filtering to create new files containing subsets of the original. An important use case for Rsamtools is as a starting point for creating R objects suitable for a diversity of work flows, e.g., AlignedRead objects in the ShortRead package (for quality assessment and read manipulation), or GAlignments objects in GenomicAlignments package (for RNA-seq and other applications). Those desiring more functionality are encouraged to explore samtools and related software efforts

This package provides an interface to the 'samtools', 'bcftools', and 'tabix' utilities (see 'LICENCE') for manipulating SAM (Sequence Alignment / Map), FASTA, binary variant call (BCF) and compressed indexed tab-delimited (tabix) files.

IRanges

IRanges is a fundamental package (see how many packages depend on it) to other packages like GenomicRanges, GenomicFeatures and GenomicAlignments. The package defines the IRanges class.

The plotRanges() function given in the 'An Introduction to IRanges' vignette shows how to draw an IRanges object.

If we want to make the same plot using the ggplot2 package, we can follow the example in this post. Note that disjointBins() returns a vector the bin number for each bins counting on the y-axis.

flank

The example is obtained from ?IRanges::flank.

ir3 <- IRanges(c(2,5,1), c(3,7,3))
# IRanges of length 3
#     start end width
# [1]     2   3     2
# [2]     5   7     3
# [3]     1   3     3

flank(ir3, 2)
#     start end width
# [1]     0   1     2
# [2]     3   4     2
# [3]    -1   0     2
# Note: by default flank(ir3, 2) = flank(ir3, 2, start = TRUE, both=FALSE)
# For example, [2,3] => [2,X] => (..., 0, 1, 2) => [0, 1]
#                                     == ==

flank(ir3, 2, start=FALSE)
#     start end width
# [1]     4   5     2
# [2]     8   9     2
# [3]     4   5     2
# For example, [2,3] => [X,3] => (..., 3, 4, 5) => [4,5]
#                                        == == 

flank(ir3, 2, start=c(FALSE, TRUE, FALSE))
#     start end width
# [1]     4   5     2
# [2]     3   4     2
# [3]     4   5     2
# Combine the ideas of the previous 2 cases.

flank(ir3, c(2, -2, 2))
#     start end width
# [1]     0   1     2
# [2]     5   6     2
# [3]    -1   0     2
# The original statement is the same as flank(ir3, c(2, -2, 2), start=T, both=F)
# For example, [5, 7] => [5, X] => ( 5, 6) => [5, 6]
#                                   == ==

flank(ir3, -2, start=F)
#     start end width
# [1]     2   3     2
# [2]     6   7     2
# [3]     2   3     2
# For example, [5, 7] => [X, 7] => (..., 6, 7) => [6, 7]
#                                       == ==

flank(ir3, 2, both = TRUE)
#     start end width
# [1]     0   3     4
# [2]     3   6     4
# [3]    -1   2     4
# The original statement is equivalent to flank(ir3, 2, start=T, both=T)
# (From the manual) If both = TRUE, extends the flanking region width positions into the range. 
#        The resulting range thus straddles the end point, with width positions on either side.
# For example, [2, 3] => [2, X] => (..., 0, 1, 2, 3) => [0, 3]
#                                             ==
#                                       == == == ==

flank(ir3, 2, start=FALSE, both=TRUE)
#     start end width
# [1]     2   5     4
# [2]     6   9     4
# [3]     2   5     4
# For example, [2, 3] => [X, 3] => (..., 2, 3, 4, 5) => [4, 5]
#                                          ==
#                                       == == == ==

Both IRanges and GenomicRanges packages provide the flank function.

Flanking region is also a common term in High-throughput sequencing. The IGV user guide also has some option related to flanking.

  • General tab: Feature flanking regions (base pairs). IGV adds the flank before and after a feature locus when you zoom to a feature, or when you view gene/loci lists in multiple panels.
  • Alignments tab: Splice junction track options. The minimum amount of nucleotide coverage required on both sides of a junction for a read to be associated with the junction. This affects the coverage of displayed junctions, and the display of junctions covered only by reads with small flanking regions.

Biostrings

GenomicRanges

GenomicRanges depends on IRanges package. See the dependency diagram below.

GenomicFeatues ------- GenomicRanges -+- IRanges -- BioGenomics
                         |            +
                   +-----+            +- GenomeInfoDb
                   |                      |
GenomicAlignments  +--- Rsamtools --+-----+
                                    +--- Biostrings

The package defines some classes

  • GRanges
  • GRangesList
  • GAlignments
  • SummarizedExperiment: it has the following slots - expData, rowData, colData, and assays. Accessors include assays(), assay(), colData(), expData(), mcols(), ... The mcols() method is defined in the S4Vectors package.

(As of Jan 6, 2015) The introduction in GenomicRanges vignette mentions the GAlignments object created from a 'BAM' file discarding some information such as SEQ field, QNAME field, QUAL, MAPQ and any other information that is not needed in its document. This means that multi-reads don't receive any special treatment. Also pair-end reads will be treated as single-end reads and the pairing information will be lost. This might change in the future.

GenomicAlignments

Counting reads with summarizeOverlaps vignette

library(GenomicAlignments)
library(DESeq)
library(edgeR)

fls <- list.files(system.file("extdata", package="GenomicAlignments"),
    recursive=TRUE, pattern="*bam$", full=TRUE)

features <- GRanges(
    seqnames = c(rep("chr2L", 4), rep("chr2R", 5), rep("chr3L", 2)),
    ranges = IRanges(c(1000, 3000, 4000, 7000, 2000, 3000, 3600, 4000, 
        7500, 5000, 5400), width=c(rep(500, 3), 600, 900, 500, 300, 900, 
        300, 500, 500)), "-",
    group_id=c(rep("A", 4), rep("B", 5), rep("C", 2)))
features

# GRanges object with 11 ranges and 1 metadata column:
#       seqnames       ranges strand   |    group_id
#          <Rle>    <IRanges>  <Rle>   | <character>
#   [1]    chr2L [1000, 1499]      -   |           A
#   [2]    chr2L [3000, 3499]      -   |           A
#   [3]    chr2L [4000, 4499]      -   |           A
#   [4]    chr2L [7000, 7599]      -   |           A
#   [5]    chr2R [2000, 2899]      -   |           B
#   ...      ...          ...    ... ...         ...
#   [7]    chr2R [3600, 3899]      -   |           B
#   [8]    chr2R [4000, 4899]      -   |           B
#   [9]    chr2R [7500, 7799]      -   |           B
#  [10]    chr3L [5000, 5499]      -   |           C
#  [11]    chr3L [5400, 5899]      -   |           C
#  -------
#  seqinfo: 3 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
olap
# class: SummarizedExperiment 
# dim: 11 2 
# exptData(0):
# assays(1): counts
# rownames: NULL
# rowData metadata column names(1): group_id
# colnames(2): sm_treated1.bam sm_untreated1.bam
# colData names(0):

assays(olap)$counts
#       sm_treated1.bam sm_untreated1.bam
#  [1,]               0                 0
#  [2,]               0                 0
#  [3,]               0                 0
#  [4,]               0                 0
#  [5,]               5                 1
#  [6,]               5                 0
#  [7,]               2                 0
#  [8,]             376               104
#  [9,]               0                 0
# [10,]               0                 0
# [11,]               0                 0

Pasilla data. Note that the bam files are not clear where to find them. According to the message, we can download SAM files first and then convert them to BAM files by samtools (Not verify yet).

samtools view -h -o outputFile.bam inputFile.sam

A modified R code that works is

###################################################
### code chunk number 11: gff (eval = FALSE)
###################################################
library(rtracklayer)
fl <- paste0("ftp://ftp.ensembl.org/pub/release-62/",
             "gtf/drosophila_melanogaster/",
             "Drosophila_melanogaster.BDGP5.25.62.gtf.gz")
gffFile <- file.path(tempdir(), basename(fl))
download.file(fl, gffFile)
gff0 <- import(gffFile, asRangedData=FALSE)

###################################################
### code chunk number 12: gff_parse (eval = FALSE)
###################################################
idx <- mcols(gff0)$source == "protein_coding" & 
           mcols(gff0)$type == "exon" & 
           seqnames(gff0) == "4"
gff <- gff0[idx]
## adjust seqnames to match Bam files
seqlevels(gff) <- paste("chr", seqlevels(gff), sep="")
chr4genes <- split(gff, mcols(gff)$gene_id)

###################################################
### code chunk number 12: gff_parse (eval = FALSE)
###################################################
library(GenomicAlignments)

# fls <- c("untreated1_chr4.bam", "untreated3_chr4.bam")
fls <- list.files(system.file("extdata", package="pasillaBamSubset"),
     recursive=TRUE, pattern="*bam$", full=TRUE)
path <- system.file("extdata", package="pasillaBamSubset")
bamlst <- BamFileList(fls)
genehits <- summarizeOverlaps(chr4genes, bamlst, mode="Union") # SummarizedExperiment object
assays(genehits)$counts

###################################################
### code chunk number 15: pasilla_exoncountset (eval = FALSE)
###################################################
library(DESeq)

expdata = MIAME(
              name="pasilla knockdown",
              lab="Genetics and Developmental Biology, University of 
                  Connecticut Health Center",
              contact="Dr. Brenton Graveley",
              title="modENCODE Drosophila pasilla RNA Binding Protein RNAi 
                  knockdown RNA-Seq Studies",
              pubMedIds="20921232",
              url="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE18508",
              abstract="RNA-seq of 3 biological replicates of from the Drosophila
                  melanogaster S2-DRSC cells that have been RNAi depleted of mRNAs 
                  encoding pasilla, a mRNA binding protein and 4 biological replicates 
                  of the the untreated cell line.")

design <- data.frame(
              condition=c("untreated", "untreated"),
              replicate=c(1,1),
              type=rep("single-read", 2), stringsAsFactors=TRUE)
library(DESeq)
geneCDS <- newCountDataSet(
                  countData=assay(genehits),
                  conditions=design)

experimentData(geneCDS) <- expdata
sampleNames(geneCDS) = colnames(genehits)

###################################################
### code chunk number 16: pasilla_genes (eval = FALSE)
###################################################
chr4tx <- split(gff, mcols(gff)$transcript_id)
txhits <- summarizeOverlaps(chr4tx, bamlst)
txCDS <- newCountDataSet(assay(txhits), design) 
experimentData(txCDS) <- expdata

We can also check out ?summarizeOverlaps to find some fake examples.

tidybulk

Bisque

Bisque: An R toolkit for accurate and efficient estimation of cell composition ('decomposition') from bulk expression data with single-cell information.

chromoMap

Inference

tximport

  • http://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/tximport.html
    $ head -5 quant.sf 
    Name	Length	EffectiveLength	TPM	NumReads
    ENST00000456328.2	1657	1410.79	0.083908	2.46885
    ENST00000450305.2	632	410.165	0	0
    ENST00000488147.1	1351	1035.94	10.4174	225.073
    ENST00000619216.1	68	24	0	0
    ENST00000473358.1	712	453.766	0	0
    
  • Another real data from PDMR -> PDX. Select Genomic Analysis -> RNASeq and TPM(genes) column. Consider Patient ID=114348, Specimen ID=004-R, Sample ID=ATHY22, CTEP SDC Code=10038045,
    $ head -2 114348_004-R_ATHY22_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results 
    gene_id	transcript_id.s. length	effective_length  expected_count  TPM	  FPKM
    5S_rRNA	uc021ofx.1	 105.04	2.23	          2039.99	  49629.87 35353.97
    
    $ R
    x = read.delim("114348_004-R_ATHY22_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.genes.results")
    dim(x)
    # [1] 28109     7
    names(x)
    # [1] "gene_id"          "transcript_id.s." "length"           "effective_length"
    # [5] "expected_count"   "TPM"              "FPKM"            
    x[1:3, -2]
    #     gene_id length effective_length expected_count      TPM     FPKM
    # 1   5S_rRNA 105.04             2.23        2039.99 49629.87 35353.97
    # 2 5_8S_rRNA 161.00            21.19           0.00     0.00     0.00
    # 3    6M1-18 473.00           302.74           0.00     0.00     0.00
    
    y <- read.delim("114348_004-R_ATHY22_v2.0.1.4.0_RNASeq.RSEM.isoforms.results")
    dim(y)
    # [1] 78375     8
    names(y)
    # [1] "transcript_id"    "gene_id"          "length"           "effective_length"
    # [5] "expected_count"   "TPM"              "FPKM"             "IsoPct" 
    y[1:3, -1]
    #   gene_id length effective_length expected_count TPM FPKM IsoPct
    # 1 5S_rRNA    110             3.06              0   0    0      0
    # 2 5S_rRNA    133             9.08              0   0    0      0
    # 3 5S_rRNA     92             0.00              0   0    0      0
    

File:RSEM PDX.png

DESeq2 or edgeR

Shrinkage estimators

  • The package uses a negative binomial statistical model to fit the count data, and can account for differences in sequencing depth across samples.
    • Shrinkage is a technique used to regularize the estimates of the parameters of the negative binomial model.
    • The idea behind shrinkage is to pull the estimated values of the parameters towards a prior distribution, which can help to reduce the variability of the estimates and improve the stability of the results.
    • The specific shrinkage method used in DESeq2 is called the "shrinkage prior for dispersion" method. This method involves adding a prior distribution on the dispersion parameter of the negative binomial model, which is used to control the degree of overdispersion in the data.
    • This prior distribution is designed to shrink the estimated values of the dispersion parameter towards a common value across all the genes in the dataset, which can help to reduce the variance of the estimated log-fold changes.
  • More details:
    • The negative binomial model is used to model the count data, y, as a function of the mean, [math]\displaystyle{ \mu }[/math], and the dispersion, [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math]. The probability mass function of the negative binomial is given by:
    [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} P(y | \mu, \alpha) = (y + \alpha - 1)! / (y! * (\alpha - 1)!) * (\mu / (\mu + \alpha))^y * (\alpha / (\mu + \alpha))^\alpha \end{align} }[/math]
    • The likelihood of the data is given by:
    [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} L(\mu, \alpha | y) = \prod_i [ P(y_i | \mu_i, \alpha) ] \end{align} }[/math]
    • The log-likelihood is :
    [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} logL(\mu, \alpha | y) = \sum_i [ \log(P(y_i | \mu_i, \alpha)) ] \end{align} }[/math]
    In this model, [math]\displaystyle{ \mu }[/math] is the mean of the negative binomial for each gene and it is modeled as a linear function of the design matrix.
    [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} \mu_i = exp(X_i \beta) \end{align} }[/math]
    [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math] is the dispersion parameter and it's the same for all the genes, following the common practice in RNA-seq analysis
    • The shrinkage prior is added on [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math], it assumes that [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math] is following a hyper-prior distribution like Gamma distribution
    [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} \alpha \sim \Gamma(a_0, b_0) \end{align} }[/math]
    This prior allows the shrinkage of [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math] estimates from the data towards a common value across all the genes, which can help to reduce the variance of the estimated log-fold changes.
    • The goal is to find the values of mu and alpha that maximize the log-likelihood, this is done by using maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) or Bayesian approach where the prior are considered and integrated in the calculation and the result is the posterior probability.
  • Dispersion parameter.
    • In the context of the negative binomial model used in DESeq2, the dispersion parameter, alpha, is a measure of the degree of overdispersion in the data. In other words, it represents the variability of the data around the mean. A value of alpha greater than 1 indicates that the data is more dispersed (more variable) than would be expected if the data were following a Poisson distribution, which is a common distribution used to model count data. The Poisson distribution has a single parameter, the mean, which represents both the location and the scale of the distribution. In contrast, the negative binomial distribution has two parameters, the mean and the dispersion, which allows for more flexibility in fitting the data.
    • The shrinkage method in DESeq2 involves shrinking the estimated values of the dispersion parameter towards a common value across all the genes in the dataset, which can help to reduce the variance of the estimated log-fold changes.
  • What is the formula of the fold change estimator given by DESeq2?
    • The fold change estimator given by the DESeq2 package is calculated as the ratio of the estimated mean expression levels in two conditions, with the log2 of this ratio being the log2 fold change. The mean expression levels are calculated using a negative binomial model, which accounts for both the mean and the overdispersion of the data.
    • The estimated mean expression level for a gene i in condition j is given by:
    [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} \log(\mu_{i,j}) = \beta_j + X_i \gamma \end{align} }[/math]
    where [math]\displaystyle{ \beta_j }[/math] is the overall mean for condition [math]\displaystyle{ j }[/math], [math]\displaystyle{ X_i }[/math] is the design matrix for gene [math]\displaystyle{ i }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \gamma_i }[/math] is the gene-specific effect.
    • The log2 fold change is calculated as:
    [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} \log2(\mu_{i,j} / \mu_{i,k}) \end{align} }[/math]
    where j and k are the two conditions being compared.
    • So, you can see that the fold change estimator depends on the design matrix [math]\displaystyle{ X }[/math] and the parameters of the model, [math]\displaystyle{ \beta }[/math] and [math]\displaystyle{ \gamma }[/math]. The DESeq2 implementation also includes an estimation of the variance-covariance matrix of the parameters to compute the standard deviation (uncertainty) of these parameters, and therefore the standard deviation on the fold-change estimator. This can help to estimate the significance of the fold change between conditions.
    • Hypothesis testing H0: log(FC)=0 using Wald test
  • What is the variance of the estimated log-fold changes before and after applying DESeq2 method?
    • In RNA-seq data analysis, the log-fold change is a measure of the relative difference in expression between two conditions. The log-fold change is calculated as the log2 of the ratio of the mean expression in one condition to the mean expression in another condition.
    • Without using any methods like DESeq2, the variance of the estimated log-fold changes can be high, particularly for genes with low expression levels, which can lead to unreliable results. This high variance is due to the over-dispersion present in RNA-seq data, which results in a large variability in the estimated expression levels even for genes with similar means.
    • When using the DESeq2 package, the shrinkage method is applied on dispersion parameter alpha, which helps to reduce the variance of the estimated log-fold changes. By applying a prior on alpha and by shrinking the estimates of alpha towards a common value across all the genes, the method reduces the variability of the estimates. This results in more stable and reliable estimates of the log-fold changes, which can improve the accuracy and robustness of the results of the differential expression analysis.
    • Additionally, the DESeq2 package also accounts for differences in sequencing depth across samples, which can also help to reduce the variability of the estimated log-fold changes.
  • how DESeq2 package accounts for differences in sequencing depth across samples
    • The DESeq2 package accounts for differences in sequencing depth across samples by using the raw count data to estimate the normalized expression levels for each gene in each sample. This normalization process is necessary because sequencing depth can vary widely between samples, leading to differences in the overall number of reads and the apparent expression levels of the genes.
    • The package uses a method called regularized-logarithm (rlog) transformation to normalize the data, which is a variance stabilization method that is based on the logarithm of the counts, but also adjusts for the total library size and the mean expression level.
    • The method starts by computing a weighted mean of the counts across all samples, which is used as a reference. Next, for each sample, the counts are divided by the library size and then multiplied by the weighted mean of the counts. This scaling step corrects for differences in sequencing depth by making the library sizes comparable between samples.
    • Then, the regularized logarithm (rlog) transformation is applied to the scaled counts, which is given by :
    [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} vst = \log(counts/sizeFactor + c) \end{align} }[/math]
    where c is a small positive constant added to the counts to stabilize the variance, size_factor is the ratio of library size for each sample over the weighted mean of the library size.
    • The rlog transformation can stabilize the variance of the data and make the mean expression levels more comparable between samples. This transformed data can then be used for downstream analysis like calculating the fold changes.
    • In addition to rlog transformation the DESeq2 package uses a negative binomial distribution to model the count data, this distribution helps to account for over-dispersion in the data, and shrinkage method on the dispersion parameter is applied as well to improve the stability of results. All of these techniques work together to help correct for sequencing depth differences across samples, which can improve the accuracy of the estimated fold changes and provide more robust results in differential gene expression analysis.
  • type='apeglm' shrinkage only for use with 'coef'

