wilsonlabgroup / scMappR

the scMappR developmental package
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single-cell mapper (scMappR)

Dustin Sokolowski: dustin-dot-sokolowski-at-sickkids-dot-ca

Date: 06/27/2023

Description

Primary function of scMappR

Description of scMappR R package adapted from pre-print. The single cell mapper (scMappR) R package contains a suite of bioinformatic tools that provide experimentally relevant cell-type specific information to a list of differentially expressed genes (DEG). The function scMappR_and_pathway_analysis reranks DEGs to generate cell-type specificity scores called cell-weighted fold-changes (cwFold-change). cwFold-changes are the original fold-changes identifiend with bulk differntial analysis that are then scaled by the cell-type specificity of the DEG and the cell-type proportion of the inputted samples.

Running scMappR_and_pathway_analysis

Users input a list of DEGs (gene name, fdr adjusted p-value, log2(fold-change)), read-depth normalized counts (e.g. TPM, RFPKM, CPM etc.), and a signature matrix (a gene by cell-type matrix populated with the fold-changes of cell-type specificity) into this function. Counts do not need to be log2 adjusted. scMappR then re-weights bulk DEGs by cell-type specific expression from the signature matrix, cell-type proportions from RNA-seq deconvolution and the ratio of cell-type proportions between the two conditions to account for changes gene expression driven by cell-type proportion.

Cell-type specific pathway enrichment

With cwFold-changes calculated, scMappR uses two approaches to utilize cwFold-changes to complete cell-type specific pathway analysis. The two_method_pathway_enrichment re-ranks DEGs for each cell-type based on their cwFold-change as well as the rank-order change between cwFold-change and bulk fold-changes. The function then uses g:Profiler to test for pathway enrichment after the DEGs were re-ordered.

Identifying cell-type specific differentially expressed genes.

With cwFold-changes calculated, scMappR further identifies genes that are differentially expressed in each cell-type. These differences in expression are due to gene expression and not cell-type proportion. The cwFoldChange_evaluate function evaluates the cell-type specificity of cwFold-changes at the gene and cell-type levels.

At the level of the gene, cwFold-changes are scored so that they sum to 1. For each gene, cell-types whose cwFold-change are greater than the cell-type proportion while accounting for an abnormally high proportion of the fold change (+ 3 median absolute deviations from median cell-type specificity) are considered cell-type specific. At the level of the cell-type, bulk DEGs and cwFold-changes for each cell-type are correlated. The difference in the rank of DEG is also measured.

Secondary scMappR functionalities

processing scRNA-seq count data

The process_dgTMatrix_lists function in the scMappR package contains an automated scRNA-seq processing pipeline where users input scRNA-seq count data. These data are processed, clustered, and eventually converted into a signature matrix. scRNA-seq counts are normalized and processed using the Seurat R package (scTransform or Seurat V4 as options). We then identify cell-types markers and cell-type lavels using Seurat using gene set enrichment methods Fisher's exact-test and GSVA using gene set markers databases from CellMarker and PanglaoDB. Finally, custom scripts convert cell-type markers into signature matrices.

This function can be applied to any scRNA-seq count data, however it can only label cell-types containing human or mouse gene symbols. We we apply this pipeline to the scRNA-seq datasets stored in the panglaoDB database every 3 months, allowing us to store hundreds of pre-computed signature matrices for users to apply to their own data.

Cell-type enrichment of a generic list of genes.

The functions tissue_by_celltype_enrichment, tissue_scMappR_internal, and tissue_scMappR_custom combine these consistently processed scRNAseq count data with gene-set enrichment tools to allow for cell-type marker enrichment of a generic gene list (e.g. GWAS hits).

Reference

Sokolowski,D.J., Faykoo-Martinez,M., Erdman,L., Hou,H., Chan,C., Zhu,H., Holmes,M.M., Goldenberg,A. and Wilson,M.D. (2021) Single-cell mapper (scMappR): using scRNA-seq to infer cell-type specificities of differentially expressed genes. NAR Genomics and Bioinformatics. 3(1). Iqab011. doi 10.1093/nargab/lqab011

Installation

scMappR relies on the following dependencies which should be downlaoded/updated with scMappR automatically. Please ensure that these packages are not open when installing scMappR.

Install GSVA and pcaMethods from bioconductor first, as devtools::install_github() will automatically install CRAN dependencies.

Installation

  1. Github (Development Version)

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

if (!requireNamespace("pcaMethods", quietly = TRUE))
BiocManager::install("pcaMethods")

if (!requireNamespace("GSVA", quietly = TRUE))
BiocManager::install("GSVA")

# For R Version >= 4.2 individuals have reported needing 
# to also install preprocessCore from bioconductor
if (!requireNamespace("preprocessCore", quietly = TRUE))
    BiocManager::install("preprocessCore")

devtools::install_github("wilsonlabgroup/scMappR")
  1. CRAN (Stable Release)

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

if (!requireNamespace("pcaMethods", quietly = TRUE))
BiocManager::install("pcaMethods")

if (!requireNamespace("GSVA", quietly = TRUE))
BiocManager::install("GSVA")

# For R Version >= 4.2 individuals have reported needing 
# to also install preprocessCore from bioconductor
if (!requireNamespace("preprocessCore", quietly = TRUE))
    BiocManager::install("preprocessCore")

install.packages("scMappR")

Data Download

Link to data used in scMappR: https://github.com/wilsonlabgroup/scMappR_Data

To run scMappR locally, please download all .rda files in this data download repository. In many of the functions, the "rda_path" argument can be changed to wherever you would like to download these files to. It however assumes "~/scMappR/data".

