The identification of the transcription factor (TF) responsible for the coregulation of an specific set of genes is a common problem in transcriptomics. In the most simple scenario, the comparison of the transcriptome of cells or organisms in two conditions leads to the identification of a set of differentially expressed (DE) genes and the underlying assumption is that one or a few TFs regulate the expression of those genes. Traditionally, the identification of the relevant TFs has relied on the use of position weight matrices (PWMs) to predict transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) proximal to the DE genes (Wasserman and Sandelin, 2004). The comparison of predicted TFBS in DE versus control genes reveals factors that are significantly enriched in the DE gene set. These approaches have been useful to narrow down potential binding sites, but can suffer from high rates of false positives. In addition, this strategy is limited by design to sequence-specific transcription factors (TF) and thus unable to identify cofactors that bind indirectly to target genes. To overcome these limitations, TFEA.ChIP exploits the vast amount of publicly available ChIP-seq datasets to determine TFBS proximal to a given set of genes and computes enrichment analysis based on this experimentally-derived rich information. Specifically TFEA.ChIP, uses information derived from the hundreds of ChIP-seq experiments from the ENCODE Consortium 1 expanded to include additional datasets contributed to GEO database2 3 by individual laboratories representing the binding sites of factors not assayed by ENCODE. The package includes a set of tools to customize the ChIP data, perform enrichment analysis and visualize the results. The package implements two enrichment analysis methods:
TFEA.ChIP includes a TF-gene interaction database containing 1060 datasets from ChIP-Seq experiments testing 277 different human transcription factors from the ReMap 2018 repository6. Due to space limitations, TFEA.ChIPs internal database only includes ChIP-seq experiments from the ENCODE project. All the plots included in this vignette have been generated using the full ReMap 2018 ChIP-seq collection. To download the full ReMap 2018 database, as well as other ready-to-use databases, visit https://github.com/LauraPS1/TFEA.ChIP_downloads .
Although the package is mainly focused towards analyzing expression data generated from human cells, TFEA.ChIP includes the option to use datasets coming from experiments in mice, translating mouse gene names to their equivalent ID on the human genome.
TFEA.ChIP is designed to take the output of a differential expression analysis and identify TFBS enriched in the list of DE genes. In the case of the analysis of association, the only required input is a set of DE genes and, optionally, a set of control genes whose expression is not altered by the experimental conditions under study. For the GSEA analysis a ranked list of genes is required. This is supplied as a dataframe containing a column with gene names and a numerical column with the ranking metric, which typically are log-fold change or p-values for the gene expression changes in the two conditions under evaluation. For illustration purposes we will derive the input required for both analysis from a table containing the following field columns:
The output of popular packages, such as DESeq2, for detection of differentially expressed genes from the analysis of count data from RNA-seq experiments produce tables with this information. The hypoxia_DESeq and hypoxia datasets are the output of a differential expression analysis performed on an RNAseq experiment analyzing the response to hypoxia of endothelial cells7 deposited at the NCBI’s GEO repository (GSE89831).
To extract the information from a DESeqResults object or a data frame the function preprocessInputData is available.
Using the option from.Mouse = TRUE will convert mouse gene IDs to their equivalent human gene ID, thus taking advantage of the wider abailability of ChIP-seq experiments done on human cells. This strategy relies on the overlap between human and mouse transcription regulatory mechanisms. Nevertheless, we advise to be cautious using this approach, since extrapolating results from one organism to another is not always appropiate.
library(TFEA.ChIP)
data( "hypoxia_DESeq", "hypoxia", package="TFEA.ChIP" ) # load example datasets
hypoxia_table <- preprocessInputData( hypoxia_DESeq )