Time course experiment

  • Time course trend analysis from the edgeR's vignette. glmQLFTest()
    • Finds genes that respond to the treatment at either 1 hour or 2 hours versus the 0 hour baseline. This is analogous to an ANOVA F-test for a normal linear model.
    • Assuming gene expression changes smoothly over time, we can use a polynomial or a cubic spline curve with a certain number of degrees of freedom to model gene expression along time.
    • We are looking for genes that change expression level over time. We test for a trend by conducting F-tests for each gene. The topTags function lists the top set of genes with most significant time effects.
    • The total number of genes with significant (5% FDR) changes at different time points can be examined with decideTests.
  • RNA-seq data collected at different time points. Identify differentially expressed genes associated with seasonal changes

DESeq2 experimental design and interpretation

DESeq2 experimental design and interpretation

Controlling for batch differences

The variable we are interested in ("condition") is placed after the batch variable.

dds <- DESeqDataSetFromMatrix(countData = cts,
                              colData = coldata,
                              design= ~ batch + condition)
dds <- DESeq(dds)

OR

dds <- DESeq(dds, test="LRT", reduced=~batch)
res <- results(dds)

DESeq2 diagnostic plot, MA plot

vst over rlog transformation

Expected counts
     | round()
     v                              /-- vst transformation  ---\
Raw counts --> normalized counts  --                            -- Other analyses such as PCA, Hclust (sample distances).
                                    \-- rlog transformation ---/

Simulate negative binomial distribution data

  • rnegbin() in sim.counts() from the ssizeRNA package
    rnegbin(10000 * 10, lambda, 1 / disp) 
    # 10000 genes, 20 samples
    # lambda: mean counts from control group, a matrix. 
    # disp: dispersion parameter, a matrix.
    

Reducing false positives in differential analyses of large RNA sequencing data sets

edgeR vs DESeq2 vs limma

  • edgeR
    library(edgeR)
    
    # create DGEList object from count data
    counts <- matrix(c(20,30,25,50,45,55,15,20,10,5,10,8,100,120,110,80,90,95), nrow=3, ncol=6, byrow=TRUE)
    rownames(counts) <- c("G1", "G2", "G3")
    colnames(counts) <- c("A1", "A2", "A3", "B1", "B2", "B3")
    counts
    #     A1  A2  A3 B1 B2 B3
    # G1  20  30  25 50 45 55
    # G2  15  20  10  5 10  8
    # G3 100 120 110 80 90 95
    d <- DGEList(counts)
    
    # perform normalization and differential expression analysis
    d <- calcNormFactors(d)
    design <- model.matrix(~0+factor(c(rep("A",3), rep("B",3))))
    d <- estimateDisp(d, design)
    fit <- glmQLFit(d, design)
    res <- glmQLFTest(fit, contrast=c(-1, 1))
    
    # summarize the results and identify significant genes
    summary(res)
    res2 <- topTags(res); res2
    # Coefficient:  -1*factor(c(rep("A", 3), rep("B", 3)))A 1*factor(c(rep("A", 3), rep("B", 3)))B 
    #         logFC   logCPM          F       PValue          FDR
    # G1  1.1683093 17.98614 146.579840 4.380158e-08 1.314048e-07
    # G2 -0.7865080 16.41917   3.056504 1.059256e-01 1.588884e-01
    # G3 -0.1437956 19.34279  40.852893 2.256279e-01 2.256279e-01
    de_genes <- rownames(res2)[which(res2$FDR < 0.05 & abs(res2$log2FoldChange) > 1)]
  • DESeq2. The count data above will result in an error. The error can occur when there is very little variability in the count data, which can happen if the biological samples are very homogeneous or if the sequencing depth is very low. In such cases, it may be difficult to reliably identify differentially expressed genes using DESeq2.
    library(DESeq2)
    
    col_data <- data.frame(condition = factor(rep(c("treated", "untreated"), c(3, 3))))
    
    # create a DESeq2 dataset object
    dds <- DESeqDataSetFromMatrix(countData = counts, colData = col_data, design = ~ condition)
    
    # differential expression analysis
    dds <- DESeq(dds)
    # estimating size factors
    # estimating dispersions
    # gene-wise dispersion estimates
    # mean-dispersion relationship
    # Error in estimateDispersionsFit(object, fitType = fitType, quiet = quiet) : 
    #   all gene-wise dispersion estimates are within 2 orders of magnitude
    #   from the minimum value, and so the standard curve fitting techniques will not work.
    #   One can instead use the gene-wise estimates as final estimates:
    #   dds <- estimateDispersionsGeneEst(dds)
    #   dispersions(dds) <- mcols(dds)$dispGeneEst
    #   ...then continue with testing using nbinomWaldTest or nbinomLRT
    

    Try another data.

    count_data <- matrix(c(100, 500, 200, 1000, 300,
                           200, 400, 150, 500, 300,
                           300, 300, 100, 1500, 300,
                           400, 200, 50, 2000, 300), nrow = 5, byrow = TRUE)
    
    colnames(count_data) <- paste0("sample", 1:4)
    rownames(count_data) <- paste0("gene", 1:5)
    col_data <- data.frame(condition = factor(rep(c("treated", "untreated"), c(2, 2))))
    
    # create a DESeq2 dataset object
    dds <- DESeqDataSetFromMatrix(countData = count_data, colData = col_data, design = ~ condition)
    # estimating size factors
    # estimating dispersions
    # gene-wise dispersion estimates
    # mean-dispersion relationship
    # -- note: fitType='parametric', but the dispersion trend was not well captured by the
    #    function: y = a/x + b, and a local regression fit was automatically substituted.
    #    specify fitType='local' or 'mean' to avoid this message next time.
    # final dispersion estimates
    # fitting model and testing
    # Warning message:
    # In lfproc(x, y, weights = weights, cens = cens, base = base, geth = geth,  :
    #   Estimated rdf < 1.0; not estimating variance
    
    # differential expression analysis
    dds <- DESeq(dds)
    
    # extract results
    res <- results(dds)
    res
    # log2 fold change (MLE): condition untreated vs treated 
    # Wald test p-value: condition untreated vs treated 
    # DataFrame with 5 rows and 6 columns
    #        baseMean log2FoldChange     lfcSE      stat    pvalue      padj
    #       <numeric>      <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric>
    # gene1   465.558       0.707313  1.243608  0.568758 0.5695201  0.711900
    # gene2   309.591      -0.119330  0.885551 -0.134752 0.8928081  0.892808
    # gene3   413.959      -0.742921  0.513376 -1.447130 0.1478604  0.369651
    # gene4   638.860      -1.372724  1.428977 -0.960634 0.3367360  0.561227
    # gene5   721.470       2.928705  1.536174  1.906493 0.0565863  0.282931
    
    # extract DE genes with adjusted p-value < 0.05 and |log2 fold change| > 1
    DESeq2_DE_genes <- subset(res, padj < 0.05 & abs(log2FoldChange) > 1)
    
    # print the number of DE genes identified by DESeq2
    cat("DESeq2 identified", nrow(DESeq2_DE_genes), "DE genes.\n")
  • limma-voom. voom is a function in the limma package that modifies RNA-Seq data for use with limma. Differential Expression with Limma-Voom.
    library(limma)
    
    # Create a design matrix with the sample groups
    design_matrix <- model.matrix(~ condition, data = col_data)
    
    # filter out low-expressed genes
    if (FALSE) {
      keep <- rowSums(counts) >= 10
      counts <- counts[keep,]
    }
    
    # normalization using voom
    v <- voom(count_data, design_matrix)
    
    # linear model fitting
    fit <- lmFit(v, design_matrix)
    
    # Calculate the empirical Bayes statistics
    fit <- eBayes(fit)
    
    top.table <- topTable(fit, sort.by = "P", n = Inf)
    top.table
    #            logFC  AveExpr          t    P.Value adj.P.Val         B
    # gene3 -2.3242262 15.67787 -1.8229203 0.08330054 0.3153894 -4.249298
    # gene5  2.0865122 16.34012  1.5960616 0.12615577 0.3153894 -4.376405
    # gene1  0.5610761 16.69722  0.5079444 0.61704872 0.7551329 -4.834183
    # gene2  0.2477959 18.69843  0.3829295 0.70581164 0.7551329 -5.150958
    # gene4  0.2869870 17.11809  0.3161922 0.75513288 0.7551329 -4.963932
    
    # Perform hypothesis testing to identify DE genes
    results <- decideTests(fit)
    
    summary(results)
    #        (Intercept) conditionuntreated
    # Down             0                  0
    # NotSig           0                  5
    # Up               5                  0
    
    # Extract the DE genes
    de_genes <- rownames(count_data)[which(results$all != 0)]

DESeq2 vs edgeR

D vs E?

  • One major difference is in the method used to estimate the dispersion parameter. DESeq2 uses a local regression method, whereas edgeR uses a Cox-Reid profile-adjusted likelihood method. The local regression method estimates the dispersion parameter for each gene independently, whereas the profile-adjusted likelihood method estimates a common dispersion parameter for all genes, with gene-specific scaling factors that depend on the mean expression levels.
  • Another difference is in the approach to normalization. DESeq2 uses a variance-stabilizing transformation to account for differences in library size and composition, whereas edgeR uses a trimmed mean of M-values (TMM) normalization method, which adjusts for library size differences by scaling the counts of each sample to a common effective library size.
  • DESeq2 also uses a different statistical model for differential expression analysis. DESeq2 models the count data as a negative binomial distribution, but includes additional terms to account for batch effects and other sources of variation. It uses a shrinkage estimator to improve the estimation of fold changes and reduce false positives. EdgeR, on the other hand, uses a similar negative binomial model but applies an empirical Bayes method to estimate gene-specific dispersions and to borrow information across genes to improve the power of detection and reduce false positives.

When should I choose DESeq2 and when should I choose edgeR?

  • The choice between DESeq2 and edgeR for differential gene expression analysis depends on several factors, including the experimental design, sample size, and the nature of the biological question being investigated. Here are some general guidelines to help you choose between these two algorithms:
  • Choose DESeq2 when:
    • The experimental design includes multiple batches or covariates that may affect the gene expression levels
    • The sample size is small, typically fewer than 12 samples per group
    • The gene expression levels are highly variable across replicates, and the goal is to identify differentially expressed genes with a low false discovery rate (FDR)
    • The focus is on the fold change rather than the statistical significance of differential expression
  • Choose edgeR when:
    • The experimental design includes several factors, such as treatment, time, and biological replicate, and the goal is to identify the main effects and interaction effects of these factors on gene expression
    • The sample size is moderate to large, typically more than 12 samples per group
    • The gene expression levels are less variable across replicates, and the goal is to achieve high statistical power to detect differentially expressed genes
    • The focus is on both the fold change and the statistical significance of differential expression, and the researcher is interested in performing downstream analyses such as gene set enrichment analysis or pathway analysis.

DESeq2 in Python

PyDESeq2, nice work

Generalized Linear Models and Plots with edgeR

Generalized Linear Models and Plots with edgeR – Advanced Differential Expression Analysis

EBSeq

An R package for gene and isoform differential expression analysis of RNA-seq data

http://www.rna-seqblog.com/analysis-of-ebv-transcription-using-high-throughput-rna-sequencing/

prebs

Probe region expression estimation for RNA-seq data for improved microarray comparability

DEXSeq

Inference of differential exon usage in RNA-Seq

rSeqNP

A non-parametric approach for detecting differential expression and splicing from RNA-Seq data

voomDDA: discovery of diagnostic biomarkers and classification of RNA-seq data

http://www.biosoft.hacettepe.edu.tr/voomDDA/

Pathway analysis

About the KEGG pathways

  • MSigDB database or msigdbr package - seems to be old. It only has 186 KEGG pathways for human.
  • msigdb from Bioconductor
  • KEGGREST package directly pull the data from kegg.jp. I can get 337 KEGG pathways for human ('hsa')
    BiocManager::install("KEGGREST")
    library(KEGGREST)
    res <- keggList("pathway", "hsa") 
    length(res) # 337
    

GSOAP

GSOAP: a tool for visualization of gene set over-representation analysis

clusterProfiler

fgsea: Fast Gene Set Enrichment Analysis

GSEABenchmarkeR: Reproducible GSEA Benchmarking

Towards a gold standard for benchmarking gene set enrichment analysis

hypeR

GSEPD

GSEPD: a Bioconductor package for RNA-seq gene set enrichment and projection display

SeqGSEA

http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/SeqGSEA.html

BAGSE

BAGSE: a Bayesian hierarchical model approach for gene set enrichment analysis 2020

GeneSetCluster

GeneSetCluster: a tool for summarizing and integrating gene-set analysis results

Pipeline

SPEAQeasy

SPEAQeasy – a scalable pipeline for expression analysis and quantification for R/Bioconductor-powered RNA-seq analyses

Nextflow

GeneTEFlow

GeneTEFlow – A Nextflow-based pipeline for analysing gene and transposable elements expression from RNA-Seq data

pipeComp

pipeComp, a general framework for the evaluation of computational pipelines, reveals performant single-cell RNA-seq preprocessing tools

SARTools

http://www.rna-seqblog.com/sartools-a-deseq2-and-edger-based-r-pipeline-for-comprehensive-differential-analysis-of-rna-seq-data/

SEQprocess

SEQprocess: a modularized and customizable pipeline framework for NGS processing in R package

GEMmaker

GEMmaker, Paper

pasilla and pasillaBamSubset Data

pasilla - Data package with per-exon and per-gene read counts of RNA-seq samples of Pasilla knock-down by Brooks et al., Genome Research 2011.

pasillaBamSubset - Subset of BAM files untreated1.bam (single-end reads) and untreated3.bam (paired-end reads) from "Pasilla" experiment (Pasilla knock-down by Brooks et al., Genome Research 2011).

