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1.
Biostatistics ; 25(4): 1079-1093, 2024 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38887902

ABSTRACT

Although transcriptomics data is typically used to analyze mature spliced mRNA, recent attention has focused on jointly investigating spliced and unspliced (or precursor-) mRNA, which can be used to study gene regulation and changes in gene expression production. Nonetheless, most methods for spliced/unspliced inference (such as RNA velocity tools) focus on individual samples, and rarely allow comparisons between groups of samples (e.g. healthy vs. diseased). Furthermore, this kind of inference is challenging, because spliced and unspliced mRNA abundance is characterized by a high degree of quantification uncertainty, due to the prevalence of multi-mapping reads, ie reads compatible with multiple transcripts (or genes), and/or with both their spliced and unspliced versions. Here, we present DifferentialRegulation, a Bayesian hierarchical method to discover changes between experimental conditions with respect to the relative abundance of unspliced mRNA (over the total mRNA). We model the quantification uncertainty via a latent variable approach, where reads are allocated to their gene/transcript of origin, and to the respective splice version. We designed several benchmarks where our approach shows good performance, in terms of sensitivity and error control, vs. state-of-the-art competitors. Importantly, our tool is flexible, and works with both bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing data. DifferentialRegulation is distributed as a Bioconductor R package.


Subject(s)
Bayes Theorem , Humans , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , RNA Splicing/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation , Models, Statistical
2.
Nat Methods ; 19(3): 316-322, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35277707

ABSTRACT

The rapid growth of high-throughput single-cell and single-nucleus RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq and snRNA-seq) technologies has produced a wealth of data over the past few years. The size, volume and distinctive characteristics of these data necessitate the development of new computational methods to accurately and efficiently quantify sc/snRNA-seq data into count matrices that constitute the input to downstream analyses. We introduce the alevin-fry framework for quantifying sc/snRNA-seq data. In addition to being faster and more memory frugal than other accurate quantification approaches, alevin-fry ameliorates the memory scalability and false-positive expression issues that are exhibited by other lightweight tools. We demonstrate how alevin-fry can be effectively used to quantify sc/snRNA-seq data, and also how the spliced and unspliced molecule quantification required as input for RNA velocity analyses can be seamlessly extracted from the same preprocessed data used to generate normal gene expression count matrices.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Profiling , Single-Cell Analysis , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , RNA, Small Nuclear , RNA-Seq , Sequence Analysis, RNA/methods , Single-Cell Analysis/methods , Software
3.
Bioinformatics ; 2024 Oct 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39460943

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: A crucial component of intuitive data visualization is presenting a hierarchical tree structure with interactive functions. For example, single-cell transcriptomics studies may generate gene expression values with developmental trajectories or cell lineage structures. Two common visualization methods, t-SNE and UMAP, require two separate figures to depict the distribution of cell types and gene expression data, with low-dimension projections that may not capture the hierarchical structures among cells. RESULTS: Here, we present a JavaScript framework and an interactive web app named Collapsible Tree, which presents values jointly with interactive, expandable, and collapsible lineage structures. For example, the Collapsible Tree presents cellular states and gene expression from single-cell transcriptomics within a single hierarchical plot, enabling comparisons of gene expression across lineages and subtle patterns between sub-lineages. Our framework can facilitate the exploration of complicated value patterns that are not evident in UMAP or t-SNE plots. AVAILABILITY: The Collapsible Tree web interface is available at https://collapsibletree.data2in.net. The JavaScript library source code is available at https://github.com/data2intelligence/collapsible_tree.