If these functions do not detect these rda files, they will temporarily download them with the downloader R package; however, these rda files must already be downloaded to use the examples that are not automatically run.

Download signature matrices from scMappR_Data repo.


signature_matrix_download <- get_signature_matrices("all") # get all matrices and celltype labels

Most commonly used functions in scMappR.

Below describes the primary ways scMappR can measure cell-type specificity within a gene list as well as process scRNA-seq data. It is strongly reccomended to set toSave = TRUE in functions and, when appropraite, internet = TRUE. Otherwise scMappR will not print files/directories and many of the results will not be printed.

Scaling and visualizing Differentially Expressed Genes from bulk RNA-seq data

This function requires a normalized count matrix from RNA-seq (e.g. CPM, TPM, RPKM), a signature matrix such that there are fewer cell-types than there are samples, and a list of differentially expressed genes (with log2Fold-Change and adjusted P-value).

Then, it will calculate cwFold-changes before estimating if there are changes in cell-type proportion between samples. If toSave = TRUE then STV's will be visualized. Additionally, if internet = TRUE, scMappR will iteratively re-order DEGs based on their STV's and complete pathway analysis with g:ProfileR or gprofiler2.


data(PBMC_scMappR) 
bulk_DE_cors <- PBMC_example$bulk_DE_cors 
bulk_normalized <- PBMC_example$bulk_normalized 
odds_ratio_in <- PBMC_example$odds_ratio_in 
case_grep <- "_female" 
control_grep <- "_male" 
max_proportion_change <- 10 
theSpecies <- "human" 

toOut <- scMappR_and_pathway_analysis(bulk_normalized, odds_ratio_in, 
                                      bulk_DE_cors, case_grep = case_grep,
                                      control_grep = control_grep, rda_path = "", 
                                      max_proportion_change = 10, print_plots = TRUE, 
                                      plot_names = "scMappR_vignette_", theSpecies = "human", 
                                      output_directory = "scMappR_vignette_",
                                      sig_matrix_size = 3000, up_and_downregulated = TRUE, 
                                      internet = TRUE, toSave = TRUE)

Generating a signature matrix and processing scRNA-seq count data

A matrix, dgGMatrix, or list of these matrices are inputted where the rows are genes and the columns are indiviudal cells. The gene names must be human or mouse gene symbols.

This function returns the signature matrix and cell-type labels. If toSave = TRUE signature matrices, all cell-type markers, the average expression of genes from each cell-type, and cell-type labels from gsva are stored as files in the working directory. Additionally, if saveSCObject = TRUE, then the Seurat object is also saved in the working directory.


data(sm)
toProcess <- list(example = sm)
tst1 <- process_dgTMatrix_lists(toProcess, name = "testPropcess", species_name = "mouse", naming_preference = "eye",
rda_path = "~/scMappR/data", toSave = TRUE, saveSCObject = TRUE)

Generating a signature matrix with multiple scRNA-seq samples.

If there are multiple scRNA-seq runs, the process_dgTMatrix_lists function will integrate these data with the integration anchors feature in seurat. To complete this task, each scRNA-seq run should be a differnt element in the dgTMatrix_list variable.

This is covered in the "Processing scRNA-seq data with multiple scRNA-seq runs." portion of the vignette.

Cell-type markers in a list of genes.

Input a list of human or mouse gene symbols as well as a tissue of interest to intentify and visualize enriched cell-types and cell-types co-enriched by the same genes. This process is repeated for every signature matrix (i.e. scRNA-seq study) present for the inputted tissue.

Provided signature matrix.

Complete the same process but with a signature matrix and gene list provided by the user. Here, gene symbols do not have to be human or mouse, the symbols in the list must match the signature.


data(POA_example)
Signature <- POA_example$POA_Rank_signature
 rowname <- get_gene_symbol(Signature)
 rownames(Signature) <- rowname$rowname
 genes <- rownames(Signature)[1:200]

 internal <- tissue_scMappR_custom(genes,Signature,output_directory = "scMappR_Test_custom", toSave = TRUE)

Provided tissue (but not signature matrix)


data(Preoptic_Area)
Signature <- POA_example$POA_Rank_signature
rowname <- get_gene_symbol(Signature) 
rownames(Signature) <- rowname$rowname
genes <- rownames(Signature)[1:60]
 rda_path1 = "~/Documents/scMappR/data" 
internal <- tissue_scMappR_internal(genes,"mouse",output_directory = "scMappR_Test",
tissue = "hypothalamus",rda_path = rda_path1, toSave = TRUE)

Non tissue-specific

While computing custom signature matrices, there are cell-type markers across tissues and studies. These markers are stored in a gmt file format and can be used for cell-type enrichment. This may be useful if there is not a particular tissue in mind. This function inputs a list of human or mouse gene symbols.


data(POA_example)
POA_generes <- POA_example$POA_generes
POA_OR_signature <- POA_example$POA_OR_signature
POA_Rank_signature <- POA_example$POA_Rank_signature
Signature <- POA_Rank_signature
rowname <- get_gene_symbol(Signature)
rownames(Signature) <- rowname$rowname
genes <- rownames(Signature)[1:100]

enriched <- tissue_by_celltype_enrichment(gene_list = genes, species = "mouse",p_thresh = 0.05, isect_size = 3)