BitSeq

Transcript expression inference and differential expression analysis for RNA-seq data. The homepage of Antti Honkela.

ReportingTools

The ReportingTools software package enables users to easily display reports of analysis results generated from sources such as microarray and sequencing data.

Figures can be included in a cell in output table. See Using ReportingTools in an Analysis of Microarray Data.

It is suggested by e.g. EnrichmentBrowser.

sequences

More or less an educational package. It has 2 c and c++ source code. It is used in Advanced R programming and package development.

QuasR

Bioinformatics paper

CRAN/Bioconductor packages

ssizeRNA

RNASeqPower

RNASeqPower Sample size for RNAseq studies

RnaSeqSampleSize

Shiny app

rbamtools

Provides an interface to functions of the 'SAMtools' C-Library by Heng Li

refGenome

The packge contains functionality for import and managing of downloaded genome annotation Data from Ensembl genome browser (European Bioinformatics Institute) and from UCSC genome browser (University of California, Santa Cruz) and annotation routines for genomic positions and splice site positions.

WhopGenome

Provides very fast access to whole genome, population scale variation data from VCF files and sequence data from FASTA-formatted files. It also reads in alignments from FASTA, Phylip, MAF and other file formats. Provides easy-to-use interfaces to genome annotation from UCSC and Bioconductor and gene ontology data from AmiGO and is capable to read, modify and write PLINK .PED-format pedigree files.

TCGA2STAT

Simple TCGA Data Access for Integrated Statistical Analysis in R

TCGA2STAT depends on Bioconductor package CNTools which cannot be installed automatically.

source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("CNTools")

install.packages("TCGA2STAT")

The getTCGA() function allows to download various kind of data:

  • gene expression which includes mRNA-microarray gene expression data (data.type="mRNA_Array") & RNA-Seq gene expression data (data.type="RNASeq")
  • miRNA expression which includes miRNA-array data (data.type="miRNA_Array") & miRNA-Seq data (data.type="miRNASeq")
  • mutation data (data.type="Mutation")
  • methylation expression (data.type="Methylation")
  • copy number changes (data.type="CNA_SNP")

TCGAbiolinks

  • An example from Public Data Resources in Bioconductor workshop 2020. According to ?GDCquery, for the legacy data arguments project, data.category, platform and/or file.extension should be used.
    library(TCGAbiolinks)
    library(SummarizedExperiment)
    query <- GDCquery(project = "TCGA-ACC",
                               data.category = "Gene expression",
                               data.type = "Gene expression quantification",
                               platform = "Illumina HiSeq", 
                               file.type  = "normalized_results",
                               experimental.strategy = "RNA-Seq",
                               legacy = TRUE)
    
    gdcdir <- file.path("Waldron_PublicData", "GDCdata")
    GDCdownload(query, method = "api", files.per.chunk = 10,
                directory = gdcdir)  # 79 files
    ACCse <- GDCprepare(query, directory = gdcdir)
    ACCse
    class(ACCse)
    dim(assay(ACCse))  # 19947 x 79
    assay(ACCse)[1:3, 1:2] # symbol id
    length(unique(rownames(assay(ACCse))))   #  19672
    rowData(ACCse)[1:2, ]
    # DataFrame with 2 rows and 3 columns
    #          gene_id entrezgene ensembl_gene_id
    #      <character>  <integer>     <character>
    # A1BG        A1BG          1 ENSG00000121410
    # A2M          A2M          2 ENSG00000175899
    
  • HTSeq counts data example. DeMixT. Error when running GDC_prepare.
    query2 <- GDCquery(project = "TCGA-ACC",
                       data.category = "Transcriptome Profiling",
                       data.type = "Gene Expression Quantification",
                       workflow.type="HTSeq - Counts") # or "STAR - Counts"
    gdcdir2 <- file.path("Waldron_PublicData", "GDCdata2")
    GDCdownload(query2, method = "api", files.per.chunk = 10,
                directory = gdcdir2)  # 79 files
    ACCse2 <- GDCprepare(query2, directory = gdcdir2)
    ACCse2
    dim(assay(ACCse2))  # 56457 x 79
    assay(ACCse2)[1:3, 1:2]  # ensembl id
    rowData(ACCse2)[1:2, ]
    DataFrame with 2 rows and 3 columns
                    ensembl_gene_id external_gene_name original_ensembl_gene_id
                        <character>        <character>              <character>
    ENSG00000000003 ENSG00000000003             TSPAN6       ENSG00000000003.13
    ENSG00000000005 ENSG00000000005               TNMD        ENSG00000000005.5
    
  • Clinical data
    acc_clin <- GDCquery_clinic(project = "TCGA-ACC", type = "Clinical")
    dim(acc_clin)
    # [1] 92 71
    
  • TCGAanalyze_DEA(). Differentially Expression Analysis (DEA) Using edgeR Package.
    dataNorm <- TCGAbiolinks::TCGAanalyze_Normalization(dataBRCA, geneInfo)
    dataFilt <- TCGAanalyze_Filtering(tabDF = dataBRCA, method = "quantile", qnt.cut =  0.25)
    samplesNT <- TCGAquery_SampleTypes(colnames(dataFilt), typesample = c("NT"))
    samplesTP <- TCGAquery_SampleTypes(colnames(dataFilt), typesample = c("TP"))
    dataDEGs <- TCGAanalyze_DEA(dataFilt[,samplesNT],
                          dataFilt[,samplesTP],"Normal", "Tumor")
    # 2nd example
    dataDEGs <- TCGAanalyze_DEA(mat1 = dataFiltLGG, mat2 = dataFiltGBM,
                               Cond1type = "LGG", Cond2type = "GBM",
                               fdr.cut = 0.01,  logFC.cut = 1,
                               method = "glmLRT")
    
  • Enrichment analysis
    ansEA <– TCGAanalyze_EAcomplete(TFname="DEA genes LGG Vs GBM", 
                                    RegulonList = rownames(dataDEGs))
    
    TCGAvisualize_EAbarplot(tf = rownames(ansEA$ResBP),
                            GOBPTab = ansEA$ResBP, GOCCTab = ansEA$ResCC,
                            GOMFTab = ansEA$ResMF, PathTab = ansEA$ResPat,
                            nRGTab = rownames(dataDEGs),
                            nBar = 20)
    
  • mRNA Analysis Pipeline from GDC documentation.
  • RangedSummarizedExperiment class
    • assay(()
    • colData()
    • rowData()
    • assayNames()
    • metadata()
    • > dim(colData(ACCse))
      [1] 79 72
      > dim(rowData(ACCse))
      [1] 19947     3
      > dim(assay(ACCse))
      [1] 19947    79
      > assayNames(ACCse)
      [1] "normalized_count"
      > assayNames(ACCse2)
      [1] "HTSeq - Counts"
      > metadata(ACCse)
      $data_release
      [1] "Data Release 25.0 - July 22, 2020"
      
  • TCGAbiolinks to DESEq2. My verified version (R 4.3.2 & Bioc ‘3.17’) available on Github.

curatedTCGAData

  • Public data resources and Bioconductor from Bioc2020
    library(curatedTCGAData)
    library(MultiAssayExperiment)
    curatedTCGAData(diseaseCode = "*", assays = "*")
    curatedTCGAData(diseaseCode = "ACC")
    
    ACCmae <- curatedTCGAData("ACC", c("RPPAArray", "RNASeq2GeneNorm"), 
                              dry.run=FALSE)
    ACCmae
    dim(colData(ACCmae)) # 79 (samples) x 822 (features)
    
    head(metadata(colData(ACCmae))[["subtypes"]])
    
  • Caveats for working with TCGA data
    • Not all TCGA samples are cancer, there are a mix of samples in each of the 33 cancer types.
    • Use sampleTables on the MultiAssayExperiment object along with data(sampleTypes, package = "TCGAutils") to see what samples are present in the data.
    • There may be tumors that were used to create multiple contributions leading to technical replicates. These should be resolved using the appropriate helper functions such as mergeReplicates.
    • Primary tumors should be selected using TCGAutils::TCGAsampleSelect and used as input to the subsetting mechanisms.

caOmicsV

http://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-016-0989-6 Data from TCGA ws used

Visualize multi-dimentional cancer genomics data including of patient information, gene expressions, DNA methylations, DNA copy number variations, and SNP/mutations in matrix layout or network layout.

Map2NCBI

The GetGeneList() function is useful to download Genomic Features (including gene features/symbols) from NCBI (ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/genomes/MapView/).

> library(Map2NCBI)
> GeneList = GetGeneList("Homo sapiens", build="ANNOTATION_RELEASE.107", savefiles=TRUE, destfile=path.expand("~/"))
  # choose [2], [n], and [1] to filter the build and feature information.
  # The destination folder will contain seq_gene.txt, seq_gene.md.gz and GeneList.txt files.
> str(GeneList)
'data.frame':	52157 obs. of  15 variables:
 $ tax_id       : chr  "9606" "9606" "9606" "9606" ...
 $ chromosome   : chr  "1" "1" "1" "1" ...
 $ chr_start    : num  11874 14362 17369 30366 34611 ...
 $ chr_stop     : num  14409 29370 17436 30503 36081 ...
 $ chr_orient   : chr  "+" "-" "-" "+" ...
 $ contig       : chr  "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" "NT_077402.3" ...
 $ ctg_start    : num  1874 4362 7369 20366 24611 ...
 $ ctg_stop     : num  4409 19370 7436 20503 26081 ...
 $ ctg_orient   : chr  "+" "-" "-" "+" ...
 $ feature_name : chr  "DDX11L1" "WASH7P" "MIR6859-1" "MIR1302-2" ...
 $ feature_id   : chr  "GeneID:100287102" "GeneID:653635" "GeneID:102466751" "GeneID:100302278" ...
 $ feature_type : chr  "GENE" "GENE" "GENE" "GENE" ...
 $ group_label  : chr  "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" "GRCh38.p2-Primary" ...
 $ transcript   : chr  "Assembly" "Assembly" "Assembly" "Assembly" ...
 $ evidence_code: chr  "-" "-" "-" "-" ...
> GeneList$feature_name[grep("^NAP", GeneList$feature_name)]

TCseq: Time course sequencing data analysis

http://bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/TCseq.html

UCSC Xena

RTCGA

https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/RTCGA.html

genefu

Computation of Gene Expression-Based Signatures in Breast Cancer

GEO

See the internal link at R-GEO.

GREIN: An interactive web platform for re-analyzing GEO RNA-seq data

GEO2RNAseq

GEO2RNAseq: An easy-to-use R pipeline for complete pre-processing of RNA-seq data

Network-based

Network-based integration of multi-omics data for clinical outcome prediction in neuroblastoma 2022

Proteomics

OlinkAnalyze

OlinkRPackage

Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics

$ head -5 data_phosphoprotein_quantification.txt' | cut -f 1-5
ENTITY_STABLE_ID	GENE_SYMBOL	PHOSPHOSITE	01CO005	01CO006
AAAS_pS495	AAAS	pS495	NA	-0.365
AAAS_pS525	AAAS	pS525	NA	NA
AAAS_pS541	AAAS	pS541	-0.24	NA
AAED1_pS12	AAED1	pS12	-0.46	-0.424

# R
> summary(x[, 4], na.rm = T)
   Min. 1st Qu.  Median    Mean 3rd Qu.    Max.    NA's 
 -5.776  -1.095  -0.608  -0.690  -0.213   2.383   20378 
> summary(as.vector(as.matrix(x[, 4:5])), na.rm = T)
   Min. 1st Qu.  Median    Mean 3rd Qu.    Max.    NA's 
  -5.78   -0.81   -0.36   -0.43    0.00    3.13   36304 

Cbioportal cptac.png

Metabolomics Analysis

Enzyme

  • One gene, one enzyme. The one gene, one enzyme hypothesis is the idea that each gene encodes a single enzyme. Today, we know that this idea is generally (but not exactly) correct.
library(KEGGREST)

# Step 1: Retrieve KO entries associated with the enzyme
enzyme_id <- "ec:2.7.1.1"
ko_entries <- keggLink("ko", enzyme_id)

# Step 2: Retrieve genes associated with the KO entries
ko_ids <- sub("ko:", "", ko_entries)  # Extract KO IDs
gene_links <- lapply(ko_ids, function(ko) keggLink("genes", paste0("ko:", ko)))

# Combine results into a data frame
genes_df <- do.call(rbind, lapply(names(gene_links), function(ko) {
  data.frame(KO = ko, Gene = gene_links[[ko]], stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
}))

# View the first few rows of the genes data frame
head(genes_df)
  • Enzymes are the proteins that are encoded by genes.
  • Gene → Transcription → mRNA → Translation → Enzyme.
    • A gene is a segment of DNA that contains the instructions for making a protein. It's like a blueprint or a recipe for creating a specific protein.
    • Transcription: When a gene is "turned on" or expressed, the DNA sequence is transcribed into a complementary RNA molecule called messenger RNA (mRNA). This process is like copying the recipe from the DNA blueprint.
    • mRNA: The mRNA molecule carries the genetic information from the DNA to the ribosome, which is the site of protein synthesis.
    • Translation: The mRNA sequence is translated into a sequence of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. This process is like following the recipe to assemble the ingredients into a final product.
    • Enzyme: The resulting protein, in this case, is an enzyme. Enzymes are biological molecules that catalyze specific chemical reactions, allowing them to speed up or facilitate various biological processes. An enzyme is a type of protein, but not all proteins are enzymes.

Protein-protein interaction/PPI

Drug-Drug Interactions

Understanding Drug-Drug Interactions Using R Shiny

Journals

Biometrical Journal

Biostatistics

Bioinformatics

Genome Analysis section

BMC Bioinformatics

BioRxiv

PLOS

MDPI

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MDPI, All MDPI, Frontiers & Hindawi journals planned to be erased (level 0) from Finnish academic assessment by end of 2024.

Software

BRB-SeqTools

https://brb.nci.nih.gov/seqtools/

WebMeV

GeneSpring

RNA-Seq

CCBR Exome Pipeliner

https://ccbr.github.io/Pipeliner/

Tibanna

Tibanna helps you run your genomic pipelines on Amazon cloud (AWS). It is used by the 4DN DCIC (4D Nucleome Data Coordination and Integration Center) to process data. Tibanna supports CWL/WDL (w/ docker), Snakemake (w/ conda) and custom Docker/shell command.

MOFA: Multi-Omics Factor Analysis

WGCNA

Benchmarking

Essential guidelines for computational method benchmarking

Simulation

Simulate RNA-Seq

Maq

Used by TopHat: discovering splice junctions with RNA-Seq

BEERS/Grant G.R. 2011

http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/27/18/2518.long#sec-2. The simulation method is called BEERS and it was used in the STAR software paper.

For the command line options of <reads_simulator.pl> and more details about the config files that are needed/prepared by BEERS, see this gist.

This can generate paired end data but they are in one FASTA file.