4.
Bioinformatics ; 40(Suppl 1): i297-i306, 2024 06 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38940130

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Short-read single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) has been used to study cellular heterogeneity, cellular fate, and transcriptional dynamics. Modeling splicing dynamics in scRNA-seq data is challenging, with inherent difficulty in even the seemingly straightforward task of elucidating the splicing status of the molecules from which sequenced fragments are drawn. This difficulty arises, in part, from the limited read length and positional biases, which substantially reduce the specificity of the sequenced fragments. As a result, the splicing status of many reads in scRNA-seq is ambiguous because of a lack of definitive evidence. We are therefore in need of methods that can recover the splicing status of ambiguous reads which, in turn, can lead to more accuracy and confidence in downstream analyses. RESULTS: We develop Forseti, a predictive model to probabilistically assign a splicing status to scRNA-seq reads. Our model has two key components. First, we train a binding affinity model to assign a probability that a given transcriptomic site is used in fragment generation. Second, we fit a robust fragment length distribution model that generalizes well across datasets deriving from different species and tissue types. Forseti combines these two trained models to predict the splicing status of the molecule of origin of reads by scoring putative fragments that associate each alignment of sequenced reads with proximate potential priming sites. Using both simulated and experimental data, we show that our model can precisely predict the splicing status of many reads and identify the true gene origin of multi-gene mapped reads. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: Forseti and the code used for producing the results are available at https://github.com/COMBINE-lab/forseti under a BSD 3-clause license.


Subject(s)
RNA Splicing , Single-Cell Analysis/methods , Sequence Analysis, RNA/methods , Humans , Software , RNA-Seq/methods , Algorithms , Single-Cell Gene Expression Analysis
5.
Bioinformatics ; 40(4)2024 03 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38579261

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Substrings of length k, commonly referred to as k-mers, play a vital role in sequence analysis. However, k-mers are limited to exact matches between sequences leading to alternative constructs. We recently introduced a class of new constructs, strobemers, that can match across substitutions and smaller insertions and deletions. Randstrobes, the most sensitive strobemer proposed in Sahlin (Effective sequence similarity detection with strobemers. Genome Res 2021a;31:2080-94. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.275648.121), has been used in several bioinformatics applications such as read classification, short-read mapping, and read overlap detection. Recently, we showed that the more pseudo-random the behavior of the construction (measured in entropy), the more efficient the seeds for sequence similarity analysis. The level of pseudo-randomness depends on the construction operators, but no study has investigated the efficacy. RESULTS: In this study, we introduce novel construction methods, including a Binary Search Tree-based approach that improves time complexity over previous methods. To our knowledge, we are also the first to address biases in construction and design three metrics for measuring bias. Our evaluation shows that our methods have favorable speed and sampling uniformity compared to existing approaches. Lastly, guided by our results, we change the seed construction in strobealign, a short-read mapper, and find that the results change substantially. We suggest combining the two results to improve strobealign's accuracy for the shortest reads in our evaluated datasets. Our evaluation highlights sampling biases that can occur and provides guidance on which operators to use when implementing randstrobes. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: All methods and evaluation benchmarks are available in a public Github repository at https://github.com/Moein-Karami/RandStrobes. The scripts for running the strobealign analysis are found at https://github.com/NBISweden/strobealign-evaluation.

6.
Bioinformatics ; 39(10)2023 10 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37802884

ABSTRACT

SUMMARY: The alevin-fry ecosystem provides a robust and growing suite of programs for single-cell data processing. However, as new single-cell technologies are introduced, as the community continues to adjust best practices for data processing, and as the alevin-fry ecosystem itself expands and grows, it is becoming increasingly important to manage the complexity of alevin-fry's single-cell preprocessing workflows while retaining the performance and flexibility that make these tools enticing. We introduce simpleaf, a program that simplifies the processing of single-cell data using tools from the alevin-fry ecosystem, and adds new functionality and capabilities, while retaining the flexibility and performance of the underlying tools. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: Simpleaf is written in Rust and released under a BSD 3-Clause license. It is freely available from its GitHub repository https://github.com/COMBINE-lab/simpleaf, and via bioconda. Documentation for simpleaf is available at https://simpleaf.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ and tutorials for simpleaf that have been developed can be accessed at https://combine-lab.github.io/alevin-fry-tutorials.


