This vignette provides a description of how to use the GENESIS package to analyze sequence data. We demonstrate the use of mixed models for genetic association testing, as PC-AiR PCs can be used as fixed effect covariates to adjust for population stratification, and a kinship matrix (or genetic relationship matrix) estimated from PC-Relate can be used to account for phenotype correlation due to genetic similarity among samples. To illustrate the methods, we use a small subset of data from 1000 Genomes Phase 3.
The first step is to convert a VCF file into the GDS file format used by GENESIS. We use the SeqArray package, which defines the extended GDS format used to capture all data in a VCF file. If the VCF files are split by chromosome, they can be combined into a single GDS file.
library(SeqArray)
vcffile <- system.file("extdata", "1KG",
paste0("1KG_phase3_subset_chr", 1:22, ".vcf.gz"),
package="GENESIS")
gdsfile <- tempfile()
seqVCF2GDS(vcffile, gdsfile, verbose=FALSE)
gds <- seqOpen(gdsfile)
gds
## Object of class "SeqVarGDSClass"
## File: /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.20-bioc/tmpdir/RtmpXQbHa4/file3f92d2541ca9ba (419.7K)
## + [ ] *
## |--+ description [ ] *
## |--+ sample.id { Str8 100 LZMA_ra(37.8%), 309B } *
## |--+ variant.id { Int32 24639 LZMA_ra(7.99%), 7.7K } *
## |--+ position { Int32 24639 LZMA_ra(71.8%), 69.1K } *
## |--+ chromosome { Str8 24639 LZMA_ra(0.36%), 237B } *
## |--+ allele { Str8 24639 LZMA_ra(19.2%), 20.0K } *
## |--+ genotype [ ] *
## | |--+ data { Bit2 2x100x24657 LZMA_ra(18.7%), 224.9K } *
## | |--+ extra.index { Int32 3x0 LZMA_ra, 18B } *
## | \--+ extra { Int16 0 LZMA_ra, 18B }
## |--+ phase [ ]
## | |--+ data { Bit1 100x24639 LZMA_ra(0.06%), 201B } *
## | |--+ extra.index { Int32 3x0 LZMA_ra, 18B } *
## | \--+ extra { Bit1 0 LZMA_ra, 18B }
## |--+ annotation [ ]
## | |--+ id { Str8 24639 LZMA_ra(37.3%), 87.8K } *
## | |--+ qual { Float32 24639 LZMA_ra(0.17%), 173B } *
## | |--+ filter { Int32,factor 24639 LZMA_ra(0.17%), 173B } *
## | |--+ info [ ]
## | \--+ format [ ]
## \--+ sample.annotation [ ]
Next, we combine the GDS file with information about the samples, which we store in an AnnotatedDataFrame
(defined in the Biobase package). An AnnotatedDataFrame
combines a data.frame
with metadata describing each column. A SeqVarData
object (defined in the SeqVarTools package), contains both an open GDS file and an AnnotatedDataFrame
describing the samples. The sample.id
column in the AnnotatedDataFrame
must match the sample.id
node in the GDS file.
library(GENESIS)
library(Biobase)
library(SeqVarTools)
data(sample_annotation_1KG)
annot <- sample_annotation_1KG
head(annot)
## sample.id Population sex
## 1 HG00110 GBR F
## 2 HG00116 GBR M
## 3 HG00120 GBR F
## 4 HG00128 GBR F
## 5 HG00136 GBR M
## 6 HG00137 GBR F
# simulate some phenotype data
set.seed(4)
annot$outcome <- rnorm(nrow(annot))
metadata <- data.frame(labelDescription=c("sample id",
"1000 genomes population",
"sex",
"simulated phenotype"),
row.names=names(annot))
annot <- AnnotatedDataFrame(annot, metadata)
all.equal(annot$sample.id, seqGetData(gds, "sample.id"))
## [1] TRUE
seqData <- SeqVarData(gds, sampleData=annot)
The first step for association testing is to fit the model under the null hypothesis that each SNP has no effect. This null model contains all of the covariates, including ancestry representative PCs, as well as any random effects, such as a polygenic effect due to genetic relatedness, but it does not include any SNP genotype terms as fixed effects.
The type of model fit depends on the arguments to fitNullModel
. Including a cov.mat
argument will result in a mixed model, while omitting this argument will run a standard linear model. A logistic model is specified with family="binomial"
. In the case of a logistic model and a covariance matrix, fitNullModel
will use the GMMAT algorithm. Including a group.var
argument will allow heteroscedastic variance (for linear models or linear mixed models only).
# add PCs to sample annotation in SeqVarData object
annot <- AnnotatedDataFrame(pc.df)
sampleData(seqData) <- annot
# covariance matrix from pcrelate output
grm <- pcrelateToMatrix(pcrel, scaleKin=2)
# fit the null model
nullmod <- fitNullModel(seqData, outcome="outcome",
covars=c("sex", "Population", paste0("PC", 1:2)),
cov.mat=grm, verbose=FALSE)
To run a test using the null model, we first create an iterator object specifying how we want variants to be selected. (See the documentation for the SeqVarIterator
class in SeqVarTools for more details.) For single-variant tests (GWAS), it is common to use a block iterator that reads variants in blocks (default is 10,000 variants per block).
For example purposes, we restrict our analysis to chromosome 1. The seqSetFilter
function can be used to restrict the set of variants tested in other ways (e.g., variants that pass a quality filter).