$ sudo apt-get install cpanminus
$ sudo cpanm Math::Random
$ wget http://cbil.upenn.edu/BEERS/beers.tar
$
$ tar -xvf beers.tar      # two perl files <make_config_files_for_subset_of_gene_ids.pl> and <reads_simulator.pl>
$
$ cd ~/Downloads/
$ mkdir beers_output  
$ mkdir beers_simulator_refseq && cd "$_"
$ wget http://itmat.rum.s3.amazonaws.com/simulator_config_refseq.tar.gz
$ tar xzvf simulator_config_refseq.tar.gz
$ ls -lth 
total 1.4G
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  44M Sep 16  2010 simulator_config_featurequantifications_refseq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 7.7M Sep 15  2010 simulator_config_geneinfo_refseq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 106M Sep 15  2010 simulator_config_geneseq_refseq
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.3G Sep 15  2010 simulator_config_intronseq_refseq
$ cd ~/Downloads/
$ perl reads_simulator.pl 100 testbeers \
   -configstem refseq \
   -customcfgdir ~/Downloads/beers_simulator_refseq \
   -outdir ~/Downloads/beers_output

$ ls -lh beers_output
total 3.9M
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.8K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.2M Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 1.6K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_junctions-crossed_testbeers.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 2.7M Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_substitutions_testbeers.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb 6.3K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_testbeers.bed
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  31K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_testbeers.cig
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  22K Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
-rw-r--r-- 1 brb brb  584 Mar 16 15:25 simulated_reads_testbeers.log

$ wc -l simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
102 simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
$ head -4 simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
seq.1	GENE.5600
seq.2	GENE.35506
seq.3	GENE.506
seq.4	GENE.34922
$ tail -4 simulated_reads2genes_testbeers.txt
seq.97	GENE.4197
seq.98	GENE.8763
seq.99	GENE.19573
seq.100	GENE.18830
$ wc -l simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
36131 simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
$ head -2 simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
chr1:6052304-6052531	25	1	G
chr2:73899436-73899622	141	3	ATA
$ tail -2 simulated_reads_indels_testbeers.txt
chr4:68619532-68621804	1298	-2	AA
chr21:32554738-32554962	174	1	T
$ wc -l simulated_reads_substitutions_testbeers.txt 
71678  simulated_reads_substitutions_testbeers.txt
$ head -2 simulated_reads_substitutions_testbeers.txt 
chr22:50902963-50903167	50903077	G->A
chr1:6052304-6052531	6052330	G->C
$ wc -l simulated_reads_junctions-crossed_testbeers.txt 
49   simulated_reads_junctions-crossed_testbeers.txt
$ head -2 simulated_reads_junctions-crossed_testbeers.txt 
seq.1a	chrX:49084601-49084713
seq.1b	chrX:49084909-49086682

$ cat beers_output/simulated_reads_testbeers.log
Simulator run: 'testbeers'
started: Thu Mar 16 15:25:39 EDT 2017
num reads: 100
readlength: 100
substitution frequency: 0.001
indel frequency: 0.0005
base error: 0.005
low quality tail length: 10
percent of tails that are low quality: 0
quality of low qulaity tails: 0.8
percent of alt splice forms: 0.2
number of alt splice forms per gene: 2
stem: refseq
sum of gene counts: 3,886,863,063
sum of intron counts = 1,304,815,198
sum of intron counts = 2,365,472,596
intron frequency: 0.355507598105262
padded intron frequency: 0.52453796437909
finished at Thu Mar 16 15:25:58 EDT 2017

$ wc -l simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
400 simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
$ head simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
>seq.1a
CGAAGAAGGACCCAAAGATGACAAGGCTCACAAAGTACACCCAGGGCAGTTCATACCCCATGGCATCTTGCATCCAGTAGAGCACATCGGTCCAGCCTTC
>seq.1b
GCTCGAGCTGTTCCTTGGACGAATGCACAAGACGTGCTACTTCCTGGGATCCGACATGGAAGCGGAGGAGGACCCATCGCCCTGTGCATCTTCGGGATCA
>seq.2a
GCCCCAGCAGAGCCGGGTAAAGATCAGGAGGGTTAGAAAAAATCAGCGCTTCCTCTTCCTCCAAGGCAGCCAGACTCTTTAACAGGTCCGGAGGAAGCAG
>seq.2b
ATGAAGCCTTTTCCCATGGAGCCATATAACCATAATCCCTCAGAAGTCAAGGTCCCAGAATTCTACTGGGATTCTTCCTACAGCATGGCTGATAACAGAT
>seq.3a
CCCCAGAGGAGCGCCACCTGTCCAAGATGCAGCAGAACGGCTACGAAAATCCAACCTACAAGTTCTTTGAGCAGATGCAGAACTAGACCCCCGCCACAGC

# Take a look at the true coordinates
$ head -4 simulated_reads_testbeers.bed # one-based coords and contains both endpoints of each span
chrX	49084529	49084601	+
chrX	49084713	49084739	+
chrX	49084863	49084909	+
chrX	49086682	49086734	+
$ head -4 simulated_reads_testbeers.cig # has a cigar string representation of the mapping coordinates, and a more human readable representation of the coordinates
seq.1a	chrX	49084529	73M111N27M	49084529-49084601, 49084713-49084739	+	CGAAGAAGGACCCAAAGATGACAAGGCTCACAAAGTACACCCAGGGCAGTTCATACCCCATGGCATCTTGCATCCAGTAGAGCACATCGGTCCAGCCTTC
seq.1b	chrX	49084863	47M1772N53M	49084863-49084909, 49086682-49086734	-	GCTCGAGCTGTTCCTTGGACGAATGCACAAGACGTGCTACTTCCTGGGATCCGACATGGAAGCGGAGGAGGACCCATCGCCCTGTGCATCTTCGGGATCA
seq.2a	chr1	183516256	100M	183516256-183516355	-	GCCCCAGCAGAGCCGGGTAAAGATCAGGAGGGTTAGAAAAAATCAGCGCTTCCTCTTCCTCCAAGGCAGCCAGACTCTTTAACAGGTCCGGAGGAAGCAG
seq.2b	chr1	183515275	100M	183515275-183515374	+	ATGAAGCCTTTTCCCATGGAGCCATATAACCATAATCCCTCAGAAGTCAAGGTCCCAGAATTCTACTGGGATTCTTCCTACAGCATGGCTGATAACAGAT
$ wc -l simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
400 simulated_reads_testbeers.fa
$ wc -l simulated_reads_testbeers.bed
247 simulated_reads_testbeers.bed
$ wc -l simulated_reads_testbeers.cig
200 simulated_reads_testbeers.cig

Flux Sammeth 2010

SimNGS

SimSeq

Bioinformatics

A data-based simulation algorithm for rna-seq data. The vector of read counts simulated for a given experimental unit has a joint distribution that closely matches the distribution of a source rna-seq dataset provided by the user.

empiricalFDR.DESeq2

http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/12/05/012211

The key function is simulateCounts, which takes a fitted DESeq2 data object as an input and returns a simulated data object (DESeq2 class) with the same sample size factors, total counts and dispersions for each gene as in real data, but without the effect of predictor variables.

Functions fdrTable, fdrBiCurve and empiricalFDR compare the DESeq2 results obtained for the real and simulated data, compute the empirical false discovery rate (the ratio of the number of differentially expressed genes detected in the simulated data and their number in the real data) and plot the results.

polyester

http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/12/05/012211

Given a set of annotated transcripts, polyester will simulate the steps of an RNA-seq experiment (fragmentation, reverse-complementing, and sequencing) and produce files containing simulated RNA-seq reads.

Input: reference FASTA file (containing names and sequences of transcripts from which reads should be simulated) OR a GTF file denoting transcript structures, along with one FASTA file of the DNA sequence for each chromosome in the GTF file.

Output: FASTA files. Reads in the FASTA file will be labeled with the transcript from which they were simulated.

Too many dependencies. Got an error in installation.. It seems it has not considered splice junctions.

seqgendiff

Data-based RNA-seq simulations by binomial thinning

Simulate DNA-Seq

wgsim

https://github.com/lh3/wgsim

dwgssim

NEAT

DNA aligner accuracy: BWA, Bowtie, Soap and SubRead tested with simulated reads

http://genomespot.blogspot.com/2014/11/dna-aligner-accuracy-bwa-bowtie-soap.html

$ head simDNA_100bp_16del.fasta
>Pt-0-100
TGGCGAACGCGGGAATTGACCGCGATGGTGATTCACATCACTCCTAATCCACTTGCTAATCGCCCTACGCTACTATCATTCTTT
>Pt-10-110
GCGGGATTGAACCCGATTGAATTCCAATCACTGCTTAATCCACTTGCTACATCGCCCTACGTACTATCTATTTTTTTGTATTTC
>Pt-20-120
GAACCCGCGATGAATTCAATCCACTGCTACCATTGGCTACATCCGCCCCTACGCTACTCTTCTTTTTTGTATGTCTAAAAAAAA
>Pt-30-130
TGGTGAATCACAATCACTGCCTAACCATTGGCTACATCCGCCCCTACGCTACACTATTTTTTGTATTGCTAAAAAAAAAAATAA
>Pt-40-140
ACAACACTGCCTAATCCACTTGGCTACTCCGCCCCTAGCTACTATCTTTTTTTGTATTTCTAAAAAAAAAAAATCAATTTCAAT

Simulate Whole genome

Simulate whole exome

SCSIM

SCSIM: Jointly simulating correlated single-cell and bulk next-generation DNA sequencing data

Variant simulator

sim1000G: a user-friendly genetic variant simulator in R for unrelated individuals and family-based designs

Mutation-Simulator

Mutation-Simulator

SigProfilerSimulator

Generating realistic null hypothesis of cancer mutational landscapes using SigProfilerSimulator

Convert FASTA to FASTQ

It is interesting to note that the simulated/generated FASTA files can be used by alignment/mapping tools like BWA just like FASTQ files.

If we want to convert FASTA files to FASTQ files, use https://code.google.com/archive/p/fasta-to-fastq/. The quality score 'I' means 40 (the highest) by Sanger (range [0,40]). See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FASTQ_format. The Wikipedia website also mentions FASTQ read simulation tools and a comparison of these tools.

$ cat test.fasta
>Pt-0-50
TGGCGAACGACGGGAATACCCGGAGGTGAATTCAAATCCACT
>Pt-10-60
GACGGAATTGAACCCGATGGGATACAATCCACTGCCTTATCC
>Pt-20-70
GAACCCGCGATGGTGTCACAATCCACTCTTAACCATTGCTAC
>Pt-30-80
GGTGAATTCACAATCCACTGCCTTACCACTTGGCTACCCCCT
>Pt-40-90
AATCCACTGCCTTATCCACTGGCTACATCCCTACGCTACTAT
$ perl ~/Downloads/fasta_to_fastq.pl test.fasta
@Pt-0-50
TGGCGAACGACGGGAATACCCGGAGGTGAATTCAAATCCACT
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@Pt-10-60
GACGGAATTGAACCCGATGGGATACAATCCACTGCCTTATCC
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@Pt-20-70
GAACCCGCGATGGTGTCACAATCCACTCTTAACCATTGCTAC
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@Pt-30-80
GGTGAATTCACAATCCACTGCCTTACCACTTGGCTACCCCCT
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
@Pt-40-90
AATCCACTGCCTTATCCACTGGCTACATCCCTACGCTACTAT
+
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

Alternatively we can use just one line of code by awk

$ awk 'BEGIN {RS = ">" ; FS = "\n"} NR > 1 {print "@"$1"\n"$2"\n+"; for(c=0;c<length($2);c++) printf "H"; printf "\n"}' \
   test.fasta > test.fq
$ cat test.fq
@Pt-0-50
TGGCGAACGACGGGAATACCCGGAGGTGAATTCAAATCCACT
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
@Pt-10-60
GACGGAATTGAACCCGATGGGATACAATCCACTGCCTTATCC
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
@Pt-20-70
GAACCCGCGATGGTGTCACAATCCACTCTTAACCATTGCTAC
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
@Pt-30-80
GGTGAATTCACAATCCACTGCCTTACCACTTGGCTACCCCCT
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
@Pt-40-90
AATCCACTGCCTTATCCACTGGCTACATCCCTACGCTACTAT
+
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

Change the 'H' to the quality score value that you need (Depending what phred score scale you are using).

Simulate genetic data

‘Simulating genetic data with R: an example with deleterious variants (and a pun)’

PDX/Xenograft

#!/bin/bash
module load gossamer
xenome index -M 24 -T 16 -P idx \
  -H $HOME/igenomes/Mus_musculus/UCSC/mm9/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa \
  -G $HOME/igenomes/Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa

RNA-Seq

DNA-Seq

MAF (TCGA, GDC)

DNA Seq Data

NIH

  • Go to SRA/Sequence Read Archiveand type the keywords 'Whole Genome Sequencing human'. An example of the procedures to search whole genome sequencing data from human samples:
    1. Enter 'Whole Genome Sequencing human' in ncbi/sra search sra objects at http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?view=search_obj
    2. The webpage will return the result in terms of SRA experiments, SRA studies, Biosamples, GEO datasets. I pick SRA studies from Public Access.
    3. The result is sorted by the Accession number (does not take the first 3 letters like DRP into account). The Accession number has a format SRPxxxx. So I just go to the Last page (page 98)
    4. I pick the first one Accession:SRP066837 from this page. The page shows the Study type is whole genome sequence. http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/sra.cgi?study=SRP066837
    5. (Important trick) Click the number next to Run. It will show a summary (SRR #, library name, MBases, age, biomaterial provider, isolate and sex) about all samples. http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP066837
    6. Download the raw data from any one of them (eg SRR2968056). For whole genome, the Strategy is WGS. For whole exome, the Strategy is called WXS.
  • Search the keywords 'nonsynonymous' and 'human' in PMC

Use SRAToolKit instead of wget to download

Don't use the wget command since it requires the specification of right http address.

Downloading SRA data using command line utilities

SRA2R - a package to import SRA data directly into R.

(Method 1) Use the fastq-dump command. For example, the following command (modified from the document will download the first 5 reads and save it to a file called <SRR390728.fastq> (NOT sra format) in the current directory.

/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/sratoolkit.2.3.5-2-ubuntu64/bin/fastq-dump -X 5 SRR390728 -O .
# OR 
/opt/RNA-Seq/bin/sratoolkit.2.3.5-2-ubuntu64/bin/fastq-dump --split-3 SRR390728 # no progress bar

This will download the files in FASTQ format.

(Method 2) If we need to downloading by wget or FTP (works for ‘SRR’, ‘ERR’, or ‘DRR’ series):

wget ftp://ftp-trace.ncbi.nih.gov/sra/sra-instant/reads/ByRun/sra/SRR/SRR304/SRR304976/SRR304976.sra

It will download the file in SRA format. In the case of SRR590795, the sra is 240M and fastq files are 615*2MB.

(Method 3) Download Ubuntu x86_64 tarball from http://downloads.asperasoft.com/en/downloads/8?list

brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ tar xzvf aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.tar.gz
aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.sh
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ ./aspera-connect-3.6.2.117442-linux-64.sh

Installing Aspera Connect

Deploying Aspera Connect (/home/brb/.aspera/connect) for the current user only.
Restart firefox manually to load the Aspera Connect plug-in

Install complete.

brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $ ~/.aspera/connect/bin/ascp -QT -l640M \
  -i ~/.aspera/connect/etc/asperaweb_id_dsa.openssh \
  [email protected]:/sra/sra-instant/reads/ByRun/sra/SRR/SRR590/SRR590795/SRR590795.sra .
SRR590795.sra                                                                           100%  239MB  535Mb/s    00:06
Completed: 245535K bytes transferred in 7 seconds
 (272848K bits/sec), in 1 file.
brb@T3600 ~/Downloads $

Aspera is typically 10 times faster than FTP according to the website. For this case, wget takes 12s while ascp uses 7s.

Note that the URL on the website's is wrong. I got the correct URL from emailing to ncbi help. Google: ascp "[email protected]"

SRAdb package

https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/SRAdb.html

First we install some required package for XML and RCurl.

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev
sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev

and then

source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("SRAdb")

SRA

The wait is over… NIH’s Public Sequence Read Archive is now open access on the cloud

Only the cancer types with expected cases > 10^5 in the US in 2015 are considered here. http://www.cancer.gov/types/common-cancers

SRA Explorer

SRP056969

SRP066363 - lung cancer

SRP015769 or SRP062882 - prostate cancer

SRP053134 - breast cancer

Look at the MBases value column. It determines the coverage for each run.

SRP050992 single cell RNA-Seq

Used in Design and computational analysis of single-cell RNA-sequencing experiments

Single cell RNA-Seq

SRP040626 or SRP040540 - Colon and rectal cancer

OmicIDX

OmicIDX on BigQuery

Tutorials

See the BWA section.

Whole Exome Seq

Whole Genome Seq

SraRunTable.txt

  1. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/?term=SRA059511
  2. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra/SRX194938[accn] and click SRP004077
  3. http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/sra/?study=SRP004077 and click Runs from the RHS
  4. http://trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Traces/study/?acc=SRP004077 and click RunInfoTable

Note that (For this study, it has 2377 rows)

  • Column A (AssemblyName_s) eg GRCh37
  • Column I (library_name_s) eg
  • column N (header=Run_s) shows all SRR or ERR accession numbers.
  • Column P (Sample_Name)
  • Column Y (header=Assay_Type_s) shows WGS.
  • Column AB (LibraryLayout_s): PAIRED

Public Data

Ten Resources for easy access public genomic data 6/7/2023. UCSCXenaTools (TCGA, ICGC, GDC), PharmacoGx, rDGidb, OmicsDI, AnnotationHub, TCGAbiolinks, GenomicDataCommons, cbioportal.

Public data resources and Bioconductor from Bioc2020.

Package name Object class Downloads (Distinct IPs, Jul 2020)
GEOquery SummarizedExperiment 5754
GenomicDataCommons GDCQuery 1154
TCGAbiolinks
curatedTCGAData
RangedSummarizedExperiment
MultiAssayExperimentObjects
2752
275
recount RangedSummarizedExperiment 418
curatedMetagenomicData ExperimentHub 224

Caution

Public RNA-seq data are not representative of global human diversity 2024

ISB Cancer Genomics Cloud (ISB-CGC)

https://isb-cgc.appspot.com/ Leveraging Google Cloud Platform for TCGA Analysis

The ISB Cancer Genomics Cloud (ISB-CGC) is democratizing access to NCI Cancer Data (TCGA, TARGET, CCLE) and coupling it with unprecedented computational power to allow researchers to explore and analyze this vast data-space.