## Warning: Some genes returned 1:many mapping to ENTREZ ID. Genes were assigned the first ENTREZ ID match found.
## Genes log2FoldChange pvalue pval.adj
## 1 1769 4.588064 3.942129e-62 3.285202e-59
## 2 6781 4.339768 7.840000e-11 2.714222e-09
## 3 54843 4.307058 1.435621e-75 1.522672e-72
## 4 3486 4.297902 6.595438e-18 5.535897e-16
## 5 205 4.235590 1.318311e-125 5.126912e-122
## 6 5740 3.931662 4.398104e-15 2.631420e-13
## Genes log2FoldChange pvalue pval.adj
## 1 TNMD 0.00000000 1.000000000 1.00000000
## 2 DPM1 -0.44497788 0.001243905 0.01809033
## 3 SCYL3 -0.27092276 0.139977254 0.65057456
## 4 C1orf112 -0.52382569 0.035752231 0.25407939
## 5 FGR -0.44810165 0.217220835 0.83961811
## 6 CFH 0.05237749 0.740720152 1.00000000
## Warning: Some genes returned 1:many mapping to ENTREZ ID. Genes were assigned the first ENTREZ ID match found.
## Genes log2FoldChange pvalue pval.adj
## 10785 1365 5.319709 9.647797e-77 2.817857e-73
## 10138 284525 5.179949 2.411485e-64 5.414910e-61
## 9362 392255 4.401819 3.559414e-91 1.998137e-87
## 3958 4883 4.208881 1.414157e-39 1.082537e-36
## 10320 2199 4.060889 1.305316e-46 1.465522e-43
## 5256 1769 4.024703 8.418844e-65 2.025454e-61
After running preprocessInputData, your dataset will be ready to use with the rest of the package; gene names will be in Entrez Gene ID format and the resulting table is sorted by log2(Fold Change).
As indicated before, for this analysis, we must provide a list of genes are considered differentially induced and a list of control genes whose expression is not altered in the analyzed experiment. For that we will use the function Select_genes:
#extract vector with names of upregulated genes
Genes.Upreg <- Select_genes( hypoxia_table, min_LFC = 1 )
#extract vector with names of non-responsive genes
Genes.Control <- Select_genes( hypoxia_table,
min_pval = 0.5, max_pval = 1,
min_LFC = -0.25, max_LFC = 0.25 )
In case the input dataset cannot be preprocessed or the user is interested in analyzing a particular set of genes that doesn’t come from the input dataset, translating the IDs to Entrez Gene ID format is required. To that end its available the function GeneID2entrez:
#Conversion of hgnc to ENTREZ IDs
GeneID2entrez( gene.IDs = c("EGLN3","NFYA","ALS2","MYC","ARNT" ) )
## [1] "112399" "4800" "57679" "4609" "405"
# To translate from mouse IDs:
# GeneID2entrez( gene.IDs = c( "Hmmr", "Tlx3", "Cpeb4" ), mode = "m2h" ) # To get the equivalent human gene IDs
# GeneID2entrez( gene.IDs = c( "Hmmr", "Tlx3", "Cpeb4" ), mode = "m2m" ) # To get mouse ENTREZ gene IDs
In this step, we will construct a contingency table for each of the factors stored in the internal database categorizing the DE (DE_yes) and control (DE_no) genes according to the presence or absence of binding sites:
TFbound_yes | TFbound_no | |
---|---|---|
DE_yes | number y/y | number y/n |
DE_no | number n/y | number n/n |
Then, we will apply Fisher’s exact test to each contingency table to test the null hypothesis that factor binding and differential expression are independent. In addition, to the raw p-values the function also return the FDR-adjusted values to correct for multiple testing.