Subject(s)
Software , Documentation , Workflow
7.
Bioinformatics ; 38(10): 2773-2780, 2022 05 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35561168

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Allelic expression analysis aids in detection of cis-regulatory mechanisms of genetic variation, which produce allelic imbalance (AI) in heterozygotes. Measuring AI in bulk data lacking time or spatial resolution has the limitation that cell-type-specific (CTS), spatial- or time-dependent AI signals may be dampened or not detected. RESULTS: We introduce a statistical method airpart for identifying differential CTS AI from single-cell RNA-sequencing data, or dynamics AI from other spatially or time-resolved datasets. airpart outputs discrete partitions of data, pointing to groups of genes and cells under common mechanisms of cis-genetic regulation. In order to account for low counts in single-cell data, our method uses a Generalized Fused Lasso with Binomial likelihood for partitioning groups of cells by AI signal, and a hierarchical Bayesian model for AI statistical inference. In simulation, airpart accurately detected partitions of cell types by their AI and had lower Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) of allelic ratio estimates than existing methods. In real data, airpart identified differential allelic imbalance patterns across cell states and could be used to define trends of AI signal over spatial or time axes. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: The airpart package is available as an R/Bioconductor package at https://bioconductor.org/packages/airpart. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
Allelic Imbalance , Models, Statistical , Alleles , Bayes Theorem , Computer Simulation , Software
8.
Bioinformatics ; 38(12): 3155-3163, 2022 06 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35325039

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: In the past few years, researchers have proposed numerous indexing schemes for searching large datasets of raw sequencing experiments. Most of these proposed indexes are approximate (i.e. with one-sided errors) in order to save space. Recently, researchers have published exact indexes-Mantis, VariMerge and Bifrost-that can serve as colored de Bruijn graph representations in addition to serving as k-mer indexes. This new type of index is promising because it has the potential to support more complex analyses than simple searches. However, in order to be useful as indexes for large and growing repositories of raw sequencing data, they must scale to thousands of experiments and support efficient insertion of new data. RESULTS: In this paper, we show how to build a scalable and updatable exact raw sequence-search index. Specifically, we extend Mantis using the Bentley-Saxe transformation to support efficient updates, called Dynamic Mantis. We demonstrate Dynamic Mantis's scalability by constructing an index of ≈40K samples from SRA by adding samples one at a time to an initial index of 10K samples. Compared to VariMerge and Bifrost, Dynamic Mantis is more efficient in terms of index-construction time and memory, query time and memory and index size. In our benchmarks, VariMerge and Bifrost scaled to only 5K and 80 samples, respectively, while Dynamic Mantis scaled to more than 39K samples. Queries were over 24Ɨ faster in Mantis than in Bifrost (VariMerge does not immediately support general search queries we require). Dynamic Mantis indexes were about 2.5Ɨ smaller than Bifrost's indexes and about half as big as VariMerge's indexes. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: Dynamic Mantis implementation is available at https://github.com/splatlab/mantis/tree/mergeMSTs. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Software , Humans , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sequence Analysis, RNA , Research Personnel
9.
Bioinformatics ; 37(Suppl_1): i177-i186, 2021 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34252958