ISB-CGC Web Application

CCLE, DepMap

  • Next-generation characterization of the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia 2019
  • It has 1000+ cell lines profiled with different -omics including DNA methylation, RNA splicing, as well as some proteomics (and lots more!).
  • Assembling Clinical Information for the CCLE Data
  • Data download Depmap
  • Dependency Map (DepMap) portal is to empower the research community to make discoveries related to cancer vulnerabilities by providing open access to key cancer dependencies analytical and visualization tools CCLE
    • sample_info.csv also available from the download page
    • CCLE_RNAseq_reads.csv: read counts from RSEM. 1406 x (54358 - 1). Use readr::read_csv(). range(x[, -1]) = 0 13018000. Note: log2(13018000) = 23.634.
    • CCLE_expression_full.csv: log2(TPM + 1). 1406 x (53971 - 1). range(x[, -1]) = 0.00000 17.78354
    • CCLE_expression.csv: log2(TPM+1). 1406 x 19221 genes. protein coding genes. 33 diseases.
    • CCLE_expression_proteincoding_genes_expected_count.csv: 1406 x (19222 - 1). read count (non-integers) data from RSEM for just protein coding genes. range(x[, -1]) = 0 13018000.
    • CCLE_expression_transcripts_expected_count.csv: read count data from RSEM. 1406 x (228138-1). Non-integers. range(x[, -1]) = 0 11664000.
  • depmap package: Cancer Dependency Map Data Package. The depmap package currently contains eight (kinds) datasets available through ExperimentHub.
    • RNA inference knockout data
    • CRISPR-Cas9 knockout data
    • WES copy number data
    • CCLE Reverse Phase Protein Array data
    • CCLE RNAseq gene expression data
    • Cancer cell lines
    • Mutation calls
    • Drug Sensitivity
    R> eh <- ExperimentHub()
    R> class(eh)
    [1] "ExperimentHub"
    attr(,"package")
    [1] "ExperimentHub"
    
    R> rnai <- eh[["EH2260"]]
    R> class(rnai)
    [1] "tbl_df"     "tbl"        "data.frame"
    

NCI's Genomic Data Commons (GDC)/TCGA

The GDC supports several cancer genome programs at the NCI Center for Cancer Genomics (CCG), including The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), Therapeutically Applicable Research to Generate Effective Treatments (TARGET), and the Cancer Genome Characterization Initiative (CGCI).

GenomicDataCommons package

NCI60

Molecular Characterization of the NCI-60. NCI-ADR-RES and OVCAR-8 being derived from one another, SNB-19 and U251 are derived from the same patient

Case studies

Expression of the SARS-CoV-2 cell receptor gene ACE2 in a wide variety of human tissues

NCI Proteomic Data Commons

https://pdc.cancer.gov/pdc/ vs https://gdc.cancer.gov/

GTEx

NIH LINCS

Sharing data

Gene set analysis

Hypergeometric test

Next-generation sequencing data

Forums

Batch effect

Batch effect

Misc

Advice

High Performance

Cloud Computing

Merge different datasets (different genechips)

Genomic data vs transcriptomic data

  • The main difference between genomic data and transcriptomic data is that genomic data provides information on the complete DNA sequence of an organism, while transcriptomic data provides information on the expression levels of genes.
  • Genomic data:
    • Genomic data refers to the complete DNA sequence of an organism, which includes all of its genes, regulatory regions, and non-coding regions. This type of data provides information on the genetic makeup of an organism, including its potential to develop certain diseases, its evolutionary history, and its overall genetic diversity.
    • Examples of genomic data: Whole genome sequencing (WGS), Genome-wide association studies (GWAS), Copy number variation (CNV) analysis, Comparative genomics, Metagenomics.
  • Transcriptomic data
    • Transcriptomic data, on the other hand, refers to the collection of all RNA transcripts produced by the genes of an organism. RNA transcripts are produced when genes are transcribed into RNA molecules, which are then used as templates to synthesize proteins. Transcriptomic data provides information on the expression levels of genes, which can help researchers understand how genes are regulated and how they contribute to biological processes.
    • Examples of transcriptomic data: RNA-Seq, Microarray, scRNA-Seq, qPCR, Ribosome profiling

Low read count and filtering

  • DESeq2 pre-filtering:
    • While it is not necessary to pre-filter low count genes before running the DESeq2 functions, there are two reasons which make pre-filtering useful: by removing rows in which there are very few reads, we reduce the memory size of the dds data object, and we increase the speed of the transformation and testing functions within DESeq2. DESeq2 vignette.
    • One can also omit this step entirely and just rely on the independent filtering procedures available in results(), either IHW or genefilter::filtered_p().
smallestGroupSize <- 3 # smallest group size
keep <- rowSums(counts(dds) >= 10) >= smallestGroupSize
dds <- dds[keep, ]

Independent Filtering

edgeR::filterByExpr

Normalization

log2 transformation

No matter we use TPM, TMM, FPKM, or DESeq2 normalized counts, we still need to take a log2(x+1) transformation before any analyses.

Quantile normalization

  • normalize.quantiles() from preprocessCore package. How to Perform Quantile Normalization in R
    • for ties, the average is used in normalize.quantiles(), ((4.666667 + 5.666667) / 2) = 5.166667.
    • I got into an error when I use the function in RStudio docker container but the solution here (BiocManager::install("preprocessCore", configure.args="--disable-threading")) works.
    source('http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R')
    biocLite('preprocessCore')
    #load package
    library(preprocessCore)
     
    #the function expects a matrix
    #create a matrix using the same example
    mat <- matrix(c(5,2,3,4,4,1,4,2,3,4,6,8),
                 ncol=3)
    mat
    #     [,1] [,2] [,3]
    #[1,]    5    4    3
    #[2,]    2    1    4
    #[3,]    3    4    6
    #[4,]    4    2    8
     
    #quantile normalisation
    normalize.quantiles(mat)
    #         [,1]     [,2]     [,3]
    #[1,] 5.666667 5.166667 2.000000
    #[2,] 2.000000 2.000000 3.000000
    #[3,] 3.000000 5.166667 4.666667
    #[4,] 4.666667 3.000000 5.666667

Distribution, density plot

Density plot showing the distribution of RNA-seq read counts (FPKM) log10(FPKM)

Negative binomial distribution

RNA-seq and Negative binomial distribution

Z-score transformation

Ensembl to gene symbol

How to use UCSC Table Browser

File:Tablebrowser.png File:Tablebrowser2.png

Note

  1. the UCSC browser will return the output on browser by default. Users need to use the browser to save the file with self-chosen file name.
  2. the output does not have a header
  3. The bed format is explained in https://genome.ucsc.edu/FAQ/FAQformat.html#format1

If I select "Whole Genome", I will get a file with 75,893 rows. If I choose "Coding Exons", I will get a file with 577,387 rows.

$ wc -l hg38Tables.bed 
75893 hg38Tables.bed
$ head -2 hg38Tables.bed 
chr1	67092175	67134971	NM_001276352	0	-	67093579	67127240	0	9	1429,70,145,68,113,158,92,86,42,	0,4076,11062,19401,23176,33576,34990,38966,42754,
chr1	201283451	201332993	NM_000299	0	+	201283702	201328836	0	15	453,104,395,145,208,178,63,115,156,177,154,187,85,107,2920,	0,10490,29714,33101,34120,35166,36364,36815,38526,39561,40976,41489,42302,45310,46622,
$ tail -2 hg38Tables.bed 
chr22_KI270734v1_random	131493	137393	NM_005675	0	+	131645	136994	0	5	262,161,101,141,549,	0,342,3949,4665,5351,
chr22_KI270734v1_random	138078	161852	NM_016335	0	-	138479	161586	0	15	589,89,99,176,147,93,82,80,117,65,150,35,209,313,164,	0,664,4115,5535,6670,6925,8561,9545,10037,10335,12271,12908,18210,23235,23610,

$ wc -l hg38CodingExon.bed 
577387 hg38CodingExon.bed
$ head -2 hg38CodingExon.bed 
chr1	67093579	67093604	NM_001276352_cds_0_0_chr1_67093580_r	0	-
chr1	67096251	67096321	NM_001276352_cds_1_0_chr1_67096252_r	0	-
$ tail -2 hg38CodingExon.bed 
chr22_KI270734v1_random	156288	156497	NM_016335_cds_12_0_chr22_KI270734v1_random_156289_r	0	-
chr22_KI270734v1_random	161313	161586	NM_016335_cds_13_0_chr22_KI270734v1_random_161314_r	0	-

# Focus on one NCBI refseq (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/444741698)
$ grep NM_001276352 hg38Tables.bed 
chr1	67092175	67134971	NM_001276352	0	-	67093579	67127240	0	9	1429,70,145,68,113,158,92,86,42,	0,4076,11062,19401,23176,33576,34990,38966,42754,
$ grep NM_001276352 hg38CodingExon.bed
chr1	67093579	67093604	NM_001276352_cds_0_0_chr1_67093580_r	0	-
chr1	67096251	67096321	NM_001276352_cds_1_0_chr1_67096252_r	0	-
chr1	67103237	67103382	NM_001276352_cds_2_0_chr1_67103238_r	0	-
chr1	67111576	67111644	NM_001276352_cds_3_0_chr1_67111577_r	0	-
chr1	67115351	67115464	NM_001276352_cds_4_0_chr1_67115352_r	0	-
chr1	67125751	67125909	NM_001276352_cds_5_0_chr1_67125752_r	0	-
chr1	67127165	67127240	NM_001276352_cds_6_0_chr1_67127166_r	0	-

This can be compared to refGene(?) directly downloaded via http

$ wget -c -O hg38.refGene.txt.gz http://hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg38/database/refGene.txt.gz
--2018-10-09 15:44:43--  http://hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg38/database/refGene.txt.gz
Resolving hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu (hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu)... 128.114.119.163
Connecting to hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu (hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu)|128.114.119.163|:80... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 7457957 (7.1M) [application/x-gzip]
Saving to: ‘hg38.refGene.txt.gz’

hg38.refGene.txt.gz                100%[===============================================================>]   7.11M   901KB/s    in 10s

2018-10-09 15:44:54 (708 KB/s) - ‘hg38.refGene.txt.gz’ saved [7457957/7457957]

$ zcat hg38.refGene.txt.gz | wc -l
75893
15:45PM /tmp$ zcat hg38.refGene.txt.gz | head -2
1072	NM_003288	chr20	+	63865227	63891545	63865365	63889945	7	63865227,63869295,63873667,63875815,63882718,63889189,63889849,	63865384,63869441,63873816,63875875,63882820,63889238,63891545,	0	TPD52L2	cmpl	cmpl	0,1,0,2,2,2,0,
1815	NR_110164	chr2	+	161244738	161249050	161249050	161249050	2	161244738,161246874,	161244895,161249050,	0	LINC01806	unk	unk	-1,-1,

$ zcat hg38.refGene.txt.gz | tail -2
1006	NM_130467	chrX	+	55220345	55224108	55220599	55224003	5	55220345,55221374,55221766,55222620,55223986,	55220651,55221463,55221875,55222746,55224108,	0	PAGE5	cmpl	cmpl	0,1,0,1,1,
637	NM_001364814	chrY	-	6865917	6874027	6866072	6872608	7	6865917,6868036,6868731,6868867,6870005,6872554,6873971,	6866078,6868462,6868776,6868909,6870053,6872620,6874027,	0	AMELY	cmpl	cmpl	0,0,0,0,0,0,-1,

Where to download reference genome

Which human reference genome to use?

http://lh3.github.io/2017/11/13/which-human-reference-genome-to-use (11/13/2017)

UHR, HBR

In RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), Universal Human Reference (UHR) and Human Brain Reference (HBR) are two types of commercially available RNA samples that are often used as control samples and assess the performance and accuracy of RNA-seq assays. See this (github) and Lesson 13: Aligning raw sequences to reference genome.

GENCODE transcript database

RefSeq categories

See Table 1 of Chapter 18The Reference Sequence (RefSeq) Database.

Category Description
NC Complete genomic molecules
NG Incomplete genomic region
NM mRNA
NR ncRNA
NP Protein
XM predicted mRNA model
XR predicted ncRNA model
XP predicted Protein model (eukaryotic sequences)
WP predicted Protein model (prokaryotic sequences)

UCSC version & NCBI release corresponding

Gene Annotation

library(rtracklayer)
genes <- readGFF("gencode.v27.annotation.gff3.gz")
genes[1:2, 1:5]
# DataFrame with 2 rows and 5 columns
#      seqid   source       type     start       end
#   <factor> <factor>   <factor> <integer> <integer>
# 1     chr1   HAVANA gene           11869     14409
# 2     chr1   HAVANA transcript     11869     14409
genes[1:100, ] %>% filter(type == "gene") %>% dim()
# Error in UseMethod("filter") :
#   no applicable method for 'filter' applied to an object of class "c('DFrame', 'DataFrame', 'RectangularData', 'SimpleList', 'DataFrame_OR_NULL', 'List', 'Vector', 'list_OR_List', 'Annotated', 'vector_OR_Vector')"

library(ape)
genes2 <- read.gff("gencode.v27.annotation.gff3.gz")
genes2[1:2, 1:5]
#   seqid source       type start   end
# 1  chr1 HAVANA       gene 11869 14409
# 2  chr1 HAVANA transcript 11869 14409
genes2[1:100,]  %>% filter(type == "gene") %>% dim()
# [1] 11  9

Genecards

  • https://www.genecards.org/
  • Q: What are genes with gene symbols starting with LINC?; eg LINC00491
    A: Genes with gene symbols starting with "LINC" are long intergenic non-coding RNA (lncRNA) genes. lncRNAs are RNA molecules that are transcribed from the genome but do not encode proteins. Unlike protein-coding genes, lncRNAs do not have a well-defined coding sequence, but they do play important regulatory roles in cellular processes such as gene expression, chromatin structure, and genome stability. Some lncRNAs are specifically expressed in cancer cells and have been implicated in tumor development and progression, making them of interest for cancer research.

How many DNA strands are there in humans?

How many base pairs in human

  • 3 billion base pairs. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_genome
  • chromosome 22 has the smallest number of bps (~50 million).
  • chromosome 1 has the largest number of bps (245 million base pairs).
  • Illumina iGenome Homo_sapiens/UCSC/hg19/Sequence/WholeGenomeFasta/genome.fa file is 3.0GB (so is other genome.fa from human).

Gene, Transcript, Coding/Non-coding exon

SNP

Types of SNPs and number of SNPs in each chromosomes

NGS technology

DNA methylation, Epigenetics

  • Relation of methylation genes and gene expression
    • Methylation of genes can have different effects on gene expression, depending on where the methylation occurs in the gene and the specific context of the gene and the cellular environment. Generally, methylation of promoter regions of genes is associated with reduced gene expression, whereas methylation of gene body regions is less clearly associated with gene expression changes.
    • When DNA is methylated at the promoter region of a gene, it can prevent the binding of transcription factors and RNA polymerase, which are necessary for transcription initiation. Methylation at the promoter region can also recruit proteins that block transcription or promote histone modifications that lead to chromatin compaction, further limiting access to the gene for transcriptional machinery.
    • However, methylation in other regions of the gene, such as the gene body, can have more complex effects on gene expression. In some cases, gene body methylation can be associated with increased expression, while in other cases it may have no effect or even lead to decreased expression. It is thought that gene body methylation may be involved in regulating alternative splicing or RNA stability, among other possible mechanisms.
    • Therefore, the effect of methylation on gene expression is not always straightforward and depends on various factors, including the specific gene, the location of methylation, and the cellular context.
devtools::install_github("coloncancermeth","genomicsclass")
library(coloncancermeth) # 485512 x 26
data(coloncancermeth) # load meth (methylation data), pd (sample info ) and gr objects
dim(meth)
dim(pd)
length(gr)
colnames(pd)
table(pd$Status) # 9 normals, 17 cancers
normalIndex <- which(pd$Status=="normal")
cancerlIndex <- which(pd$Status=="cancer")

i=normalIndex[1]
plot(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),main="",ylim=c(0,3),type="n")
for(i in normalIndex){
  lines(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),col=1)
}
### Add the cancer samples
for(i in cancerlIndex){
  lines(density(meth[,i],from=0,to=1),col=2)
}

# finding regions of the genome that are different between cancer and normal samples
library(limma)
X<-model.matrix(~pd$Status)
fit<-lmFit(meth,X)
eb <- ebayes(fit)

# plot of the region surrounding the top hit
library(GenomicRanges)
i <- which.min(eb$p.value[,2])
middle <- gr[i,]
Index<-gr%over%(middle+10000)
cols=ifelse(pd$Status=="normal",1,2)
chr=as.factor(seqnames(gr))
pos=start(gr)

plot(pos[Index],fit$coef[Index,2],type="b",xlab="genomic location",ylab="difference")
matplot(pos[Index],meth[Index,],col=cols,xlab="genomic location")
# http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22422453

# within each chromosome we usually have big gaps creating subgroups of regions to be analyzed
chr1Index <- which(chr=="chr1")
hist(log10(diff(pos[chr1Index])),main="",xlab="log 10 method")

library(bumphunter)
cl=clusterMaker(chr,pos,maxGap=500)
table(table(cl)) ##shows the number of regions with 1,2,3, ... points in them
#consider two example regions#
...

