scholarly journals ascend: R package for analysis of single cell RNA-seq data

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Senabouth ◽  
Samuel W Lukowski ◽  
Jose Alquicira Hernandez ◽  
Stacey Andersen ◽  
Xin Mei ◽  
...  

AbstractSummaryascend is an R package comprised of fast, streamlined analysis functions optimized to address the statistical challenges of single cell RNA-seq. The package incorporates novel and established methods to provide a flexible framework to perform filtering, quality control, normalization, dimension reduction, clustering, differential expression and a wide-range of plotting. ascend is designed to work with scRNA-seq data generated by any high-throughput platform, and includes functions to convert data objects between software packages.AvailabilityThe R package and associated vignettes are freely available at https://github.com/IMB-Computational-Genomics-Lab/[email protected] informationAn example dataset is available at ArrayExpress, accession number E-MTAB-6108

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo Wang ◽  
Daniele Ramazzotti ◽  
Luca De Sano ◽  
Junjie Zhu ◽  
Emma Pierson ◽  
...  

AbstractMotivationWe here present SIMLR (Single-cell Interpretation via Multi-kernel LeaRning), an open-source tool that implements a novel framework to learn a cell-to-cell similarity measure from single-cell RNA-seq data. SIMLR can be effectively used to perform tasks such as dimension reduction, clustering, and visualization of heterogeneous populations of cells. SIMLR was benchmarked against state-of-the-art methods for these three tasks on several public datasets, showing it to be scalable and capable of greatly improving clustering performance, as well as providing valuable insights by making the data more interpretable via better a visualization.Availability and ImplementationSIMLR is available on GitHub in both R and MATLAB implementations. Furthermore, it is also available as an R package on [email protected] or [email protected] InformationSupplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Author(s):  
Irzam Sarfraz ◽  
Muhammad Asif ◽  
Joshua D Campbell

Abstract Motivation R Experiment objects such as the SummarizedExperiment or SingleCellExperiment are data containers for storing one or more matrix-like assays along with associated row and column data. These objects have been used to facilitate the storage and analysis of high-throughput genomic data generated from technologies such as single-cell RNA sequencing. One common computational task in many genomics analysis workflows is to perform subsetting of the data matrix before applying down-stream analytical methods. For example, one may need to subset the columns of the assay matrix to exclude poor-quality samples or subset the rows of the matrix to select the most variable features. Traditionally, a second object is created that contains the desired subset of assay from the original object. However, this approach is inefficient as it requires the creation of an additional object containing a copy of the original assay and leads to challenges with data provenance. Results To overcome these challenges, we developed an R package called ExperimentSubset, which is a data container that implements classes for efficient storage and streamlined retrieval of assays that have been subsetted by rows and/or columns. These classes are able to inherently provide data provenance by maintaining the relationship between the subsetted and parent assays. We demonstrate the utility of this package on a single-cell RNA-seq dataset by storing and retrieving subsets at different stages of the analysis while maintaining a lower memory footprint. Overall, the ExperimentSubset is a flexible container for the efficient management of subsets. Availability and implementation ExperimentSubset package is available at Bioconductor: https://bioconductor.org/packages/ExperimentSubset/ and Github: https://github.com/campbio/ExperimentSubset. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhun Miao ◽  
Ke Deng ◽  
Xiaowo Wang ◽  
Xuegong Zhang

AbstractSummaryThe excessive amount of zeros in single-cell RNA-seq data include “real” zeros due to the on-off nature of gene transcription in single cells and “dropout” zeros due to technical reasons. Existing differential expression (DE) analysis methods cannot distinguish these two types of zeros. We developed an R package DEsingle which employed Zero-Inflated Negative Binomial model to estimate the proportion of real and dropout zeros and to define and detect 3 types of DE genes in single-cell RNA-seq data with higher accuracy.Availability and ImplementationThe R package DEsingle is freely available at https://github.com/miaozhun/DEsingle and is under Bioconductor’s consideration [email protected] informationSupplementary data are available at bioRxiv online.


2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (24) ◽  
pp. 5155-5162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengzhong Ye ◽  
Terence P Speed ◽  
Agus Salim

Abstract Motivation Dropout is a common phenomenon in single-cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) data, and when left unaddressed it affects the validity of the statistical analyses. Despite this, few current methods for differential expression (DE) analysis of scRNA-seq data explicitly model the process that gives rise to the dropout events. We develop DECENT, a method for DE analysis of scRNA-seq data that explicitly and accurately models the molecule capture process in scRNA-seq experiments. Results We show that DECENT demonstrates improved DE performance over existing DE methods that do not explicitly model dropout. This improvement is consistently observed across several public scRNA-seq datasets generated using different technological platforms. The gain in improvement is especially large when the capture process is overdispersed. DECENT maintains type I error well while achieving better sensitivity. Its performance without spike-ins is almost as good as when spike-ins are used to calibrate the capture model. Availability and implementation The method is implemented as a publicly available R package available from https://github.com/cz-ye/DECENT. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Pirkl ◽  
Niko Beerenwinkel

AbstractMotivationNew technologies allow for the elaborate measurement of different traits of single cells. These data promise to elucidate intra-cellular networks in unprecedented detail and further help to improve treatment of diseases like cancer. However, cell populations can be very heterogeneous.ResultsWe developed a mixture of Nested Effects Models (M&NEM) for single-cell data to simultaneously identify different cellular sub-populations and their corresponding causal networks to explain the heterogeneity in a cell population. For inference, we assign each cell to a network with a certain probability and iteratively update the optimal networks and cell probabilities in an Expectation Maximization scheme. We validate our method in the controlled setting of a simulation study and apply it to three data sets of pooled CRISPR screens generated previously by two novel experimental techniques, namely Crop-Seq and Perturb-Seq.AvailabilityThe mixture Nested Effects Model (M&NEM) is available as the R-package mnem at https://github.com/cbgethz/mnem/[email protected], [email protected] informationSupplementary data are available.online.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alemu Takele Assefa ◽  
Jo Vandesompele ◽  
Olivier Thas