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: The construction of the compacted de Bruijn graph from collections of reference genomes is a task of increasing interest in genomic analyses. These graphs are increasingly used as sequence indices for short- and long-read alignment. Also, as we sequence and assemble a greater diversity of genomes, the colored compacted de Bruijn graph is being used more and more as the basis for efficient methods to perform comparative genomic analyses on these genomes. Therefore, time- and memory-efficient construction of the graph from reference sequences is an important problem. RESULTS: We introduce a new algorithm, implemented in the tool Cuttlefish, to construct the (colored) compacted de Bruijn graph from a collection of one or more genome references. Cuttlefish introduces a novel approach of modeling de Bruijn graph vertices as finite-state automata, and constrains these automata's state-space to enable tracking their transitioning states with very low memory usage. Cuttlefish is also fast and highly parallelizable. Experimental results demonstrate that it scales much better than existing approaches, especially as the number and the scale of the input references grow. On a typical shared-memory machine, Cuttlefish constructed the graph for 100 human genomes in under 9 h, using Ć¢ĀˆĀ¼29 GB of memory. On 11 diverse conifer plant genomes, the compacted graph was constructed by Cuttlefish in under 9 h, using Ć¢ĀˆĀ¼84 GB of memory. The only other tool completing these tasks on the hardware took over 23 h using Ć¢ĀˆĀ¼126 GB of memory, and over 16 h using Ć¢ĀˆĀ¼289 GB of memory, respectively. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: Cuttlefish is implemented in C++14, and is available under an open source license at https://github.com/COMBINE-lab/cuttlefish. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
Decapodiformes , Genomics , Algorithms , Animals , Genome, Human , Humans , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Software
10.
Bioinformatics ; 37(22): 4048-4055, 2021 11 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34117875

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Sequence alignment is one of the first steps in many modern genomic analyses, such as variant detection, transcript abundance estimation and metagenomic profiling. Unfortunately, it is often a computationally expensive procedure. As the quantity of data and wealth of different assays and applications continue to grow, the need for accurate and fast alignment tools that scale to large collections of reference sequences persists. RESULTS: In this article, we introduce PuffAligner, a fast, accurate and versatile aligner built on top of the Pufferfish index. PuffAligner is able to produce highly sensitive alignments, similar to those of Bowtie2, but much more quickly. While exhibiting similar speed to the ultrafast STAR aligner, PuffAligner requires considerably less memory to construct its index and align reads. PuffAligner strikes a desirable balance with respect to the time, space and accuracy tradeoffs made by different alignment tools and provides a promising foundation on which to test new alignment ideas over large collections of sequences. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: All the data used for preparing the results of this paper can be found with 10.5281/zenodo.4902332. PuffAligner is a free and open-source software. It is implemented in C++14 and can be obtained from https://github.com/COMBINE-lab/pufferfish/tree/cigar-strings. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Software , Genomics/methods , Metagenomics , Metagenome
11.
Bioinformatics ; 37(12): 1699-1707, 2021 Jul 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33471073

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Quantification estimates of gene expression from single-cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) data have inherent uncertainty due to reads that map to multiple genes. Many existing scRNA-seq quantification pipelines ignore multi-mapping reads and therefore underestimate expected read counts for many genes. alevin accounts for multi-mapping reads and allows for the generation of 'inferential replicates', which reflect quantification uncertainty. Previous methods have shown improved performance when incorporating these replicates into statistical analyses, but storage and use of these replicates increases computation time and memory requirements. RESULTS: We demonstrate that storing only the mean and variance from a set of inferential replicates ('compression') is sufficient to capture gene-level quantification uncertainty, while reducing disk storage to as low as 9% of original storage, and memory usage when loading data to as low as 6%. Using these values, we generate 'pseudo-inferential' replicates from a negative binomial distribution and propose a general procedure for incorporating these replicates into a proposed statistical testing framework. When applying this procedure to trajectory-based differential expression analyses, we show false positives are reduced by more than a third for genes with high levels of quantification uncertainty. We additionally extend the Swish method to incorporate pseudo-inferential replicates and demonstrate improvements in computation time and memory usage without any loss in performance. Lastly, we show that discarding multi-mapping reads can result in significant underestimation of counts for functionally important genes in a real dataset. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: makeInfReps and splitSwish are implemented in the R/Bioconductor fishpond package available at https://bioconductor.org/packages/fishpond. Analyses and simulated datasets can be found in the paper's GitHub repo at https://github.com/skvanburen/scUncertaintyPaperCode. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

12.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 17(1): e1008585, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33428615

