xGR2xGeneAnno: Function to conduct region-based enrichment analysis via...

View source: R/xGR2xGeneAnno.r

xGR2xGeneAnnoR Documentation

Function to conduct region-based enrichment analysis via crosslinked genes

Description

xGR2xGeneAnno is supposed to conduct region-based enrichment analysis for the input genomic region data (genome build h19), using crosslinked gene annotations. To do so, crosslinked genes are first defined. Currently supported built-in crosslink info is enhancer genes, eQTL genes, conformation genes and nearby genes (purely), though the user can customise it via 'crosslink.customised'; if so, it has priority over the built-in data. Enrichment analysis is then based on either Fisher's exact test or Hypergeometric test for estimating the significance of overlapped crosslinked genes. Test background can be provided; by default, the annotatable genes will be used.

Usage

xGR2xGeneAnno(
data,
background = NULL,
format = c("chr:start-end", "data.frame", "bed", "GRanges"),
build.conversion = c(NA, "hg38.to.hg19", "hg18.to.hg19"),
crosslink = c("genehancer", "PCHiC_combined", "GTEx_V6p_combined",
"nearby"),
crosslink.customised = NULL,
crosslink.top = NULL,
nearby.distance.max = 50000,
nearby.decay.kernel = c("rapid", "slow", "linear", "constant"),
nearby.decay.exponent = 2,
ontology = NA,
size.range = c(10, 2000),
min.overlap = 5,
which.distance = NULL,
test = c("hypergeo", "fisher", "binomial"),
background.annotatable.only = NULL,
p.tail = c("one-tail", "two-tails"),
p.adjust.method = c("BH", "BY", "bonferroni", "holm", "hochberg",
"hommel"),
ontology.algorithm = c("none", "pc", "elim", "lea"),
elim.pvalue = 0.01,
lea.depth = 2,
path.mode = c("all_paths", "shortest_paths", "all_shortest_paths"),
true.path.rule = F,
out.evidence = T,
out.evidence.plot = F,
verbose = T,
silent = F,
RData.location = "http://galahad.well.ox.ac.uk/bigdata",
guid = NULL
)

Arguments

data

input genomic regions (GR). If formatted as "chr:start-end" (see the next parameter 'format' below), GR should be provided as a vector in the format of 'chrN:start-end', where N is either 1-22 or X, start (or end) is genomic positional number; for example, 'chr1:13-20'. If formatted as a 'data.frame', the first three columns correspond to the chromosome (1st column), the starting chromosome position (2nd column), and the ending chromosome position (3rd column). If the format is indicated as 'bed' (browser extensible data), the same as 'data.frame' format but the position is 0-based offset from chromomose position. If the genomic regions provided are not ranged but only the single position, the ending chromosome position (3rd column) is allowed not to be provided. The data could also be an object of 'GRanges' (in this case, formatted as 'GRanges')

background

an input background containing a list of genomic regions as the test background. The file format is the same as 'data' above. By default, it is NULL meaning all annotatable genes are used as background

format

the format of the input data. It can be one of "data.frame", "chr:start-end", "bed" or "GRanges"

build.conversion

the conversion from one genome build to another. The conversions supported are "hg38.to.hg19" and "hg18.to.hg19". By default it is NA (no need to do so)

crosslink

the built-in crosslink info with a score quantifying the link of a GR to a gene. See xGR2xGenes for details

crosslink.customised

the crosslink info with a score quantifying the link of a GR to a gene. A user-input matrix or data frame with 4 columns: 1st column for genomic regions (formatted as "chr:start-end", genome build 19), 2nd column for Genes, 3rd for crosslink score (crosslinking a genomic region to a gene, such as -log10 significance level), and 4th for contexts (optional; if not provided, it will be added as 'C'). Alternatively, it can be a file containing these 4 columns. Required, otherwise it will return NULL

crosslink.top

the number of the top genes defined by 'data' will be used for test. By default, it is NULL

nearby.distance.max

the maximum distance between genes and GR. Only those genes no far way from this distance will be considered as seed genes. This parameter will influence the distance-component weights calculated for nearby GR per gene

nearby.decay.kernel

a character specifying a decay kernel function. It can be one of 'slow' for slow decay, 'linear' for linear decay, and 'rapid' for rapid decay. If no distance weight is used, please select 'constant'

nearby.decay.exponent

a numeric specifying a decay exponent. By default, it sets to 2

ontology

the ontology supported currently. By default, it is 'NA' to disable this option. Pre-built ontology and annotation data are detailed in xDefineOntology.