Integrate DNA methylation and gene expression

Whole Genome Sequencing, Whole Exome Sequencing, Transcriptome (RNA) Sequencing

Sequence + Expression

Integrate RNA-Seq and DNA-Seq

Immunohistochemistry/IHC

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunohistochemistry. Protein expression by IHC.

Deconvolve bulk tumor tissue

Performance of computational algorithms to deconvolve heterogeneous bulk tumor tissue depends on experimental factors. Twitter.

Tumor purity

  • Tumor Purity in Preclinical Mouse Tumor Models 2022
  • Systematic Assessment of Tumor Purity and Its Clinical Implications Haider 2020.
    • With the exception of naive miRNA profiles, purity estimates were inversely correlated with molecular profiles regardless of the underlying purity estimation profile .
    • These data suggest that the presence of genomic and transcriptomic correlates of tumor purity are likely to confound biologic and clinical interpretations.
  • Estimators:
    • DNA: ABSOLUTE, ASCAT, CLONET, INTEGER, OncoSNP
    • RNA: DeMix, ISOpure-R (matlab/R), ESTIMATE (Yoshihara, R)
    • miRNA/microRNA: ISOpure-I
  • TCGA purity estimate by Aran 2015 Systematic pan-cancer analysis of tumour purity - Supplementary Data 1 (xlsx file with columns: Sample ID,Cancer type,ESTIMATE,ABSOLUTE,LUMP,IHC & CPE).
  • Tumor.purity: TCGA samples with their Tumor Purity measures (a data frame with 9364 rows and 7 variables) from TCGAbiolinks package
  • Prediction of tumor purity from gene expression data using machine learning 2021.
    • We selected the CPE as the target variable, which is the median purity value after normalizing values from the other four purity estimates (ESTIMATE, ABSOLUTE, LUMP and IHC).
    • our data set consisted of 8405 tumor samples.
  • How VAF is related to tumor purity?
    • Variant allelic fraction (VAF) is related to tumor purity because it reflects the proportion of cells in a sample that carry a specific genetic variant. In the context of cancer, VAF can be used as a surrogate marker for tumor purity, as the fraction of cells in the sample that carry the variant will depend on the proportion of cancer cells relative to normal cells.
    • The VAF of a specific genetic variant in a cancer sample can be calculated as the ratio of the number of reads supporting the variant to the total number of reads covering that locus. In a sample that is purely composed of cancer cells, the VAF should approach 1, as all cells will carry the variant. In a sample that is mixed with normal cells, the VAF will be lower and proportional to the proportion of cancer cells in the sample.
    • Therefore, by measuring the VAF of one or more genetic variants, it is possible to estimate the tumor purity, which is the proportion of cancer cells in the sample relative to normal cells. This information is important for a variety of downstream analyses, including variant calling, gene expression analysis, and the estimation of the mutational burden, as it can affect the interpretation of the results and the accuracy of the analysis.
  • How gene expression can be used to estimate tumor purity?
    • Gene expression analysis can be used to estimate tumor purity by comparing the expression levels of genes known to be specific to either normal or cancer cells. In a sample that is mixed with normal and cancer cells, the expression levels of these genes will reflect the proportion of normal and cancer cells present in the sample.
    • For example, genes that are highly expressed in normal cells, such as housekeeping genes, can be used as a reference to estimate the proportion of normal cells in the sample. Similarly, genes that are highly expressed in cancer cells, such as oncogenes, can be used to estimate the proportion of cancer cells in the sample.
    • The relative expression levels of these genes can then be used to estimate the tumor purity, either by comparing the expression levels to a reference sample of known purity, or by using mathematical models to estimate the proportion of normal and cancer cells in the sample.
    • It is important to note that this method is not without limitations, as the expression levels of specific genes can be influenced by various factors, such as the presence of cell-to-cell heterogeneity, gene amplification, and epigenetic modifications, among others. Therefore, gene expression analysis should be used in combination with other methods, such as copy number analysis and variant allelic fraction analysis, to obtain a more accurate estimate of tumor purity.
  • Some papers
  • ISOpureR (Quon 2013): intensity or count data. Error term [math]\displaystyle{ e_n }[/math] multinomial distribution.
    library(ISOpureR)
    
    # For reproducible results, set the random seed
    set.seed(123);
    
    # Run ISOpureR Step 1 - Cancer Profile Estimation
    system.time(ISOpureS1model <- ISOpure.step1.CPE(
      tumor.expression.data,  # intensity or count data
      normal.expression.data  # intensity or count data 
    ))
    ISOpureS1model$alphapurities  # tumor purity estimates
    
  • ESTIMATE (Yoshihara 2013): normalized data.
    • Since it is based ssGSEA, only ranks are used. It does not matter we used the log transformed or count data.
    • ssGSEA is based on two gene signatures: Stromal signature (141 genes) and immune signature (141 genes)
    • The formula for calculating ESTIMATE tumor purity was developed in TCGA Affymetrix data (n=1001) including both the ESTIMATE score and ABSOLUTE-based tumor purity.
    • An evolutionary algorithm was used for the mathematical model.
    • Nonlinear least squares method was used to determine the final model estimate.
    • Tumor purity = cos(0.6 + 0.000146 * ESTIMATE score)
    library(estimate)
    OvarianCancerExpr <- system.file("extdata", "sample_input.txt", package="estimate")
    filterCommonGenes(input.f=OvarianCancerExpr, output.f="OV_10412genes.gct", id="GeneSymbol")
    estimateScore("OV_10412genes.gct", "OV_estimate_score.gct", platform="affymetrix")
    
    plotPurity(scores="OV_estimate_score.gct", samples="s516", platform="affymetrix")
    
    scan("OV_estimate_score.gct", "", skip=6)[-c(1:2)] |> as.numeric() # tumor purity estimates
    
  • DeMixT (Wang 2018): count data. Estimation of tumor cell total mRNA expression in 15 cancer types predicts disease progression, Cao 2022 for profile likelihood method & supplementary information for more information about the benchmarking between DeMixT_DE and DeMixT_GS.
    library(DeMixT)
    source("DeMixT_preprocessing.R")
    
    count.mat <- cbind(normal.expression.data, tumor.expression.data)
    colnames(count.mat) <- paste0("sample", 1:ncol(count.mat))
    
    label = factor(c(rep('Normal', ncol(normal.expression.data)),
                     rep('Tumor', ncol(tumor.expression.data))))
    set.seed(1234) # not sure if this is needed
    preprocessed_data = DeMixT_preprocessing(count.mat, label)
    PRAD_filter = preprocessed_data$count.matrix
    
    set.seed(1234)
    Normal.id <- paste0("sample", 1:n1)
    Tumor.id <- paste0("sample", (n1+1):(n1+n2))
    data.Y = SummarizedExperiment(assays = list(counts = PRAD_filter[, Tumor.id]))
    data.N1 <- SummarizedExperiment(assays = list(counts = PRAD_filter[, Normal.id]))
    res = DeMixT(data.Y = data.Y,
                 data.N1 = data.N1,
                 nthread = 64,
                 gene.selection.method = "DE") # default is "GS"
    res$pi[2, ] # tumor purity estimates
    
  • CIBERSORTx (Newman 2019). Web only. Determining cell type abundance and expression from bulk tissues with digital cytometry
  • PUREE (Revkov 2023). Python-based. Only API, no source code.

Integrate/combine Omics

Gene expression

Expression level is the amount of RNA in cell that was transcribed from that gene. Slides from Alyssa Frazee.

Fusion gene

Structural variation

LUMPY, DELLY, ForestSV, Pindel, breakdancer , SVDetect.

Covid-19

Bulk RNA sequencing for analysis of post COVID-19 condition 2024. 13 differentially expressed genes associated with PCC (long Covid) were found. Enriched pathways were related to interferon-signalling and anti-viral immune processes.

RNASeq + ChipSeq

Labs

Biowulf2 at NIH

BamHash

Hash BAM and FASTQ files to verify data integrity. The C++ code is based on OpenSSL and seqan libraries.

Reproducibility

Selected Papers

Pictures

https://www.flickr.com/photos/genomegov

FISH/Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization

用DNA做身分鑑識

用DNA做身分鑑識

如何自学入门生物信息学

CRISPR

基因編輯的原理是什麼?一次看懂基因神剪CRISPR

Staying current

Staying Current in Bioinformatics & Genomics: 2017 Edition

Papers

Common issues in algorithmic bioinformatics papers

What are some common issues I find when reviewing algorithmic bioinformatics conference papers?

Precision Medicine courses

Personalized medicine

Cancer and gene markers

  • Colorectal cancer patients without KRAS mutations have far better outcomes with EGFR treatment than those with KRAS mutations.
    • Two EGFR inhibitors, cetuximab and panitumumab are not recommended for the treatment of colorectal cancer in patients with KRAS mutations in codon 12 and 13.
  • Breast cancer.

The shocking truth about space travel

7 percent of DNA belonging to NASA astronaut Scott Kelly changed in the time he was aboard the International Space Station

bioSyntax: syntax highlighting for computational biology

https://bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12859-018-2315-y

Deep learning

Deep learning: new computational modelling techniques for genomics

HRD/homologous recombination deficiency 同源重组修复缺陷

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homologous_recombination
    • Homologous recombination proficient (HRP) cancer cells can repair DNA damage caused by chemotherapy, making them difficult to treat.
    • drugs have been developed to target homologous recombination via c-Abl inhibition and to exploit (take advantage of) deficiencies in homologous recombination in cancer cells with BRCA mutations.
    • One such drug is Olaparib, a PARP1 inhibitor that targets cancer cells by inhibiting base-excision repair (BER) in HR-deficient cells. However, cancer cells can become resistant to PARP1 inhibitors if they undergo deletions of mutations in BRCA2, restoring their ability to repair DNA by HR.
  • https://www.genome.gov/genetics-glossary/homologous-recombination (graphical illustration). Homologous recombination is a type of genetic recombination in which nucleotide sequences are exchanged between two similar or identical molecules of DNA.
  • BRCA1 and BRCA2 are genes that produce proteins responsible for repairing damaged DNA within cells. Mutations in these genes can lead to errors in the DNA repair process, resulting in an accumulation of mutations that can cause cancer. This condition is known as Homologous Recombination Deficiency (HRD). PARP inhibitors are a type of targeted therapy that blocks the enzyme Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), which helps repair DNA damage in (cancer) cells. By inhibiting PARP, these drugs prevent cancer cells from repairing their DNA, leading to cell death.
  • The inability to repair DNA damage is referred to as homologous recombination deficiency (HRD). DNA damage response from Qiagen.
  • FDA approved for HRD assessment: 1) Foundation Medicine's FoundationOne CDx in 2020, 2) Myriad myChoice CDx in 2019. PS:
    • CDx stands for Companion Diagnostic. They help identify patients who might benefit from specific treatments, particularly in the context of certain cancer therapies. In the case of HRD (Homologous Recombination Deficiency) assessment, these CDx tests help identify patients who might respond well to PARP inhibitors or other targeted therapies.
    • In the case of HRD (Homologous Recombination Deficiency) assessment, these CDx tests help identify patients who might respond well to PARP inhibitors or other targeted therapies.
  • How HRD and PARP inhibitors relate:
    • Cancer cells with HRD are already struggling to repair DNA damage.
    • When these cells are treated with PARP inhibitors, it becomes even harder for them to repair DNA damage.
    • This combination can lead to cancer cell death, a concept known as "synthetic lethality."
    • In other words, PARP inhibitors (PARPi) are primarily used in patients who are HRD-positive.
  • Role of CDx tests in HRD assessment:
    • These tests analyze tumor samples for signs of HRD.
    • They may look for specific gene mutations (like BRCA1/2) or broader genomic patterns indicative of HRD.
    • The results help predict whether a patient's cancer is likely to respond to PARP inhibitors.
  • Clinical implications:
    • Patients who test positive for HRD are more likely to benefit from PARP inhibitors.
    • Those without HRD might be better suited for other treatment options.
  • Beyond PARP inhibitors:
    • HRD status can also inform the use of platinum-based chemotherapies and potentially other DNA-damaging agents.
  • Cancer types:
    • This approach is particularly relevant in ovarian, breast, prostate, and pancreatic cancers, among others.
  • openai
    • Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors are a class of drugs that are designed to inhibit the activity of PARP enzymes. PARP enzymes are proteins that are involved in DNA repair pathways. They help to repair DNA damage and maintain the stability of the genome by adding a chemical group called poly(ADP-ribose) to other proteins.
    • PARP inhibitors work by blocking the activity of PARP enzymes, which can interfere with the ability of cells to repair damaged DNA. This can be especially useful in cancer cells, which often rely on PARP enzymes to repair DNA damage and maintain genomic stability. By inhibiting PARP enzymes, PARP inhibitors can sensitizize cancer cells to chemotherapy and other treatments, making them more vulnerable to cell death.
    • is there drug targeting HRP cancer patients? One approach is to target homologous recombination via c-Abl inhibition. For example, Niraparib is a PARP inhibitor that has been shown to be effective in treating advanced ovarian cancer in both homologous recombination deficient (HRD) and homologous recombination proficient (HRP) patients.
    • is there any drugs target HRD cancer patients? Yes, there are several drugs that have been developed to target HRD cancer cells. One approach is to use PARP inhibitors, which exploit deficiencies in homologous recombination in cancer cells with BRCA mutations. For example, Olaparib is a PARP1 inhibitor that has been shown to be effective in shrinking or stopping the growth of tumors from breast, ovarian and prostate cancers caused by mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. By inhibiting base-excision repair (BER) in HR-deficient cells, Olaparib applies the concept of synthetic lethality to specifically target cancer cells. PS: Examples of PARP inhibitors include niraparib (Zejula), olaparib (Lynparza), talazoparib (Talzenna), and rucaparib (Rubraca).
    • PARP1 is a member of the PARP family of proteins. PARP stands for Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase. The PARP family comprises 17 members.
  • Loss-of-function genes involved in this pathway can sensitize tumors to poly(adenosine diphosphate [ADP]-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors and platinum-based (Pt) chemotherapy
    • Certain genes that are involved in a process called Homologous Recombination Repair (HRR) can make cancer cells more susceptible to certain treatments. Specifically, it says that when these loss-of-function genes are present, the cancer cells become more sensitive to two types of chemotherapy: PARP inhibitors and platinum-based chemotherapy.
    • Loss-of-function genes are genes that have mutations that prevent them from functioning properly or at all. By disrupting the normal functioning of the HRR pathway, these loss-of-function genes can make cancer cells more sensitive to PARP inhibitors and platinum-based chemotherapy.
  • scarHRD package. Note for the 2 test samples, the return object is a 1x4 matrix.
    • HRD-LOH/Loss of Heterozygosity
    • LST/Large Scale Transitions
    • Number of Telomeric Allelic Imbalances
    • HRD-sum (sum of the above 3)
  • Harmonization of homologous recombination deficiency testing in ovarian cancer: Results from the MITO16A/MaNGO-OV2 trial 2024
    • BRCA mutation status: the BRCA status was defined positive (BRCA+) when a clinically significant mutation (pathogenic/likely pathogenic) was found in BRCA genes, and negative (BRCA-) if no clinically significant mutation was found. NOTE: Pathogenicity 致病性 refers to the ability of an organism to cause disease or damage in a host.
    • Genomic instability/GI score (same as HRD score)
    • HRD status
    • Sensitivty, Specificity, Agreement, Cohen kappa are used to compare new assays/tests vs reference test (Myriad)
    • RECIST response rate, PFS, OS

Computational Pathology

Bi-allelic, monoallelic

Bi-allelic and monoallelic expression. In most cases, both alleles (the two chromosomal copies) are transcribed; this is known as bi-allelic expression (left). However, a minority of genes show monoallelic expression (right). In these cases, only one allele of a gene is expressed (right).