ABSTRACT

Experimental single-cell approaches are becoming widely used for many purposes, including investigation of the dynamic behaviour of developing biological systems. Consequently, a large number of computational methods for extracting dynamic information from such data have been developed. One example is RNA velocity analysis, in which spliced and unspliced RNA abundances are jointly modeled in order to infer a 'direction of change' and thereby a future state for each cell in the gene expression space. Naturally, the accuracy and interpretability of the inferred RNA velocities depend crucially on the correctness of the estimated abundances. Here, we systematically compare five widely used quantification tools, in total yielding thirteen different quantification approaches, in terms of their estimates of spliced and unspliced RNA abundances in five experimental droplet scRNA-seq data sets. We show that there are substantial differences between the quantifications obtained from different tools, and identify typical genes for which such discrepancies are observed. We further show that these abundance differences propagate to the downstream analysis, and can have a large effect on estimated velocities as well as the biological interpretation. Our results highlight that abundance quantification is a crucial aspect of the RNA velocity analysis workflow, and that both the definition of the genomic features of interest and the quantification algorithm itself require careful consideration.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , RNA, Messenger , RNA, Small Cytoplasmic , Sequence Analysis, RNA/methods , Algorithms , Animals , Databases, Genetic , Mice , RNA, Messenger/analysis , RNA, Messenger/genetics , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , RNA, Small Cytoplasmic/analysis , RNA, Small Cytoplasmic/genetics , RNA, Small Cytoplasmic/metabolism , Single-Cell Analysis/methods
13.
Bioinformatics ; 36(Suppl_1): i292-i299, 2020 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32657394

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Droplet-based single-cell RNA-seq (dscRNA-seq) data are being generated at an unprecedented pace, and the accurate estimation of gene-level abundances for each cell is a crucial first step in most dscRNA-seq analyses. When pre-processing the raw dscRNA-seq data to generate a count matrix, care must be taken to account for the potentially large number of multi-mapping locations per read. The sparsity of dscRNA-seq data, and the strong 3' sampling bias, makes it difficult to disambiguate cases where there is no uniquely mapping read to any of the candidate target genes. RESULTS: We introduce a Bayesian framework for information sharing across cells within a sample, or across multiple modalities of data using the same sample, to improve gene quantification estimates for dscRNA-seq data. We use an anchor-based approach to connect cells with similar gene-expression patterns, and learn informative, empirical priors which we provide to alevin's gene multi-mapping resolution algorithm. This improves the quantification estimates for genes with no uniquely mapping reads (i.e. when there is no unique intra-cellular information). We show our new model improves the per cell gene-level estimates and provides a principled framework for information sharing across multiple modalities. We test our method on a combination of simulated and real datasets under various setups. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: The information sharing model is included in alevin and is implemented in C++14. It is available as open-source software, under GPL v3, at https://github.com/COMBINE-lab/salmon as of version 1.1.0.


Subject(s)
Information Dissemination , Software , Algorithms , Bayes Theorem , Gene Expression Profiling , RNA-Seq , Sequence Analysis, RNA
14.
Bioinformatics ; 36(Suppl_1): i102-i110, 2020 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32657377

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Advances in sequencing technology, inference algorithms and differential testing methodology have enabled transcript-level analysis of RNA-seq data. Yet, the inherent inferential uncertainty in transcript-level abundance estimation, even among the most accurate approaches, means that robust transcript-level analysis often remains a challenge. Conversely, gene-level analysis remains a common and robust approach for understanding RNA-seq data, but it coarsens the resulting analysis to the level of genes, even if the data strongly support specific transcript-level effects. RESULTS: We introduce a new data-driven approach for grouping together transcripts in an experiment based on their inferential uncertainty. Transcripts that share large numbers of ambiguously-mapping fragments with other transcripts, in complex patterns, often cannot have their abundances confidently estimated. Yet, the total transcriptional output of that group of transcripts will have greatly reduced inferential uncertainty, thus allowing more robust and confident downstream analysis. Our approach, implemented in the tool terminus, groups together transcripts in a data-driven manner allowing transcript-level analysis where it can be confidently supported, and deriving transcriptional groups where the inferential uncertainty is too high to support a transcript-level result. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: Terminus is implemented in Rust, and is freely available and open source. It can be obtained from https://github.com/COMBINE-lab/Terminus. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Profiling , Software , Algorithms , RNA-Seq , Sequence Analysis, RNA
15.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 16(2): e1007664, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32097405

