library(knitr) opts_chunk$set(concordance=FALSE) knitr::opts_chunk$set(fig.width = 18) knitr::opts_chunk$set(fig.height = 12) set.seed(21666641)
Data visualisation is a powerful tool used for data analysis and exploration in
many fields. Genomics data analysis is one of these fields where good
visualisation tools can be of great help.
The aim of r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
is to offer the user an
easy way to create copy-number related plots using the infrastructure provided
by the R package r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("karyoploteR")
.
In addition to a set of specialized plotting functions for copy-number analysis
data and results (plotBAF
, plotCopyNumberCalls
, ...),
r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
contains a number of data loading
functions to help parsing and loading the results of widely used
copy-number calling software such as r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("DNAcopy")
,
DECoN or
CNVkit.
Finally, since r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
extends the
functionality of r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("karyoploteR")
, it is possible
to combine the plotting functions of both packages to get the perfect
figure for your data.
r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
is a
Bioconductor package and to install it we have
to use r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("BiocManager")
.
if (!requireNamespace("BiocManager", quietly = TRUE)) install.packages("BiocManager") BiocManager::install("CopyNumberPlots")
We can also install the package from github to get the latest devel version, but beware that it might be incompatible with the release version of Bioconductor!
```` {r, eval = FALSE} BiocManager::install("bernatgel/CopyNumberPlots")
# Quick Start To start working with `r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")` we will need to use the `plotKaryoptype` function from `r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("karyoploteR")`. If you want more information on how to customize it, use for other organisms or genome version, etc... you can take a look at the [karyoploteR tutorial](https://bernatgel.github.io/karyoploter_tutorial/) and specifically at the section on [how to plot ideograms](https://bernatgel.github.io/karyoploter_tutorial//Tutorial/CreateIdeogram/CreateIdeogram.html). For this quick start example we'll plot SNP-array data simulating a cancer genome. The data is in a file included with the package. You can use almost any table-like file format, including the Final Report file you would get from Illumina's Genome Studio. In this case, to keep the example small, we have data only for chomosome 1. To load the data we'll use `loadSNPData` which will detect the right columns, read the data and build a GRanges object for us. If data uses Ensembl-style chromosome names (1,2,3,...,X,Y) instead of default karyoploteR UCSC chromosome names (chr1,chr2,chr3,...,chrX,chrY) we could change the chromosome style to UCSC with the function `UCSCStyle`. ```r library(CopyNumberPlots) s1.file <- system.file("extdata", "S1.rawdata.txt", package = "CopyNumberPlots", mustWork = TRUE) s1 <- loadSNPData(s1.file) s1
Once we have our data loaded we can start plotting. We'll start by creating
a karyoplot using plotKaryotype
. If we were plotting more than one
chromosome, we could use plot.type=4
to get all chromosomes in a single line
one next to the other. You can get more information on the available plot types
at
the karyoploteR tutorial.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1")
And once we have a karyoplot we can start adding out data. We can plot the
B-allele frequency using plotBAF
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotBAF(kp, s1)
We can plot LRR using plotLRR
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotLRR(kp, s1)
And we can see in this plot that points with a LRR below -4 (and above 2) are plotted in red at -4 (and at 2) so we don't lose them.
We can also use the
data positioning parameters r0
and r1
to add more than one data type
on the same plot.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotBAF(kp, s1, r0=0.55, r1=1) plotLRR(kp, s1, r0=0, r1=0.45)
Finally, we can load a copy number calling made on this data and plot it.
To load the copy number calls in this file we can use the function
loadCopyNumberCalls
that will read the data, identify the correct columns and
create a GRanges object for us.
s1.calls.file <- system.file("extdata", "S1.segments.txt", package = "CopyNumberPlots", mustWork = TRUE) s1.calls <- loadCopyNumberCalls(s1.calls.file) s1.calls
And then use plotCopyNumberCalls
to add them to the previous plot.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotBAF(kp, s1, r0=0.6, r1=1) plotLRR(kp, s1, r0=0.15, r1=0.55) plotCopyNumberCalls(kp, s1.calls, r0=0, r1=0.10)
With that the main functionality of r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
is covered. It is important to take into account that since we are extending
the functionality of r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("karyoploteR")
, we can use all
karyoploteR functions to add more data and other data types into these plots.
In the following pages you will find more information on how to load
data to use with r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
, how to create other
plot types and how to customize them.
The plotting functions in r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
expect
data to be in a GRanges
with a few columns with specific names:
You can create these structures yourself, but
r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
has functions to help in loading
both raw data (mainly SNP-array and aCGH data) and copy-number calls.