SOMAscan assay (proteomic)

Scandal

阿茲海默症關鍵論文被揭發疑似造假,16年來全球醫學專家可能都被呼弄 & 阿茲海默症關鍵論文疑造假 誤導外界16年

Terms

RNA vs DNA

基因结构

https://zhuanlan.zhihu.com/p/49601643

Pseudogene

https://www.genome.gov/genetics-glossary/Pseudogene. An example: OR7E47P with alias bpl 41-16 or bpl41-16.

PCR

什麼是PCR? 聚合酶鏈鎖反應? 基因叔叔

Epidemiology

Epidemiology for the uninitiated

Cell lines

in vivo, in vitro, and in situ

In silico 電腦模擬 (in silicon, s=simulation)

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_silico An in silico experiment is one performed on computer or via computer simulation.
  • The main difference between in silico gene expression analysis and experimental gene expression analysis is the method used to study the patterns and levels of gene expression.
    • In silico gene expression analysis involves the use of computational tools and algorithms to analyze large datasets of gene expression data obtained from techniques such as microarrays, RNA sequencing, or single-cell RNA sequencing. This analysis can include identifying differentially expressed genes between samples, clustering genes with similar expression patterns, and predicting the functional roles of genes based on their expression profiles.
    • On the other hand, experimental gene expression analysis involves directly measuring the levels and patterns of gene expression using laboratory techniques. These techniques can include real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR), northern blotting, western blotting, and immunohistochemistry, among others. These experimental techniques allow researchers to directly measure the levels of specific RNA or protein molecules in biological samples.
    • While in silico gene expression analysis is a rapid and cost-effective way to analyze large datasets of gene expression data, it relies on the accuracy and completeness of the data being analyzed. Experimental gene expression analysis provides a more direct and accurate view of gene expression but can be more time-consuming and expensive. In practice, both in silico and experimental gene expression analysis are valuable tools that can be used to complement each other in the study of gene expression and its role in various biological processes and diseases.
  • In silico gene expression analysis--an overview Murray 2007
  • A simple in silico approach to generate gene-expression profiles from subsets of cancer genomics data 2019

In situ 原處 (介於in vivo與in vitro之間)

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_situ 意義大致介於in vivo與in vitro之間。
  • Something that’s performed in situ means that it’s observed in its natural context, but outside of a living organism. In vivo is Latin for “within the living.” It refers to work that’s performed in a whole, living organism .
  • A good example of this is a technique called in situ hybridization (ISH). ISH can be used to look for a specific nucleic acid (DNA or RNA) within something like a tissue sample. Specialized probes are used to bind to a specific nucleic acid sequence that the researcher is looking to find. These probes are tagged with things like radioactivity or fluorescence. This allows the researcher to see where the nucleic acid is located within the tissue sample. ISH allows the researcher to observe where a nucleic acid is located within its natural context, yet outside of a living organism. Examples are microarray experiments.

in vivo 活体内

Syngenic

Syngeneic tumor models are experimental models used in cancer research that use genetically identical animals to study the growth and spread of cancer cells. In these models, a malignant tumor is induced in one animal and then transplanted into another animal of the same genetic background. This allows researchers to study the interactions between the host immune system and the cancer cells, as well as the response of the tumor to various treatments.

Syngeneic tumor models are often used in combination with other experimental models, such as xenograft models (where the cancer cells are transplanted into a genetically different animal) or cell line models (where the cancer cells are grown in a laboratory). By using a combination of these models, researchers can gain a more complete understanding of the biology of cancer and develop new treatments for cancer patients.

The syngeneic model is an important tool for studying the role of the immune system in cancer, as the genetically identical animals allow researchers to control for genetic differences that might impact the immune response. Additionally, because the host immune system in these models is functional and can mount a response against the transplanted cancer cells, the syngeneic model provides a more realistic representation of the host-tumor interaction than other models that rely on immunodeficient animals.

in vitro 试管内/体外

RUO: research use only

RUO stands for "Research Use Only". In the context of clinical trials and laboratory research, it refers to in vitro diagnostic products (IVDs) that are intended to be used in non-clinical studies, including to gather data for submission as required by regulatory authorities³. These products are not intended for use in diagnostic procedures. They are often used by medical laboratories and other institutions for research purposes. However, if these products are used for purposes other than research, it could have legal implications. It's important to note that RUO products are not subject to the same regulatory controls as in-vitro diagnostic medical devices (CE-IVDs) that must comply with the applicable legal requirements.

RNA sequencing 101

Web

Books

strand-specific vs non-strand specific experiment

Understand this info is necessary when we want to use summarizeOverlaps() function (GenomicAlignments) or htseq-count python program to get count data.

This post mentioned to use infer_experiment.py script to check whether the rna-seq run is stranded or not.

The rna-seq experiment used in this tutorial is not stranded-specific.

FASTQ

  • FASTQ=FASTA + Qual. FASTQ format is a text-based format for storing both a biological sequence (usually nucleotide sequence) and its corresponding quality scores.

Phred quality score

q = -10log10(p) where p = error probability for the base.

q error probability base call accuracy
10 0.1 90%
13 0.05 95%
20 0.01 99%
30 0.001 99.9%
40 0.0001 99.99%
50 0.00001 99.999%

FASTA

fasta/fa files can be used as reference genome in IGV. But we cannot load these files in order to view them.

Download sequence files

Compute the sequence length of a FASTA file

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23992646/sequence-length-of-fasta-file

awk '/^>/ {if (seqlen){print seqlen}; print ;seqlen=0;next; } { seqlen += length($0)}END{print seqlen}' file.fa

head -2 file.fa | \
    awk '/^>/ {if (seqlen){print seqlen}; print ;seqlen=0;next; } { seqlen += length($0)}END{print seqlen}'  | \
    tail -1

FASTA <=> FASTQ conversion

According to this post,

  • FastA are text files containing multiple DNA* seqs each with some text, some part of the text might be a name.
  • FastQ files are like fasta, but they also have quality scores for each base of each seq, making them appropriate for reads from an Illumina machine (or other brands)

Convert FASTA to FASTQ without quality scores

Biostars. For example, the bioawk by lh3 (Heng Li) worked.

Convert FASTA to FASTQ with quality score file

See the links on the above post.

Convert FASTQ to FASTA using Seqtk

Use the Seqtk program; see this post.

The Seqtk program by lh3 can be used to sample reads from a fastq file including paired-end; see this post.

RPKM (Mortazavi et al. 2008) and cpm (counts per million)

Reads per Kilobase of Exon per Million of Mapped reads.

  • RPKMs can only be calculated for those genes for which the gene length and GC content information is available; see the vignette of GSVA
  • rpkm function in edgeR package.
  • RPKM function in easyRNASeq package.
  • TMM > cpm > log2 transformation on the paper Gene expression profiling of 1200 pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma reveals novel subtypes
  • Gene expression quantification from RNA-Seq wikipedia page
    • Sequencing depth/coverage: the total number of reads generated in a single experiment is typically normalized by converting counts to fragments, reads, or counts per million mapped reads (FPM, RPM, or CPM).
    • Gene length: FPKM, TPM. Longer genes will have more fragments/reads/counts than shorter genes if transcript expression is the same. This is adjusted by dividing the FPM by the length of a gene, resulting in the metric fragments per kilobase of transcript per million mapped reads (FPKM). When looking at groups of genes across samples, FPKM is converted to transcripts per million (TPM) by dividing each FPKM by the sum of FPKMs within a sample.
  • Difference between CPM and TPM and which one for downstream analysis?. CPM is basically depth-normalized counts whereas TPM is length normalized (and then normalized by the length-normalized values of the other genes).
  • The RNA-seq abundance zoo. The counts per million (CPM) metric takes the raw (or estimated) counts, and performs the first type of normalization I mention in the previous section. That is, it normalized the count by the library size, and then multiplies it by a million (to avoid scary small numbers).
  • See also the log(CPM) implemented in Seurat::NormalizeData() for scRNA-seq data.

Idea

  • The more we sequence, the more reads we expect from each gene. This is the most relevant correction of this method.
  • Longer transcript are expected to generate more reads. The latter is only relevant for comparisons among different genes which we rarely perform!. As such, the DESeq2 only creates a size factor for each library and normalize the counts by dividing counts by a size factor (scalar) for each library. Note that: H0: mu1=mu2 is equivalent to H0: c*mu1=c*mu2 where c is gene length.

Calculation

  1. Count up the total reads in a sample and divide that number by 1,000,000 – this is our “per million” scaling factor.
  2. Divide the read counts by the “per million” scaling factor. This normalizes for sequencing depth, giving you reads per million (RPM)
  3. Divide the RPM values by the length of the gene, in kilobases. This gives you RPKM.

Formula

RPKM = (10^9 * C)/(N * L), with 

C = Number of reads mapped to a gene
N = Total mapped reads in the experiment
L = gene length in base-pairs for a gene
source("http://www.bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("edgeR")
library(edgeR)

set.seed(1234)
y <- matrix(rnbinom(20,size=1,mu=10),5,4)
     [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4]
[1,]    0    0    5    0
[2,]    6    2    7    3
[3,]    5   13    7    2
[4,]    3    3    9   11
[5,]    1    2    1   15

d <- DGEList(counts=y, lib.size=1001:1004)
# Note that lib.size is optional
# By default, lib.size = colSums(counts)
cpm(d) # counts per million
   Sample1   Sample2  Sample3   Sample4
1    0.000     0.000 4985.045     0.000
2 5994.006  1996.008 6979.063  2988.048
3 4995.005 12974.052 6979.063  1992.032
4 2997.003  2994.012 8973.081 10956.175
5  999.001  1996.008  997.009 14940.239
> cpm(d,log=TRUE)
    Sample1   Sample2  Sample3   Sample4
1  7.961463  7.961463 12.35309  7.961463
2 12.607393 11.132027 12.81875 11.659911
3 12.355838 13.690089 12.81875 11.129470
4 11.663897 11.662567 13.17022 13.451207
5 10.285119 11.132027 10.28282 13.890078

d$genes$Length <- c(1000,2000,500,1500,3000)
rpkm(d)
    Sample1   Sample2    Sample3  Sample4
1    0.0000     0.000  4985.0449    0.000
2 2997.0030   998.004  3489.5314 1494.024
3 9990.0100 25948.104 13958.1256 3984.064
4 1998.0020  1996.008  5982.0538 7304.117
5  333.0003   665.336   332.3363 4980.080

> cpm
function (x, ...)
UseMethod("cpm")
<environment: namespace:edgeR>
> showMethods("cpm")

Function "cpm":
 <not an S4 generic function>
> cpm.default
function (x, lib.size = NULL, log = FALSE, prior.count = 0.25,
    ...)
{
    x <- as.matrix(x)
    if (is.null(lib.size))
        lib.size <- colSums(x)
    if (log) {
        prior.count.scaled <- lib.size/mean(lib.size) * prior.count
        lib.size <- lib.size + 2 * prior.count.scaled
    }
    lib.size <- 1e-06 * lib.size
    if (log)
        log2(t((t(x) + prior.count.scaled)/lib.size))
    else t(t(x)/lib.size)
}
<environment: namespace:edgeR>
> rpkm.default
function (x, gene.length, lib.size = NULL, log = FALSE, prior.count = 0.25,
    ...)
{
    y <- cpm.default(x = x, lib.size = lib.size, log = log, prior.count = prior.count)
    gene.length.kb <- gene.length/1000
    if (log)
        y - log2(gene.length.kb)
    else y/gene.length.kb
}
<environment: namespace:edgeR>

Here for example the 1st sample and the 2nd gene, its rpkm value is calculated as

# step 1:
6/(1.0e-6 *1001) = 5994.006    # cpm, compute column-wise
# step 2:
5994.006/ (2000/1.0e3) = 2997.003 # rpkm, compute row-wise

# Another way
# step 1 (RPK) 
6/ (2000/1.0e3) = 3
# step 2 (RPKM)
3/ (1.0e-6 * 1001) = 2997.003

Another example. source code of calc_cpm().

library(edgeR)
set.seed(1234)
y <- matrix(rnbinom(20,size=1,mu=10),5,4)
cpm(y)
#          [,1]   [,2]      [,3]      [,4]
#[1,]      0.00      0 172413.79      0.00
#[2,] 400000.00 100000 241379.31  96774.19
#[3,] 333333.33 650000 241379.31  64516.13
#[4,] 200000.00 150000 310344.83 354838.71
#[5,]  66666.67 100000  34482.76 483870.97

calc_cpm <- function (expr_mat) {
    norm_factor <- colSums(expr_mat)
    return(t(t(expr_mat)/norm_factor) * 10^6)
    # Fix a bug in the original code
    # Not affect silhouette()
}

calc_cpm(y)
#          [,1]   [,2]      [,3]      [,4]
#[1,]      0.00      0 172413.79      0.00
#[2,] 400000.00 100000 241379.31  96774.19
#[3,] 333333.33 650000 241379.31  64516.13
#[4,] 200000.00 150000 310344.83 354838.71
#[5,]  66666.67 100000  34482.76 483870.97

Critics

Consider the following example: in two libraries, each with one million reads, gene X may have 10 reads for treatment A and 5 reads for treatment B, while it is 100x as many after sequencing 100 millions reads from each library. In the latter case we can be much more confident that there is a true difference between the two treatments than in the first one. However, the RPKM values would be the same for both scenarios. Thus, RPKM/FPKM are useful for reporting expression values, but not for statistical testing!

CPM vs TPM

Both has the property that the sumof reads is 1 million(10^6). But TPM includes gene length normalization (TPM accounts for variations in gene length (done first) and sequencing depth (done second)). So if want to find DE genes between samples, it is common to use the TPM normalization method.

(another critic) Union Exon Based Approach

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0141910

In general, the methods for gene quantification can be largely divided into two categories: transcript-based approach and ‘union exon’-based approach.

It was found that the gene expression levels are significantly underestimated by ‘union exon’-based approach, and the average of RPKM from ‘union exons’-based method is less than 50% of the mean expression obtained from transcript-based approach.

FPKM (Trapnell et al. 2010)

  • Fragment per Kilobase of exon per Million of Mapped fragments (Cufflinks).
  • FPKM is very similar to RPKM. RPKM was made for single-end RNA-seq, where every read corresponded to a single fragment that was sequenced. FPKM was made for paired-end RNA-seq. With paired-end RNA-seq, two reads can correspond to a single fragment, or, if one read in the pair did not map, one read can correspond to a single fragment. The only difference between RPKM and FPKM is that FPKM takes into account that two reads can map to one fragment (and so it doesn’t count this fragment twice).
  • Differential expression analysis with only FPKM matrix available from total newbie in R

RPKM, FPKM, TPM and DESeq

> set.seed(1)
> dds <- makeExampleDESeqDataSet(m=4)
> head(counts(dds))
      sample1 sample2 sample3 sample4
gene1      14       1       1       4
gene2       5      17      13      14
gene3       0      12       8       6
gene4     152      62     149     110
gene5      23      36      33      94
gene6       0       1       1       4
> dds <- estimateSizeFactors(dds)
> sizeFactors(dds)
 sample1  sample2  sample3  sample4
1.068930 1.014687 1.010392 1.033559
> head(counts(dds))
      sample1 sample2 sample3 sample4
gene1      14       1       1       4
gene2       5      17      13      14
gene3       0      12       8       6
gene4     152      62     149     110
gene5      23      36      33      94
gene6       0       1       1       4
> head(counts(dds, normalized=TRUE))
         sample1    sample2     sample3    sample4
gene1  13.097206  0.9855256   0.9897147   3.870122
gene2   4.677574 16.7539354  12.8662916  13.545427
gene3   0.000000 11.8263073   7.9177179   5.805183
gene4 142.198237 61.1025878 147.4674957 106.428358
gene5  21.516838 35.4789219  32.6605863  90.947869
gene6   0.000000  0.9855256   0.9897147   3.870122

# normalized counts is calculated as the following
R> head(scale(counts(dds, normalized=F), F, sizeFactors(dds)))
         sample1    sample2     sample3    sample4
gene1  13.097206  0.9855256   0.9897147   3.870122
gene2   4.677574 16.7539354  12.8662916  13.545427
gene3   0.000000 11.8263073   7.9177179   5.805183
gene4 142.198237 61.1025878 147.4674957 106.428358
gene5  21.516838 35.4789219  32.6605863  90.947869
gene6   0.000000  0.9855256   0.9897147   3.870122

# The situation of DESeqDataSet object created using 'tximport()' is different. See the next item.
P -- per
K -- kilobase (related to gene length)
M -- million (related to sequencing depth)

TMM (Robinson and Oshlack, 2010)

Trimmed Means of M values (edgeR).