ABSTRACT

Correct annotation metadata is critical for reproducible and accurate RNA-seq analysis. When files are shared publicly or among collaborators with incorrect or missing annotation metadata, it becomes difficult or impossible to reproduce bioinformatic analyses from raw data. It also makes it more difficult to locate the transcriptomic features, such as transcripts or genes, in their proper genomic context, which is necessary for overlapping expression data with other datasets. We provide a solution in the form of an R/Bioconductor package tximeta that performs numerous annotation and metadata gathering tasks automatically on behalf of users during the import of transcript quantification files. The correct reference transcriptome is identified via a hashed checksum stored in the quantification output, and key transcript databases are downloaded and cached locally. The computational paradigm of automatically adding annotation metadata based on reference sequence checksums can greatly facilitate genomic workflows, by helping to reduce overhead during bioinformatic analyses, preventing costly bioinformatic mistakes, and promoting computational reproducibility. The tximeta package is available at https://bioconductor.org/packages/tximeta.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Gene Expression Profiling , RNA-Seq , Algorithms , Animals , Drosophila melanogaster , Genomics , Humans , Mice , Models, Statistical , Pattern Recognition, Automated , Programming Languages , Reproducibility of Results , Software , Transcriptome
16.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 47(18): e105, 2019 10 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31372651

ABSTRACT

A primary challenge in the analysis of RNA-seq data is to identify differentially expressed genes or transcripts while controlling for technical biases. Ideally, a statistical testing procedure should incorporate the inherent uncertainty of the abundance estimates arising from the quantification step. Most popular methods for RNA-seq differential expression analysis fit a parametric model to the counts for each gene or transcript, and a subset of methods can incorporate uncertainty. Previous work has shown that nonparametric models for RNA-seq differential expression may have better control of the false discovery rate, and adapt well to new data types without requiring reformulation of a parametric model. Existing nonparametric models do not take into account inferential uncertainty, leading to an inflated false discovery rate, in particular at the transcript level. We propose a nonparametric model for differential expression analysis using inferential replicate counts, extending the existing SAMseq method to account for inferential uncertainty. We compare our method, Swish, with popular differential expression analysis methods. Swish has improved control of the false discovery rate, in particular for transcripts with high inferential uncertainty. We apply Swish to a single-cell RNA-seq dataset, assessing differential expression between sub-populations of cells, and compare its performance to the Wilcoxon test.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Profiling/methods , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , Sequence Analysis, RNA/methods , Single-Cell Analysis/methods , Algorithms , Cell Lineage/genetics , Gene Expression/genetics , Humans , RNA/genetics , Software
17.
Nat Methods ; 14(4): 417-419, 2017 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28263959

ABSTRACT

We introduce Salmon, a lightweight method for quantifying transcript abundance from RNA-seq reads. Salmon combines a new dual-phase parallel inference algorithm and feature-rich bias models with an ultra-fast read mapping procedure. It is the first transcriptome-wide quantifier to correct for fragment GC-content bias, which, as we demonstrate here, substantially improves the accuracy of abundance estimates and the sensitivity of subsequent differential expression analysis.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Sequence Analysis, RNA/methods , Base Composition , Bayes Theorem , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Gene Expression Profiling/statistics & numerical data , Sequence Analysis, RNA/statistics & numerical data
18.
Bioinformatics ; 35(14): i136-i144, 2019 07 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31510649