# select chromosome 1
seqSetFilterChrom(seqData, include=1)
## # of selected variants: 1,120
iterator <- SeqVarBlockIterator(seqData, verbose=FALSE)
assoc <- assocTestSingle(iterator, nullmod, verbose=FALSE,
BPPARAM=BiocParallel::SerialParam())
head(assoc)
## variant.id chr pos allele.index n.obs freq MAC Score Score.SE
## 1 1 1 828740 1 100 0.035 7 0.01852643 2.810783
## 2 2 1 913272 1 100 0.010 2 -0.19822201 1.378855
## 3 3 1 1171878 1 100 0.005 1 0.05842004 1.016472
## 4 4 1 1242288 1 100 0.025 5 -0.63222028 2.152144
## 5 5 1 1378837 1 100 0.670 66 -10.25156898 6.031003
## 6 6 1 1403820 1 100 0.015 3 2.30811833 1.689624
## Score.Stat Score.pval Est Est.SE PVE
## 1 0.00659120 0.99474102 0.002344969 0.3557727 5.111049e-07
## 2 -0.14375838 0.88569127 -0.104259227 0.7252393 2.431350e-04
## 3 0.05747337 0.95416812 0.056542030 0.9837953 3.886103e-05
## 4 -0.29376304 0.76893898 -0.136497869 0.4646530 1.015256e-03
## 5 -1.69981158 0.08916637 -0.281845581 0.1658099 3.399246e-02
## 6 1.36605427 0.17192193 0.808495931 0.5918476 2.195417e-02
The default test is a Score test, but the Wald test is also available for continuous outcomes.
If there are multiallelic variants, each alternate allele is tested separately. The allele.index
column in the output differentiates between different alternate alleles for the same variant.
We make a QQ plot to examine the results.
qqPlot <- function(pval) {
pval <- pval[!is.na(pval)]
n <- length(pval)
x <- 1:n
dat <- data.frame(obs=sort(pval),
exp=x/n,
upper=qbeta(0.025, x, rev(x)),
lower=qbeta(0.975, x, rev(x)))
ggplot(dat, aes(-log10(exp), -log10(obs))) +
geom_line(aes(-log10(exp), -log10(upper)), color="gray") +
geom_line(aes(-log10(exp), -log10(lower)), color="gray") +
geom_point() +
geom_abline(intercept=0, slope=1, color="red") +
xlab(expression(paste(-log[10], "(expected P)"))) +
ylab(expression(paste(-log[10], "(observed P)"))) +
theme_bw()
}
qqPlot(assoc$Score.pval)
We can aggregate rare variants for association testing to decrease multiple testing burden and increase statistical power. We can create functionally agnostic units using a SeqVarWindowIterator
. This iterator type generates a sliding window over the genome, with user-specified width and step size. We can also create units with specific start and end points or containing specific variants, using a SeqVarRangeIterator
or a SeqVarListIterator
.
In this example, we illustrate defining ranges based on known genes. We run a burden test, setting a maximum alternate allele frequency to exclude common variants.
library(GenomicRanges)
library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene)
# return the variants on chromosome 1 as a GRanges object
seqSetFilterChrom(seqData, include=1)
## # of selected variants: 1,120
gr <- granges(gds)
# find variants that overlap with each gene
txdb <- TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene
gr <- renameSeqlevels(gr, paste0("chr", seqlevels(gr)))
ts <- transcriptsByOverlaps(txdb, gr, columns="GENEID")
# simplistic example - define genes as overlapping transcripts
genes <- reduce(ts)
genes <- renameSeqlevels(genes, sub("chr", "", seqlevels(genes)))
# create an iterator where each successive unit is a different gene
iterator <- SeqVarRangeIterator(seqData, variantRanges=genes, verbose=FALSE)
# do a burden test on the rare variants in each gene
assoc <- assocTestAggregate(iterator, nullmod, AF.max=0.05, test="Burden",
BPPARAM=BiocParallel::SerialParam(), verbose=FALSE)
The output of an aggregate test is a list with two elements: 1) a data.frame with the test results for each aggregate unit, and 2) a list of data.frames containing the variants in each aggregate unit.
head(assoc$results)
## n.site n.alt n.sample.alt Score Score.SE Score.Stat Score.pval Est
## 1 1 3 3 2.308118 1.689624 1.3660543 0.17192193 0.8084959
## 2 1 5 5 3.726985 2.238929 1.6646284 0.09598691 0.7434931
## 3 1 1 1 -0.775075 1.046050 -0.7409537 0.45872150 -0.7083346
## 4 1 9 9 -1.551195 2.581171 -0.6009659 0.54786273 -0.2328268
## 5 0 0 0 NA NA NA NA NA
## 6 1 1 1 -0.312060 1.023753 -0.3048197 0.76050351 -0.2977473
## Est.SE PVE
## 1 0.5918476 0.021954168
## 2 0.4466421 0.032599857
## 3 0.9559768 0.006458970
## 4 0.3874211 0.004248941
## 5 NA NA
## 6 0.9767982 0.001093118
head(assoc$variantInfo)
## [[1]]
## variant.id chr pos allele.index n.obs freq MAC weight
## 1 6 1 1403820 1 100 0.015 3 1
##
## [[2]]
## variant.id chr pos allele.index n.obs freq MAC weight
## 1 7 1 1421285 1 100 0.025 5 1
##
## [[3]]
## variant.id chr pos allele.index n.obs freq MAC weight
## 1 12 1 2023475 1 100 0.005 1 1
##
## [[4]]
## variant.id chr pos allele.index n.obs freq MAC weight
## 1 21 1 3254100 1 100 0.045 9 1
##
## [[5]]
## [1] variant.id chr pos allele.index n.obs
## [6] freq MAC weight
## <0 rows> (or 0-length row.names)
##
## [[6]]
## variant.id chr pos allele.index n.obs freq MAC weight
## 1 24 1 3818550 1 100 0.005 1 1
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