  • TMM relies on the assumption that most genes are not differentially expressed. See the paper. DESeq2 does not rely on this assumption.
  • TMM will not work well for samples where the library size is so small that most of the counts become zero. A library size of 1 million is on the small side, but is probably ok. Is there any reason to think that normalization (e.g. TMM) doesn't work well with samples that that have very different raw counts?
  • Many normalization RNA-Seq normalization methods perform poorly on samples with extreme composition bias. For instance, in one sample a large number of reads comes from rRNAs while in another they have been removed more efficiently. Most scaling based methods, including RPKM and CPM, will underestimate the expression of weaker expressed genes in the presence of extremely abundant mRNAs (less sequencing real estate available for them). The TMM methods tries to correct this bias.
  • Does EdgeR trimmed mean of M values (TMM) account for gene length? No. In general, edgeR does not need to adjust for gene length in DE analyses because gene length cancels out of DE comparisons.
  • Gene expression units explained: RPM, RPKM, FPKM, TPM, DESeq, TMM, SCnorm, GeTMM, and ComBat-Seq
  • Q: Does TMM method require count data?
    • A: Yes, the TMM method requires RNA-seq count data as input.
    • The TMM method uses these count data to calculate the scaling factors that adjust for differences in library size and gene length, as well as the effects of highly expressed genes.
    • Before applying the TMM method, it is important to ensure that the count data has been properly preprocessed and filtered to remove low-quality reads, adapter sequences, and other artifacts.
  • Q: can TMM method be applied to non-integer data?
    • A: It is possible to apply TMM to non-integer data, such as normalized expression values or FPKM (fragments per kilobase of transcript per million mapped reads) values, by rounding the values to the nearest integer.
    • In practice, the TMM method can be applied to non-integer data by first converting the data to counts, for example, by multiplying the expression values by a scaling factor that represents the average library size, and then rounding the resulting values to the nearest integer. The TMM method can then be applied to the rounded count data as usual.
  • StatQuest: edgeR, part 1, Library Normalization. Good explanation about reference sample selection.
  • Trimmed Mean
  • RNA Sequence Analysis in R: edgeR
  • Normalisation methods implemented in edgeR. TMM, RLE, Upper-quartile.
  • Using edgeR package
    library(magrittr)
    library(edgeR)
    set.seed(1)
    M <- matrix(rnbinom(10000,mu=5,size=2), ncol=4)
    
    out <- DGEList(M) %>% calcNormFactors() %>% cpm()
    
  • Using NOISeq package
    library(NOISeq)
    out2 <- tmm(M, long = 1000, lc = 0, k = 0)
    out[1:3, 1:3] / out2[1:3, 1:3]
    #    Sample1  Sample2  Sample3
    # 1 80.81611 81.32609      NaN
    # 2 80.81611 81.32609 80.81611
    # 3 80.81611      NaN 80.81611
    

Sample size

Power-> RNA-seq

Coverage

~20x coverage ----> reads per transcript = transcriptlength/readlength * 20
C = L N / G

where L=read length, N =number of reads and G=haploid genome length. So, if we take one lane of single read human sequence with v3 chemistry, we get C = (100 bp)*(189×10^6)/(3×10^9 bp) = 6.3. This tells us that each base in the genome will be sequenced between six and seven times on average.

# Assume the bam file is sorted by chromosome location
# took 40 min on 5.8G bam file. samtools depth has no threads option:(
# it is not right since it only account for regions that were covered with reads
samtools depth  *bamfile*  |  awk '{sum+=$3} END { print "Average = ",sum/NR}'    # maybe 42

# The following is the right way! The result matches with Qualimap program.
samtools depth -a *bamfile*  |  awk '{sum+=$3} END { print "Average = ",sum/NR}'  # maybe 8
# OR
LEN=`samtools view -H bamfile | grep -P '^@SQ' | cut -f 3 -d ':' | awk '{sum+=$1} END {print sum}'`   # 3095693981
SUM=`samtools depth bamfile | awk '{sum+=$3} END { print "Sum = ", sum}'`   # 24473867730
echo $(( $LEN/$SUM ))

5 common genomics file formats

5 genomics file formats you must know (video)

  • fastq,
  • fastq,
  • bam,
  • vcf,
  • bed (genomic intervals regions)

SAM/Sequence Alignment Format and BAM format specification

Single-end, pair-end, fragment, insert size

Germline vs Somatic mutation

  • Germline: inherit from parents. See the Wikipedia page.
  • Somatic SNVs are mutations that occur in the cells of a tumor. These mutations can be found in multiple copies of the same gene, while germline SNVs are mutations that are found in a single copy of the gene, usually the original copy.
  • Somatic & Germline Mutations

Pathogenic mutation

  • A pathogenic mutation is a change in the genetic sequence that causes a specific genetic disease. To determine if a change found in the gene is something that causes disease, a laboratory looks at many different factors. For example, they look at the type of change found. Some changes, like nonsense mutations or frameshift mutations, almost always result in a major problem with the protein produced, so they are often labeled as pathogenic mutations. Laboratories will also check the scientific literature and databases to see if the particular change has been reported in other individuals with the genetic disease. Lastly, they look to see if the change is in an area of the gene that is conserved across species, meaning that the area where the change is located is the same in lots of animals, thus may be an important area for the function of the protein.
  • pathogenic variant. See Genetic Disorders
  • Pathogenic means able to cause or produce disease.
  • What are some examples of genetic diseases caused by pathogenic mutations? Cystic fibrosis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, Familial hypercholesterolemia, Hemochromatosis, Sickle cell disease, Tay-Sachs disease ...

Driver vs passenger mutation

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatic_evolution_in_cancer

Nonsynonymous mutation

It is related to the genetic code, Wikipedia. There are 20 amino acids though there are 64 codes.

See

isma: analysis of mutations detected by multiple pipelines

isma: an R package for the integrative analysis of mutations detected by multiple pipelines

mutSignatures: analysis of cancer mutational signatures

Rediscover: identify mutually exclusive mutations

Rediscover: an R package to identify mutually exclusive mutations

Tumor mutational burden

Types of mutations

Cytogenetic alternations

Alternative and differential splicing

Allele vs Gene

http://www.diffen.com/difference/Allele_vs_Gene

  • A gene is a stretch of DNA or RNA that determines a certain trait.
  • Genes mutate and can take two or more alternative forms; an allele is one of these forms of a gene. For example, the gene for eye color has several variations (alleles) such as an allele for blue eye color or an allele for brown eyes.
  • An allele is found at a fixed spot on a chromosome?
  • Chromosomes occur in pairs so organisms have two alleles for each gene — one allele in each chromosome in the pair. Since each chromosome in the pair comes from a different parent, organisms inherit one allele from each parent for each gene. The two alleles inherited from parents may be same (homozygous) or different (heterozygotes).

Locus

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locus_(genetics)

Haplotypes

Base quality, Mapping quality, Variant quality

VarSAP

Enrichment of Variant Information for the Variant Standardization and Annotation Pipeline

The Clinical Knowledgebase (CKB)

https://ckb.jax.org/gene/show?geneId=7157 (TP53)

Mapping quality (MAPQ) vs Alignment score (AS)

http://seqanswers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=66634 & SAM format specification

  • MAPQ (5th column): MAPping Quality. It equals −10 log10 Pr{mapping position is wrong} (defined by SAM documentation), rounded to the nearest integer. A value 255 indicates that the mapping quality is not available. MAPQ is a metric that tells you how confident you can be that the read comes from the reported position. So given 1000 reads, for example, read alignments with mapping quality being 30, one of them will be wrong in average (10^(30/-10)=.001). Another example, if MAPQ=70, then the probability mapping position is wrong is 10^(70/-10)=1e-7. We can use 'samtools view -q 30 input.bam' to keep reads with MAPQ at least 30. Users should refer to the alignment program for the 'MAPQ' value it uses.
  • AS (optional, 14th column in my case): Alignment score is a metric that tells you how similar the read is to the reference. AS increases with the number of matches and decreases with the number of mismatches and gaps (rewards and penalties for matches and mismatches depend on the scoring matrix you use)

Note:

  1. MAPQ scores produced by the aligners typically involves the alignment score and other information.
  2. You can have high AS and low MAPQ if the read aligns perfectly at multiple positions, and you can have low AS and high MAPQ if the read aligns with mismatches but still the reported position is still much more probable than any other.
  3. You probably want to filter for MAPQ, but "good" alignment may refer to AS if what you care is similarity between read and reference.
  4. MAPQ values are really useful but their implementation is a mess by Simon Andrews

gene's isoform

FFPE Tissue vs Frozen Tissue

Wild type vs mutant

ns

Not significant

PARP inhibitor

  • What is a PARP Inhibitor? Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
  • PARP is an enzyme/a family of proteins that help repair damaged DNA in cells. When DNA is damaged, PARP detects the damage and signals other enzymes to come and fix it. This helps maintain the stability of the cell’s genetic material and prevent cell death.
  • Is PARP good or bad? PARP is neither inherently good nor bad. It is a protein that plays an important role in maintaining the stability of the cell’s genetic material by helping to repair damaged DNA.
    • In normal cells, PARP helps prevent cell death and maintain genomic stability.
    • In cancer cells, PARP can help the cancer cells survive and continue to grow by repairing their DNA. This is why PARP inhibitors (PARPi) are used in cancer treatment to block the function of PARP and prevent cancer cells from repairing their DNA.
  • PARP inhibitors are a type of targeted cancer therapy, not a traditional chemotherapy.
  • PARPi therapy is a cancer treatment that blocks the PARP enzyme, which helps repair DNA damage in cancer cells
    • PARP Inhibitors: Clinical Relevance, Mechanisms of Action and Tumor Resistance
    • List of PARP inhibitors: olaparib, niraparib, rucaparib, and talazoparib.
    • Olaparib is a medication for the maintenance treatment of BRCA-mutated advanced ovarian cancer in adults. It is a PARP inhibitor, inhibiting poly ADP ribose polymerase (PARP), an enzyme involved in DNA repair. Others include Letrozole, Avastin.
    • Maintenance therapy is called so because it is the ongoing treatment of cancer with medication after the cancer has responded to the first recommended treatment. The main goals of maintenance therapy are
      • To prevent the cancer’s return
      • To delay the growth of advanced cancer after the initial treatment
  • PARP inhibitors are a class of drugs that inhibit the activity of PARP enzymes. By blocking PARP’s ability to help repair DNA damage, these drugs can make it more difficult for cancer cells to survive DNA damage caused by other treatments, such as chemotherapy or radiation therapy. This can make these treatments more effective against certain types of cancer.
  • PARP inhibitors are drugs that block the action of the PARP enzymes, which are involved in DNA repair. There are several PARP inhibitors available, including olaparib (Lynparza), niraparib (Zejula), rucaparib (Rubraca), and talazoparib (Talzenna). These drugs are approved for some types of cancer, such as ovarian and prostate cancer, depending on the presence of certain genetic mutations.

Inhibitor genes and activator genes/enhancer genes

  • Inhibitor genes: Inhibitor genes are genes that code for proteins that can regulate or inhibit the activity of other genes or proteins in a cell. These inhibitor proteins can interact with other proteins to prevent them from functioning or alter their activity.
    • TP53 gene, which codes for the p53 protein, a tumor suppressor protein that plays a critical role in regulating cell division and preventing the formation of cancerous tumors. Mutations in the TP53 gene can result in loss of p53 function and an increased risk of cancer.
  • Activator genes: Activator genes play crucial roles in a variety of biological processes, including embryonic development, immune system responses, and the regulation of gene expression. For example, the NF-kB gene codes for a transcription factor that activates genes involved in immune system responses.
    • The MYC gene is an oncogene that codes for a transcription factor that promotes cell growth and proliferation. Dysregulation or overexpression of MYC can contribute to the development of many types of cancer.
    • Overexpression of the HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) gene is commonly observed in certain types of cancer, particularly breast cancer. Approximately 20-25% of breast cancer cases overexpress HER2, which is associated with a more aggressive form of the disease.
    • Overexpression of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) gene is a common genetic alteration observed in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) patients.
  • It's important to note that the distinction between inhibitor and activator genes is not always clear-cut, as many genes can have both inhibitory and activating effects depending on the context and the specific proteins they interact with.
  • Normal/cancer cells and PARP Inhibition:
    • Normal cells can tolerate DNA damage caused by PARP inhibition due to their efficient homologous recombination (HR) mechanism.
    • In contrast, cancer cells with a deficient HR struggle to manage the DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and are especially sensitive to the effects of PARP inhibitors (PARPi)
    • PARP has been found to be overexpressed in various types of cancers, including breast, ovarian, and oral cancers, compared to their corresponding normal healthy tissues.
    • This overexpression makes inhibition of PARP activity an attractive strategy for cancer therapeutics. By disrupting PARP functions, it impairs DNA damage repair (DDR) pathways in cancer cells.
    • After cancer patients receive PARP inhibitor (PARPi) drugs, the expression of PARP genes in cancer patients tends to be lower compared to normal patients.

Undifferentiated cancer

  • Medical Definition of Undifferentiated cancer (不好的 tumor)
  • What are undifferentiated cells
    • Undifferentiated cells are cells that have not yet developed into a specific type of cell and do not possess the characteristics of a fully differentiated cell. They are also known as stem cells or progenitor cells.
    • In developmental biology, undifferentiated cells are the cells that have not yet undergone differentiation, the process by which a less specialized cell becomes a more specialized cell, with a specific function and characteristics. These cells have the potential to divide and differentiate into multiple cell types, either through normal development or in response to injury or disease.
    • In the context of cancer, undifferentiated cells refer to cells that have not yet developed into a specific type of cancer cell. These cells are sometimes called cancer stem cells, and they are thought to be the cells that give rise to the various types of cells within a tumor. They are believed to be responsible for the maintenance and growth of the tumor, and for its ability to spread to other parts of the body. They can be found within many types of cancer, and are considered to be an important target for cancer therapy, as they are thought to be more resistant to traditional treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation.
  • GSE164174

NCI Information Technology for Cancer Research program /ITCR

https://itcr.cancer.gov/. Videos. It sponsors several programs like Bioconductor, GenePattern, UCSC Xena, IGV, PDX Finder, WebMeV, et al.

Other software

Partek

dCHIP

MeV

MeV v4.8 (11/18/2011) allows annotation from Bioconductor

IPA from Ingenuity

Login: There are web started version https://analysis.ingenuity.com/pa and Java applet version https://analysis.ingenuity.com/pa/login/choice.jsp. We can double click the file <IpaApplication.jnlp> in my machine's download folder.

Features:

  • easily search the scientific literature/integrate diverse biological information.
  • build dynamic pathway models
  • quickly analyze experimental data/Functional discovery: assign function to genes
  • share research and collaborate. On the other hand, IPA is web based, so it takes time for running analyses. Once submitted analyses are done, an email will be sent to the user.

Start Here

Expression data -> New core analysis -> Functions/Diseases -> Network analysis
                                        Canonical pathways        |
                                              |                   |
Simple or advanced search --------------------+                   |
                                              |                   |
                                              v                   |
                                        My pathways, Lists <------+
                                              ^
                                              |
Creating a custom pathway --------------------+

Resource:

Notes:

  • The input data file can be an Excel file with at least one gene ID and expression value at the end of columns (just what BRB-ArrayTools requires in general format importer).
  • The data to be uploaded (because IPA is web-based; the projects/analyses will not be saved locally) can be in different forms. See http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Feature_Description/Data-Upload-definitions. It uses the term Single/Multiple Observation. An Observation is a list of molecule identifiers and their corresponding expression values for a given experimental treatment. A dataset file may contain a single observation or multiple observations. A Single Observation dataset contains only one experimental condition (i.e. wild-type). A Multiple Observation dataset contains more than one experimental condition (i.e. a time course experiment, a dose response experiment, etc) and can be uploaded into IPA in a single file (e.g. Excel). A maximum of 20 observations in a single file may be uploaded into IPA.
  • The instruction http://ingenuity.force.com/ipa/articles/Feature_Description/Data-Upload-definitions shows what kind of gene identifier types IPA accepts.
  • In this prostate example data tutorial, the term 'fold change' was used to replace log2 gene expression. The tutorial also uses 1.5 as the fold change expression cutoff.
  • The gene table given on the analysis output contains columns 'Fold change', 'ID', 'Notes', 'Symbol' (with tooltip), 'Entrez Gene Name', 'Location', 'Types', 'Drugs'. See a screenshot below.

Screenshots:

File:IngenuityAnalysisOutput.png

DAVID Bioinformatics Resource

It offers an integrated annotation combining gene ontology, pathways and protein annotations.

It can be used to identify the pathways associated with a set of genes; e.g. this paper.

GOTrapper

GOTrapper: a tool to navigate through branches of gene ontology hierarchy

qpcR

Model fitting, optimal model selection and calculation of various features that are essential in the analysis of quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR).

GSEA

sandbox.bio: Interactive bioinformatics tutorials

https://sandbox.bio/. An interactive playground for learning bioinformatics command-line tools like bedtools, bowtie2, and samtools.

GWAS

Genome-wide association studies in R