ABSTRACT

SUMMARY: With the advancements of high-throughput single-cell RNA-sequencing protocols, there has been a rapid increase in the tools available to perform an array of analyses on the gene expression data that results from such studies. For example, there exist methods for pseudo-time series analysis, differential cell usage, cell-type detection RNA-velocity in single cells, etc. Most analysis pipelines validate their results using known marker genes (which are not widely available for all types of analysis) and by using simulated data from gene-count-level simulators. Typically, the impact of using different read-alignment or unique molecular identifier (UMI) deduplication methods has not been widely explored. Assessments based on simulation tend to start at the level of assuming a simulated count matrix, ignoring the effect that different approaches for resolving UMI counts from the raw read data may produce. Here, we present minnow, a comprehensive sequence-level droplet-based single-cell RNA-sequencing (dscRNA-seq) experiment simulation framework. Minnow accounts for important sequence-level characteristics of experimental scRNA-seq datasets and models effects such as polymerase chain reaction amplification, cellular barcodes (CB) and UMI selection and sequence fragmentation and sequencing. It also closely matches the gene-level ambiguity characteristics that are observed in real scRNA-seq experiments. Using minnow, we explore the performance of some common processing pipelines to produce gene-by-cell count matrices from droplet-bases scRNA-seq data, demonstrate the effect that realistic levels of gene-level sequence ambiguity can have on accurate quantification and show a typical use-case of minnow in assessing the output generated by different quantification pipelines on the simulated experiment. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Single-Cell Analysis , Gene Expression Profiling , Sequence Analysis, RNA , Software
19.
Genome Res ; 26(8): 1134-44, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27252236

ABSTRACT

TransRate is a tool for reference-free quality assessment of de novo transcriptome assemblies. Using only the sequenced reads and the assembly as input, we show that multiple common artifacts of de novo transcriptome assembly can be readily detected. These include chimeras, structural errors, incomplete assembly, and base errors. TransRate evaluates these errors to produce a diagnostic quality score for each contig, and these contig scores are integrated to evaluate whole assemblies. Thus, TransRate can be used for de novo assembly filtering and optimization as well as comparison of assemblies generated using different methods from the same input reads. Applying the method to a data set of 155 published de novo transcriptome assemblies, we deconstruct the contribution that assembly method, read length, read quantity, and read quality make to the accuracy of de novo transcriptome assemblies and reveal that variance in the quality of the input data explains 43% of the variance in the quality of published de novo transcriptome assemblies. Because TransRate is reference-free, it is suitable for assessment of assemblies of all types of RNA, including assemblies of long noncoding RNA, rRNA, mRNA, and mixed RNA samples.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Transcriptome/genetics , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , RNA, Long Noncoding/genetics , RNA, Messenger/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Software
20.
Bioinformatics ; 34(19): 3265-3272, 2018 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29746620

ABSTRACT

Motivation: De novo transcriptome analysis using RNA-seq offers a promising means to study gene expression in non-model organisms. Yet, the difficulty of transcriptome assembly means that the contigs provided by the assembler often represent a fractured and incomplete view of the transcriptome, complicating downstream analysis. We introduce Grouper, a new method for clustering contigs from de novo assemblies that are likely to belong to the same transcripts and genes; these groups can subsequently be analyzed more robustly. When provided with access to the genome of a related organism, Grouper can transfer annotations to the de novo assembly, further improving the clustering. Results: On de novo assemblies from four different species, we show that Grouper is able to accurately cluster a larger number of contigs than the existing state-of-the-art method. The Grouper pipeline is able to map greater than 10% more reads against the contigs, leading to accurate downstream differential expression analyses. The labeling module, in the presence of a closely related annotated genome, can efficiently transfer annotations to the contigs and use this information to further improve clustering. Overall, Grouper provides a complete and efficient pipeline for processing de novo transcriptomic assemblies. Availability and implementation: The Grouper software is freely available at https://github.com/COMBINE-lab/grouper under the 2-clause BSD license. Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Cluster Analysis , Transcriptome , Computational Biology , Gene Expression Profiling , Molecular Sequence Annotation
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