size.range

the minimum and maximum size of members of each term in consideration. By default, it sets to a minimum of 10 but no more than 2000

min.overlap

the minimum number of overlaps. Only those terms with members that overlap with input data at least min.overlap (3 by default) will be processed

which.distance

which terms with the distance away from the ontology root (if any) is used to restrict terms in consideration. By default, it sets to 'NULL' to consider all distances

test

the test statistic used. It can be "fisher" for using fisher's exact test, "hypergeo" for using hypergeometric test, or "binomial" for using binomial test. Fisher's exact test is to test the independence between gene group (genes belonging to a group or not) and gene annotation (genes annotated by a term or not), and thus compare sampling to the left part of background (after sampling without replacement). Hypergeometric test is to sample at random (without replacement) from the background containing annotated and non-annotated genes, and thus compare sampling to background. Unlike hypergeometric test, binomial test is to sample at random (with replacement) from the background with the constant probability. In terms of the ease of finding the significance, they are in order: hypergeometric test > fisher's exact test > binomial test. In other words, in terms of the calculated p-value, hypergeometric test < fisher's exact test < binomial test

background.annotatable.only

logical to indicate whether the background is further restricted to the annotatable. By default, it is NULL: if ontology.algorithm is not 'none', it is always TRUE; otherwise, it depends on the background (if not provided, it will be TRUE; otherwise FALSE). Surely, it can be explicitly stated

p.tail

the tail used to calculate p-values. It can be either "two-tails" for the significance based on two-tails (ie both over- and under-overrepresentation) or "one-tail" (by default) for the significance based on one tail (ie only over-representation)

p.adjust.method

the method used to adjust p-values. It can be one of "BH", "BY", "bonferroni", "holm", "hochberg" and "hommel". The first two methods "BH" (widely used) and "BY" control the false discovery rate (FDR: the expected proportion of false discoveries amongst the rejected hypotheses); the last four methods "bonferroni", "holm", "hochberg" and "hommel" are designed to give strong control of the family-wise error rate (FWER). Notes: FDR is a less stringent condition than FWER

ontology.algorithm

the algorithm used to account for the hierarchy of the ontology. It can be one of "none", "pc", "elim" and "lea". For details, please see 'Note' below

elim.pvalue

the parameter only used when "ontology.algorithm" is "elim". It is used to control how to declare a signficantly enriched term (and subsequently all genes in this term are eliminated from all its ancestors)

lea.depth

the parameter only used when "ontology.algorithm" is "lea". It is used to control how many maximum depth is used to consider the children of a term (and subsequently all genes in these children term are eliminated from the use for the recalculation of the signifance at this term)

path.mode

the mode of paths induced by vertices/nodes with input annotation data. It can be "all_paths" for all possible paths to the root, "shortest_paths" for only one path to the root (for each node in query), "all_shortest_paths" for all shortest paths to the root (i.e. for each node, find all shortest paths with the equal lengths)

true.path.rule

logical to indicate whether the true-path rule should be applied to propagate annotations. By default, it sets to false

out.evidence

logical to indicate whether the evidence should be output. By default, it sets to true

out.evidence.plot

logical to indicate whether the evidence should be plot. By default, it sets to false

verbose

logical to indicate whether the messages will be displayed in the screen. By default, it sets to false for no display

silent

logical to indicate whether the messages will be silent completely. By default, it sets to false. If true, verbose will be forced to be false

RData.location

the characters to tell the location of built-in RData files. See xRDataLoader for details

guid

a valid (5-character) Global Unique IDentifier for an OSF project. See xRDataLoader for details

Value

an object of class "eTerm", a list with following components:

  • term_info: a matrix of nTerm X 4 containing snp/gene set information, where nTerm is the number of terms, and the 4 columns are "id" (i.e. "Term ID"), "name" (i.e. "Term Name"), "namespace" and "distance"

  • annotation: a list of terms containing annotations, each term storing its annotations. Always, terms are identified by "id"

