biobroom Vignette

About biobroom

The biobroom package contains methods for converting standard objects in Bioconductor into a "tidy format". It serves as a complement to the popular broom package, and follows the same division (tidy/augment/glance) of tidying methods.

"Tidy data" is a data analysis paradigm that focuses on keeping data formatted as a single observation per row of a data table. For further information, please see Hadley Wickham's seminal paper on the subject. "Tidy" is not a normative statement about the quality of an object's structure. Rather, it is a technical specification about the choice of rows and columns. A tidied data frame is not "better" than an S4 object; it simply allows analysis with a different set of tools.

Tidying data makes it easy to recombine, reshape and visualize bioinformatics analyses. Objects that can be tidied include

We are currently working on adding more methods to existing Bioconductor objects. If any bugs are found please contact the authors or visit our github page. Otherwise, any questions can be answered on the Bioconductor support site.

Installation

knitr::opts_chunk$set(fig.width=12, fig.height=6, out.width='700in', out.height='350in', 
                      echo=TRUE, warning=FALSE, message=FALSE, cache=FALSE, dev='png')

The biobroom package can be installed by typing in a R terminal:

if (!requireNamespace("BiocManager", quietly=TRUE))
    install.packages("BiocManager")
BiocManager::install("biobroom")

To find out more about the provided objects:

library(biobroom)
?edgeR_tidiers
?DESeq2_tidiers
?limma_tidiers
?ExpressionSet_tidiers
?MSnSet_tidiers
?qvalue_tidiers

Examples

qvalue object

The qvalue package is a popular package to estimate q-values and local false discovery rates. To get started, we can load the hedenfalk dataset included in the qvalue package:

library(qvalue)
data(hedenfalk)

qobj <- qvalue(hedenfalk$p)
names(qobj)

qobj is a qvalue object, generated from the p-values contained in the hedenfalk dataset. If we wanted to use a package such as dplyr or ggplot, we would need to convert the results into a data frame. The biobroom package makes this conversion easy by using the tidy, augment and glance functions:

Applying these functions to qobj:

library(biobroom)
# use tidy/augment/glance to restructure the qvalue object
head(tidy(qobj))
head(augment(qobj))
head(glance(qobj))

The original data, or in this example the gene names, can be inputted into augment using the data argument:

# create sample names
df <- data.frame(gene = 1:length(hedenfalk$p))
head(augment(qobj, data = df))

The tidied data can be used to easily create plots:

library(ggplot2)
# use augmented data to compare p-values to q-values
ggplot(augment(qobj), aes(p.value, q.value)) + geom_point() +
  ggtitle("Simulated P-values versus Computed Q-values") + theme_bw()

Additionally, we can extract out important information such as significant genes under a false discovery rate threshold:

library(dplyr)

# Find significant genes under 0.05 threshold
sig.genes <- augment(qobj) %>% filter(q.value < 0.05)
head(sig.genes)

DESeq2 objects

To demonstrate tidying on DESeq2 objects we have used the published airway RNA-Seq experiment, available as a package from Bioconductor:

if (!requireNamespace("BiocManager", quietly=TRUE))
    install.packages("BiocManager")
BiocManager::install("airway")

Import the airway dataset:

library(DESeq2)
library(airway)

data(airway)
airway_se <- airway

airway_se is a SummarizedExperiment object, which is a type of object used by the DESeq2 package. Next, we create a DESeqDataSet object and show the output of tidying this object:

airway_dds <- DESeqDataSet(airway_se, design = ~cell + dex)

head(tidy(airway_dds))

Only the gene counts are outputted since there has been no analysis performed. We perform an analysis on the data and then tidy the resulting object:

# differential expression analysis
deseq <- DESeq(airway_dds)
results <- results(deseq)
# tidy results
tidy_results <- tidy(results)
head(tidy_results)

As an example to show how easy it is to manipulate the resulting object, tidy_results, we can use ggplot2 to create a volcano plot of the p-values:

ggplot(tidy_results, aes(x=estimate, y=log(p.value),
                         color=log(baseMean))) + geom_point(alpha=0.5) +
  ggtitle("Volcano Plot For Airway Data via DESeq2") + theme_bw()

edgeR objects

Here we use the hammer dataset included in biobroom package. edgeR can be used to perform differential expression analysis as follows:

library(edgeR)
data(hammer)

hammer.counts <- Biobase::exprs(hammer)[, 1:4]
hammer.treatment <- Biobase::phenoData(hammer)$protocol[1:4]

y <- DGEList(counts=hammer.counts,group=hammer.treatment)
y <- calcNormFactors(y)
y <- estimateCommonDisp(y)
y <- estimateTagwiseDisp(y)
et <- exactTest(y)

The results of the analysis are stored in et, which is an DGEExact object. We can tidy this object using biobroom:

head(tidy(et))

glance shows a summary of the experiment: the number of genes found significant (at a specified alpha), and which contrasts were compared to get the results.

glance(et, alpha = 0.05)

Additionally, we can can easily manipulate the resulting object and create a volcano plot of the p-values using ggplot2:

ggplot(tidy(et), aes(x=estimate, y=log(p.value), color=logCPM)) +
  geom_point(alpha=0.5) + ggtitle("Volcano Plot for Hammer Data via EdgeR") +
  theme_bw()

limma objects

To demonstrate how biobroom works with limma objects, we generate some simulated data to test the tidier for limma objects.

# create random data and design
dat <- matrix(rnorm(1000), ncol=4)
dat[, 1:2] <- dat[, 1:2] + .5  # add an effect
rownames(dat) <- paste0("g", 1:nrow(dat))
des <- data.frame(treatment = c("a", "a", "b", "b"),
                  confounding = rnorm(4))

We then use lmFit and eBayes (functions included in limma) to fit a linear model and use tidy to convert the resulting object into tidy format:

lfit <- lmFit(dat, model.matrix(~ treatment + confounding, des))
eb <- eBayes(lfit)

head(tidy(lfit))
head(tidy(eb))

Analysis can easily be performed from the tidied data. The package ggplot2 can be used to make a volcano plot of the p-values:

ggplot(tidy(eb), aes(x=estimate, y=log(p.value), color=statistic)) + 
  geom_point() + ggtitle("Nested Volcano Plots for Simulated Data Processed with limma") +
  theme_bw()

ExpressionSet objects

tidy can also be run directly on ExpressionSet objects, as described in another popular Bioconductor package Biobase. The hammer dataset we used above (which is included in the biobroom package) is an ExpressionSet object, so we'll use that to demonstrate.

library(Biobase)

head(tidy(hammer))

We can add the phenotype information by using the argument addPheno:

head(tidy(hammer, addPheno = TRUE))

Now we can easily visualize the distribution of counts for each protocol by using ggplot2:

ggplot(tidy(hammer, addPheno=TRUE), aes(x=protocol, y=log(value))) +
  geom_boxplot() + ggtitle("Boxplot Showing Effect of Protocol on Expression")

MSnSet Objects

tidy can also be run directly on MSnSet objects from MSnbase, which as specialised containers for quantitative proteomics data.

library(MSnbase)
data(msnset)

head(tidy(msnset))

head(tidy(msnset, addPheno = TRUE))

Note on returned values

All biobroom tidy and augment methods return a tbl_df by default (this prevents them from printing many rows at once, while still acting like a traditional data.frame). To change this to a data.frame or data.table, you can set the biobroom.return option:

options(biobroom.return = "data.frame")
options(biobroom.return = "data.table")


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biobroom documentation built on Nov. 8, 2020, 5:20 p.m.