The main function to load raw data is loadSNPData
. It will take either
a file or an R object (data.frame
or similar) and will load it, detect
the columns with the needed information (chromosome, position, log-ratio,
B-allele frequency) based on the column names and build a GRanges
object
ready to use by the plotting functions.
raw.data.file <- system.file("extdata", "snp.data_test.csv", package = "CopyNumberPlots", mustWork=TRUE) snps <- loadSNPData(raw.data.file) snps
When run, the function will tell us the columns it identified and will proceed
load the data. To identify the columns it will internally use a set of
regular expressions that work in most cases including on the 'Final Report'
files created by Illumina's Genome Studio. If for any reason the automatic
identification of the columns failed, it is possible to specify the exact column
names using the appropiate parameters (chr.col
, start.col
, end.col
...).
Another set of functions included in the package are functions to load
the results of copy-number calling algorithms, the copy number calls per se.
In this case we also have a generic function, loadCopyNumberCalls
, and a
few functions specialized in specific copy-number calling packages.
Again, the generic function can work with a file or an R object with a
table-like structure and will try to discover the right columns itself. It will
return a GRanges with the copy-number called segments and the optional columns
cn
for integer copy-number values, loh
for loss-of-heterozigosity regions and
segment.value
for values computed for the segments (for example, mean value
of the probes in the segment).
As an example we will generate a "random" calling
cn.data <- toGRanges(c("chr14:66459785-86459774", "chr17:68663111-88866308", "chr10:43426998-83426994", "chr3:88892741-120892733", "chr2:12464318-52464316", "chrX:7665575-27665562")) cn.data$CopyNumberInteger <- sample(c(0,1,3,4), size = 6, replace = TRUE) cn.data$LossHetero <- cn.data$CopyNumberInteger<2 cn.data
and load it
cn.calls <- loadCopyNumberCalls(cn.data) cn.calls
we can see how the columns for cn and loh were correctly identified.
To plot this objet we can call, for example plotCopyNumberCalls
.
kp <- plotKaryotype(plot.type = 1) plotCopyNumberCalls(kp, cn.calls = cn.calls)
There are other specialized functions that will load either the R object produced by copy-number calling R packages or the files produced by either R or external copy-number calling software.
Currently there are specilized functions to load the data produced by:
Once we have data loaded (or directly created by us) we can plot it.
There are two functions to plot raw data (plotBAF
and plotLRR
) and three
functions to plot the copy-number calls (plotCopyNumberCalls
,
plotCopyNumberCallsAsLines
and plotCopyNumberSummary
).
To demonstrate the raw-data plotting functions we'll use two example files included with the package
s1.file <- system.file("extdata", "S1.rawdata.txt", package = "CopyNumberPlots", mustWork = TRUE) s1 <- loadSNPData(s1.file) head(s1) s2.file <- system.file("extdata", "S2.rawdata.txt", package = "CopyNumberPlots", mustWork = TRUE) s2 <- loadSNPData(s2.file) head(s2)
To plot the B-Allele frequency (BAF) we'll use plotBAF
. We'll start creating
a karyoplot using
karyoploteR's plotKaryotype and then add the BAF values into it.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotBAF(kp, snps=s1)
We can change a number of parameters to alter the appearance of the plot. We can activate and deactivate the axis and label, we can change the color, size and glyph (shape) of the points, we can use r0 and r1 alter the vertical position of the data and in general we can use any of the standard base R plotting parameters.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotBAF(kp, snps=s1, r0=0, r1=0.2, labels = "BAF1", points.col = "orange", points.cex = 2, points.pch = 4, axis.cex = 0.3) plotBAF(kp, snps=s1, r0=0.3, r1=0.5, labels = "BAF2", points.col = "red", points.cex = 0.5, points.pch = 8, axis.cex = 0.7) plotBAF(kp, snps=s1, r0=0.6, r1=1, labels = "BAF3", points.col = "#FF552222", points.cex = 1.8, points.pch = 16, axis.cex = 0.7)
If we want to plot more than one sample, if we have the data in a list of
GRanges or in a GRanges list, plotBAF
will take care of it and plot the
different samples one below the other. It will also use the names of the list
as labels to identify the different samples.
samples <- list("Sample1"=s1, "Sample2"=s2) kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotBAF(kp, snps=samples)
The function plotLRR
is equivalent to the plotBAF
function but will plot the
data in the "lrr" column.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") kpAddBaseNumbers(kp) plotLRR(kp, snps=s1)
plotLRR
has a few specific parameters. Since the range of the data points
is not limited to [0,1] as in BAF, you can define the ymin
and ymax
values
and any point falling out of the [ymin, ymax] range will be plotted in red
within this range.
This can help us identify out-of-range data, such as the deletion arround 50Mb in the plot above or the gained region at ~220Mb.