  • g: an igraph object to represent DAG

  • data: a vector containing input data in consideration. It is not always the same as the input data as only those mappable are retained

  • background: a vector containing the background data. It is not always the same as the input data as only those mappable are retained

  • overlap: a list of overlapped snp/gene sets, each storing snps overlapped between a snp/gene set and the given input data (i.e. the snps of interest). Always, gene sets are identified by "id"

  • fc: a vector containing fold changes

  • zscore: a vector containing z-scores

  • pvalue: a vector containing p-values

  • adjp: a vector containing adjusted p-values. It is the p value but after being adjusted for multiple comparisons

  • or: a vector containing odds ratio

  • CIl: a vector containing lower bound confidence interval for the odds ratio

  • CIu: a vector containing upper bound confidence interval for the odds ratio

  • cross: a matrix of nTerm X nTerm, with an on-diagnal cell for the overlapped-members observed in an individaul term, and off-diagnal cell for the overlapped-members shared betwene two terms

  • call: the call that produced this result

  • crosslink: a data frame with 3 columns ('Gene' for crosslinked genes, 'Score' for gene score summarised over its list of crosslinked GR, and 'Pval' for p-value-like significance level transformed from gene scores); restricted by crosslink.top

  • evidence: a data frame with 3 columns ('GR' for genomic regions, 'Gene' for crosslinked genes, and 'Score' for the score between the gene and the GR); restricted by crosslink.top and only works when out.evidence is true

  • gp_evidence: a ggplot object for evidence data

Note

The interpretation of the algorithms used to account for the hierarchy of the ontology is:

  • "none": does not consider the ontology hierarchy at all.

  • "lea": computers the significance of a term in terms of the significance of its children at the maximum depth (e.g. 2). Precisely, once snps are already annotated to any children terms with a more signficance than itself, then all these snps are eliminated from the use for the recalculation of the signifance at that term. The final p-values takes the maximum of the original p-value and the recalculated p-value.

  • "elim": computers the significance of a term in terms of the significance of its all children. Precisely, once snps are already annotated to a signficantly enriched term under the cutoff of e.g. pvalue<1e-2, all these snps are eliminated from the ancestors of that term).

  • "pc": requires the significance of a term not only using the whole snps as background but also using snps annotated to all its direct parents/ancestors as background. The final p-value takes the maximum of both p-values in these two calculations.

  • "Notes": the order of the number of significant terms is: "none" > "lea" > "elim" > "pc".

See Also

xGR, xGR2xGenes, xEnricherGenes

Examples

## Not run: 
RData.location <- "http://galahad.well.ox.ac.uk/bigdata"

# 1) provide the genomic regions
## load ImmunoBase
ImmunoBase <- xRDataLoader(RData.customised='ImmunoBase',
RData.location=RData.location)
## get lead SNPs reported in AS GWAS and their significance info (p-values)
gr <- ImmunoBase$AS$variant
names(gr) <- NULL
dGR <- xGR(gr, format="GRanges")

## b) perform DO enrichment analysis
## enhancer genes
eTerm <- xGR2xGeneAnno(data=dGR, format="GRanges",
crosslink="genehancer", ontology="DO", RData.location=RData.location)
## nearby genes (50kb, decaying rapidly)
eTerm <- xGR2xGeneAnno(data=dGR, format="GRanges", crosslink="nearby",
ontology="DO", nearby.distance.max=50000, nearby.decay.kernel="rapid",
RData.location=RData.location)

## c) view enrichment results for the top significant terms
xEnrichViewer(eTerm)

## d) save enrichment results to the file called 'Regions2genes_enrichments.txt'
output <- xEnrichViewer(eTerm, top_num=length(eTerm$adjp),
sortBy="adjp", details=TRUE)
utils::write.table(output, file="Regions2genes_enrichments.txt",
sep="\t", row.names=FALSE)

## e) barplot of significant enrichment results
bp <- xEnrichBarplot(eTerm, top_num=10, displayBy="fc")
print(bp)

## f) forest of significant enrichment results
gp <- xEnrichForest(eTerm, top_num=10)

## End(Not run)

hfang-bristol/XGR documentation built on Feb. 4, 2023, 7:05 a.m.