CM_list_UP <- contingency_matrix( Genes.Upreg, Genes.Control ) #generates list of contingency tables, one per dataset
pval_mat_UP <- getCMstats( CM_list_UP ) #generates list of p-values and OR from association test
head( pval_mat_UP )
## Accession Cell Treatment TF
## 873 GSE89836.EPAS1.HUVEC-C HUVEC 16h 1%O2 EPAS1
## 872 GSE89836.ARNT.HUVEC-C HUVEC 16h 1%O2 ARNT
## 814 GSE39089.HIF1A.HUVEC-C_HYPOX HUVEC hypoxia HIF1A
## 886 GSE94872.RAD21.HUVEC-C_hypoxia HUVEC hypoxia RAD21
## 304 ENCSR000EVW.GATA2.endothelial_umbilical-vein HUVEC GATA2
## 303 ENCSR000EVU.FOS.endothelial_umbilical-vein HUVEC FOS
## p.value OR log2.OR adj.p.value log10.adj.pVal distance
## 873 1.187524e-27 62.649742 5.969237 3.665490e-25 24.43587 66.31593
## 872 2.056337e-36 13.861078 3.792968 1.904168e-33 32.72029 35.15715
## 814 3.399913e-35 4.581695 2.195882 1.574160e-32 31.80295 32.00400
## 886 1.176559e-26 3.993615 1.997695 2.178987e-24 23.66175 23.85037
## 304 1.098307e-26 3.382332 1.758018 2.178987e-24 23.66175 23.78137
## 303 8.592834e-25 3.466671 1.793551 1.326161e-22 21.87740 22.01602
In this example, all 1122 datasets in the internal database were used in the analysis. However, we can restrict the analysis to a specific subset of the database and/or a given set of transcription factors. To this end we can produce and index of the tables of interest with the function get_chip_index and pass this index as an additional argument to contingency_matrix. Finally, note that the list of control genes is optional. If not supplied, all human genes not present in the test list will be used as control. Thus, we could restrict the analysis to the datasets generated by the ENCODE project and use all non-DE genes as control:
chip_index <- get_chip_index( TFfilter = c( "HIF1A","EPAS1","ARNT" ) ) #restrict the analysis to datasets assaying these factors
chip_index <- get_chip_index( encodeFilter = TRUE ) # Or select ENCODE datasets only
CM_list_UPe <- contingency_matrix( Genes.Upreg, Genes.Control, chip_index ) #generates list of contingency tables
pval_mat_UPe <- getCMstats( CM_list_UPe, chip_index ) #generates list of p-values and ORs
head( pval_mat_UPe )
## Accession Cell Treatment TF
## 304 ENCSR000EVW.GATA2.endothelial_umbilical-vein HUVEC GATA2
## 303 ENCSR000EVU.FOS.endothelial_umbilical-vein HUVEC FOS
## 290 ENCSR000EUO.CTBP2.WA01 WA01 CTBP2
## 127 ENCSR000BSK.JUND.SK-N-SH SK-N-SH JUND
## 345 ENCSR091BOQ.SUZ12.GM12878 GM12878 SUZ12
## 140 ENCSR000BVB.FOSL2.SK-N-SH SK-N-SH FOSL2
## p.value OR log2.OR adj.p.value log10.adj.pVal distance
## 304 1.098307e-26 3.382332 1.758018 7.556352e-24 23.12169 23.24409
## 303 8.592834e-25 3.466671 1.793551 2.955935e-22 21.52931 21.67015
## 290 5.015575e-21 3.399477 1.765313 1.008096e-18 17.99650 18.15575
## 127 5.861021e-21 2.926023 1.548941 1.008096e-18 17.99650 18.09927
## 345 1.682629e-20 3.202823 1.679344 1.929415e-18 17.71457 17.85101
## 140 1.485163e-20 2.905473 1.538773 1.929415e-18 17.71457 17.81676
To know more about the experiments included in TFEA.ChIP’s database or the conditions of a particular experiment, load the metadata table included using data(“MetaData”, package = “TFEA.ChIP”).
To summarize the results by transcription factor use rankTFs. This function performs Wilcoxon rank-sum test or GSEA to test whether ChIPs belonging to the same TF are, as a group, significantly enriched / depleted in the results of the analysis. Be aware that in the case of transcription factors whose behavior is dependent on cellular context, integrating the results of all the related ChIPs might conceal its enrichment in a particular set of experimental conditions.
## Warning: `guides(<scale> = FALSE)` is deprecated. Please use `guides(<scale> =
## "none")` instead.
## TF ES arg.ES pVal numberOfChIPs
## EPAS1 EPAS1 1.00000 1 0.00 1
## ARNT ARNT 0.87322 2 0.07 3
## HIF1A HIF1A 0.94269 3 0.06 2
## RAD21 RAD21 0.85683 142 0.00 11
## GATA2 GATA2 0.82732 125 0.02 7
## FOS FOS 0.86177 75 0.03 4
The table of results generated by getCMstats can be parsed to select candidate TF. The function plot_CM uses the package plotly to generate an interactive plot representing the p-value against the odd-ratio that is very helpful to explore the results.