Changing the values of ymin
and ymax
we can see a bit different picture
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") kpAddBaseNumbers(kp) plotLRR(kp, snps=s1, ymin=-1.5, ymax=1.5)
In this case we see many more points out-of-range. We can change the appearance of this points, changing their color, for example, of we can change how they are represented, using a density plot instead of raw points.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") kpAddBaseNumbers(kp) plotLRR(kp, snps=s1, ymin=-1.5, ymax=1.5, out.of.range = "density")
In this case, due to the very few points in the example, the default parameters for the density plot are not optimal. We can increase the window size to compute the density using larger windows. For example, we can set the window to 1 megabase.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotLRR(kp, snps=s1, ymin=-1.5, ymax=1.5, out.of.range = "density", density.window = 1e6)
And we can see the peaks corresponding to the accumulation of out-of-range points.
Finally, we can control the presence and color of the horizontal line marking the 0 with the "line.at.0.*" parameters.
We can also use the standard customization options with plotLRR
.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotLRR(kp, snps=s1, r0=0, r1=0.2, labels = "LRR1", points.col = "orange", points.cex = 2, points.pch = 4, axis.cex = 0.3) plotLRR(kp, snps=s1, r0=0.3, r1=0.5, labels = "LRR2", points.col = "red", points.cex = 0.5, points.pch = 8, axis.cex = 0.7, ymin=-1.5, ymax=1.5, out.of.range.col = "gold", out.of.range = "density", density.window = 10e6, density.height = 0.3) plotLRR(kp, snps=s1, r0=0.6, r1=1, labels = "LRR3", points.col = "#FF552222", points.cex = 1.8, points.pch = 16, axis.cex = 0.7)
The final data type we can plot with r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("CopyNumberPlots")
are copy number calls, that is, the results from copy-number calling algorithms.
To plot that we need a GRanges object with a at least one column of:
* "cn" for integer copy number calls
* "segment.value" for non-integer segment regional values
* "loh" a logical for loss-of-heterozygosity
As an example we'll use the data generated by ASCAT in a cancer cell line.
s1.calls.file <- system.file("extdata", "S1.segments.txt", package = "CopyNumberPlots", mustWork = TRUE) s1.calls <- loadCopyNumberCalls(s1.calls.file) s2.calls <- loadCopyNumberCalls(system.file("extdata", "S2.segments.txt", package = "CopyNumberPlots", mustWork = TRUE)) s3.calls <- loadCopyNumberCalls(system.file("extdata", "S3.segments.txt", package = "CopyNumberPlots", mustWork = TRUE)) s1.calls
The first function to plot the copy-number calls is plotCopyNumberCalls
,
which will plot them as colored rectangles over the genome. It will create
2 lines of rectangles: the top one with copy-number values and the bottom one
with loss-of-heterozygosity in blue.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes = "chr1") plotCopyNumberCalls(kp, s1.calls)
By default we'll see losses in green, 2n regions in gray and gains in
yellow-orange-red. And the LOH regions as a blue line below the CN data.
We can change the colors used with cn.colors
. This parameter will take
any value accepted by getCopyNumberColors
, including the predefined
palletes. You can find them all in the documentation of getCopyNumberColors
.
This fuction can also help us creating a legend.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotCopyNumberCalls(kp, s1.calls, cn.colors = "red_blue", loh.color = "orange", r1=0.8) cn.cols <- getCopyNumberColors(colors = "red_blue") legend("top", legend=names(cn.cols), fill = cn.cols, ncol=length(cn.cols))
As with the other plotting functions, giving it a list of GRanges will plot them all.
cn.calls <- list("Sample1"=s1.calls, "Sample2"=s2.calls, "Sample3"=s3.calls) kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") plotCopyNumberCalls(kp, cn.calls, r1=0.3)
Another option is to plot the copy-number calls as lines using the function
plotCopyNumberCallsAsLines
. We'll show a single chromosome in this case.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chr="chr1") plotCopyNumberCallsAsLines(kp, s1.calls)
In this case we can change the standard customization options and make it use
segments instead of lines using the additional parameter style
.
kp <- plotKaryotype(chr="chr1") plotCopyNumberCallsAsLines(kp, s1.calls, style = "segments")
Finally, to plot a view of the accumulation of copy number alterations we can
use plotCopyNumberSummary
. It will create a coverage plot of gains and losses
over all samples in our dataset.
cn.cols <- getCopyNumberColors(colors = "green_orange_red") kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") kpDataBackground(kp, color = cn.cols["2"], r0=0.3) plotCopyNumberCalls(kp, cn.calls, loh.height = 0, r0=0.3) plotCopyNumberSummary(kp, cn.calls, r1=0.25)
And we can change the appearance of the summary using the direction
parameter.
cn.cols <- getCopyNumberColors(colors = "green_orange_red") kp <- plotKaryotype(chromosomes="chr1") kpDataBackground(kp, color = cn.cols["2"], r0=0.3) plotCopyNumberCalls(kp, cn.calls, loh.height = 0, r0=0.3) plotCopyNumberSummary(kp, cn.calls, r1=0.25, direction = "out")
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