SummarySPsimSeq is a semi-parametric simulation method for bulk and single cell RNA sequencing data. It simulates data from a good estimate of the actual distribution of a given real RNA-seq dataset. In contrast to existing approaches that assume a particular data distribution, our method constructs an empirical distribution of gene expression data from a given source RNA-seq experiment to faithfully capture the data characteristics of real data. Importantly, our method can be used to simulate a wide range of scenarios, such as single or multiple biological groups, systematic variations (e.g. confounding batch effects), and different sample sizes. It can also be used to simulate different gene expression units resulting from different library preparation protocols, such as read counts or UMI counts.Availability and implementationThe R package and associated documentation is available from https://github.com/CenterForStatistics-UGent/SPsimSeq.Supplementary informationSupplementary data are available at bioRχiv online.


Author(s):  
Tobias Tekath ◽  
Martin Dugas

Abstract Motivation Each year, the number of published bulk and single-cell RNA-seq data sets is growing exponentially. Studies analyzing such data are commonly looking at gene-level differences, while the collected RNA-seq data inherently represents reads of transcript isoform sequences. Utilizing transcriptomic quantifiers, RNA-seq reads can be attributed to specific isoforms, allowing for analysis of transcript-level differences. A differential transcript usage (DTU) analysis is testing for proportional differences in a gene’s transcript composition, and has been of rising interest for many research questions, such as analysis of differential splicing or cell type identification. Results We present the R package DTUrtle, the first DTU analysis workflow for both bulk and single-cell RNA-seq data sets, and the first package to conduct a ‘classical’ DTU analysis in a single-cell context. DTUrtle extends established statistical frameworks, offers various result aggregation and visualization options and a novel detection probability score for tagged-end data. It has been successfully applied to bulk and single-cell RNA-seq data of human and mouse, confirming and extending key results. Additionally, we present novel potential DTU applications like the identification of cell type specific transcript isoforms as biomarkers. Availability The R package DTUrtle is available at https://github.com/TobiTekath/DTUrtle with extensive vignettes and documentation at https://tobitekath.github.io/DTUrtle/. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (24) ◽  
pp. 5306-5308
Author(s):  
Qi Liu ◽  
Quanhu Sheng ◽  
Jie Ping ◽  
Marisol Adelina Ramirez ◽  
Ken S Lau ◽  
...  

Abstract Summary Single cell RNA sequencing is a revolutionary technique to characterize inter-cellular transcriptomics heterogeneity. However, the data are noise-prone because gene expression is often driven by both technical artifacts and genuine biological variations. Proper disentanglement of these two effects is critical to prevent spurious results. While several tools exist to detect and remove low-quality cells in one single cell RNA-seq dataset, there is lack of approach to examining consistency between sample sets and detecting systematic biases, batch effects and outliers. We present scRNABatchQC, an R package to compare multiple sample sets simultaneously over numerous technical and biological features, which gives valuable hints to distinguish technical artifact from biological variations. scRNABatchQC helps identify and systematically characterize sources of variability in single cell transcriptome data. The examination of consistency across datasets allows visual detection of biases and outliers. Availability and implementation scRNABatchQC is freely available at https://github.com/liuqivandy/scRNABatchQC as an R package. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (10) ◽  
pp. 3115-3123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teng Fei ◽  
Tianwei Yu

Abstract Motivation Batch effect is a frequent challenge in deep sequencing data analysis that can lead to misleading conclusions. Existing methods do not correct batch effects satisfactorily, especially with single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data. Results We present scBatch, a numerical algorithm for batch-effect correction on bulk and single-cell RNA-seq data with emphasis on improving both clustering and gene differential expression analysis. scBatch is not restricted by assumptions on the mechanism of batch-effect generation. As shown in simulations and real data analyses, scBatch outperforms benchmark batch-effect correction methods. Availability and implementation The R package is available at github.com/tengfei-emory/scBatch. The code to generate results and figures in this article is available at github.com/tengfei-emory/scBatch-paper-scripts. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Author(s):  
Giacomo Baruzzo ◽  
Ilaria Patuzzi ◽  
Barbara Di Camillo

Abstract Motivation Single cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) count data show many differences compared with bulk RNA-seq count data, making the application of many RNA-seq pre-processing/analysis methods not straightforward or even inappropriate. For this reason, the development of new methods for handling scRNA-seq count data is currently one of the most active research fields in bioinformatics. To help the development of such new methods, the availability of simulated data could play a pivotal role. However, only few scRNA-seq count data simulators are available, often showing poor or not demonstrated similarity with real data. Results In this article we present SPARSim, a scRNA-seq count data simulator based on a Gamma-Multivariate Hypergeometric model. We demonstrate that SPARSim allows to generate count data that resemble real data in terms of count intensity, variability and sparsity, performing comparably or better than one of the most used scRNA-seq simulator, Splat. In particular, SPARSim simulated count matrices well resemble the distribution of zeros across different expression intensities observed in real count data. Availability and implementation SPARSim R package is freely available at http://sysbiobig.dei.unipd.it/? q=SPARSim and at https://gitlab.com/sysbiobig/sparsim. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


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