In fact, the exploration of this graph shows a strong enrichment for several HIF datasets, as expected for the hypoxia dataset. This can be clearly shown by highlighting the datasets of interest:
HIFs <- c( "EPAS1","HIF1A","ARNT" )
names(HIFs) <- c( "EPAS1","HIF1A","ARNT" )
col <- c( "red","blue","green" )
plot_CM( pval_mat_UP, specialTF = HIFs, TF_colors = col ) #plot p-values against ORs highlighting indicated TFs
The GSEA analysis implemented in the TFEA.ChIP package requires as input a sorted list of genes. By default, the function preprocessInputData will sort genes according to log fold change in descending order. However, they could be sorted by any numerical parameter including p-value. If you want to generate your custom gene list with other parameters, remember to make sure the gene IDs are in Entrez Gene ID format or translate them with GeneID2Entrez
By default, the analysis will include all the ChIP-Seq experiments available in the database. However, this analysis might take several minutes to run. To restrict the analysis to a subset of the database we can generate an index variable and pass it to the function GSEA_run. This will limit the analysis to the ChIP-Seq datasets of the user’s choosing. This index variable can be generated using the function get_chip_index and allows the user to select the whole database, the set of ChIP-Seq experiments produced by the ENCODE project (“encode”) or a specific subset of transcription factors (as a vector containing the TF names).
The function GSEA_run will perform a GSEA-based analysis on the input gene list. This function is based on the R-GSEA R script bundle written by the GSEA team at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard 8 9. The output of the analysis depends on the variable get.RES:
When False, the function returns a data frame storing maximum Enrichment Score and associated p-value determined for each dataset included in the analysis.
When True, the function returns a list of three elements. The first element (Enrichment.table) is the enrichment data frame previously mentioned. The second element (RES) is a list of vectors containing the Running Enrichment Scores values (see GSEA documentation, http://software.broadinstitute.org/gsea/doc/GSEAUserGuideTEXT.htm#_Interpreting_GSEA_Results) for each of the sorted genes tested against each one of the analyzed ChIP datasets. The third element (indicators) is a list of vectors indicating if the sorted genes were bound by the factor analyzed in each ChIP dataset.
## Accession Cell Treatment TF ES p.val pval.adj
## 1 ENCSR029IBC.ARNT.Hep-G2 Hep-G2 ARNT 0.40381 0.000 0.0000
## 2 ENCSR590KEQ.ARNT.GM12878 GM12878 ARNT 0.22354 0.025 0.0250
## 3 GSE39089.HIF1A.HUVEC-C_HYPOX HUVEC hypoxia HIF1A 0.35868 0.000 0.0000
## 4 GSE39089.HIF1A.HUVEC-C_NOMO HUVEC HIF1A 0.39233 0.001 0.0012
## 5 GSE89836.ARNT.HUVEC-C HUVEC 16h 1%O2 ARNT 0.63435 0.000 0.0000
## 6 GSE89836.EPAS1.HUVEC-C HUVEC 16h 1%O2 EPAS1 0.79064 0.000 0.0000
## Arg.ES
## 1 1561
## 2 3590
## 3 3219
## 4 3505
## 5 1856
## 6 1778
## NULL
## NULL
The list of results can be restricted to a given set of transcription factors by setting the variable RES.filter.
TFEA.ChIP includes two functions that use the package plotly to generate interactive html plots of your GSEA results: plot_ES and plot_RES.
We can choose to highlight ChIP-Seq from specific transcription factors plotting them in a particular color.
TF.hightlight <- c( "EPAS1","ARNT","HIF1A" )
names( TF.hightlight ) <- c( "EPAS1","ARNT","HIF1A" )
col <- c( "red","blue","green" )
plot_ES( GSEA.result, LFC = hypoxia_table$log2FoldChange, specialTF = TF.hightlight, TF_colors = col)
plot_RES(
GSEA_result = GSEA.result, LFC = hypoxia_table$log2FoldChange,
TF = c( "ARNT", "EPAS1" ), Accession = c(
"GSE89836.ARNT.HUVEC-C",
"GSE89836.EPAS1.HUVEC-C" ) )
If the user wants to generate their own database of ChIPseq datasets, the functions txt2gr and makeChIPGeneDB automate most of the process. The required inputs are:
A Metadata table (storing at least, Accession ID, name of the file, and TF tested in the ChIP-Seq experiment). The metadata table included with this package has the following fields: “Name”, “Accession”, “Cell”, “Cell Type”, “Treatment”, “Antibody”, and “TF”.
A folder containing ChIP-Seq peak data, either in “.narrowpeak” format or the MACS output files "_peaks.bed" -a format that stores “chr”, “start”, “end”, “name”, and “Q-value” of every peak-.
Specify the folder where the ChIP-Seq files are stored, create an array with the names of the ChIP-Seq files, and choose a format. Set a for loop to convert all your files to GenomicRanges objects using txt2GR. Please note that, by default, only peaks with an associated p-value of 0.05 (for narrow peaks files) or 1e-5 (for MACS files) will be kept. The user can modify the default values by setting the alpha argument to the desired threshold p-value.
folder <- "~/peak.files.folder"
File.list<-dir( folder )
format <- "macs"
gr.list <- lapply(
seq_along( File.list ),
function( File.list, myMetaData, format ){
tmp<-read.table( File.list[i], ..., stringsAsFactors = FALSE )
file.metadata <- myMetaData[ myMetaData$Name == File.list[i], ]
ChIP.dataset.gr<-txt2GR(tmp, format, file.metadata)
return(ChIP.dataset.gr)
},
File.list = File.list,
myMetadata = myMetadata,
format = format
)
# As an example of the output
data( "ARNT.peaks.bed","ARNT.metadata", package = "TFEA.ChIP" ) # Loading example datasets for this function
ARNT.gr <- txt2GR( ARNT.peaks.bed, "macs1.4", ARNT.metadata )
head( ARNT.gr, n=2 )
## GRanges object with 2 ranges and 9 metadata columns:
## seqnames ranges strand | score mcols.Name
## <Rle> <IRanges> <Rle> | <numeric> <character>
## [1] chr1 1813434-1814386 * | 4.60909e-06 GSM2390643_ARNT_ChIP..
## [2] chr1 3456399-3457536 * | 8.82450e-27 GSM2390643_ARNT_ChIP..
## mcols.Accession mcols.Cell mcols.Cell Type mcols.Treatment
## <character> <character> <character> <character>
## [1] GSM2390643 HUVEC Hypoxia
## [2] GSM2390643 HUVEC Hypoxia
## mcols.Antibody mcols.TF mcols.Score Type
## <character> <character> <character>
## [1] HIF1B ARNT corrected p-Value
## [2] HIF1B ARNT corrected p-Value
## -------
## seqinfo: 32 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
By default (see step 3), TFEA.ChIP filters the ChIPseq peaks in each dataset to select those overlapping or near to (by default max. distance 10 nucleotides) regions in a reference associated to a gene. This reference can have any number of sources, such as gene coordinates, transcription starting sites, or regulatory regions defined in projects such as GeneHancer.
As an example, we will build a reference with Dnase hypersensitive sites associated to overlapping genes using Encode’s Master DNaseI HS:
dnaseClusters<-read.table(
file="~/path.to.file.txt",
header = TRUE, sep="\t", stringsAsFactors = FALSE )
dnaseClusters<-makeGRangesFromDataFrame(
dnaseClusters, ignore.strand=TRUE,
seqnames.field="chrom", start.field="chromStart",
end.field="chromEnd" )
library( TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene, quietly = TRUE )
txdb <- TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene
Genes <- genes( txdb )
near.gene <- findOverlaps( dnaseClusters, Genes, maxgap = 1000 )
dnase.sites.list <- queryHits( near.gene )
near.gene <- subjectHits( near.gene )
gene_ids <- Genes[ near.gene ]$gene_id
DHS.database <- dnaseClusters[ dnase.sites.list ]
mcols(DHS.database)$gene_id <- gene_ids
These steps can be modified to generate a new GRanges object containing custom sites.
The function makeChIPGeneDB assigns the TFBS peaks in the ChIP datasets stored in gr.list to a gene. To this end, a ChIP peak overlaping a regulatory region region receive the gene label associated to said region. By default the function also assigns the gene name when the ChIP peak does not overlap a regulatory region but maps at less than 10 nucleotides from it. This behaviour can be modified by setting the argument distanceMargin to the desired value (by default distanceMargin = 10 bases).
The resulting ChIP-Gene data base is a list containing two elements: - Gene Keys: vector of gene IDs. - ChIP Targets: list of vectors, one per element in gr.list, containing the putative targets assigned. Each target is coded as its position in the vector ‘Gene Keys’.
data( "DnaseHS_db", "gr.list", package="TFEA.ChIP" ) # Loading example datasets for this function
TF.gene.binding.db <- makeChIPGeneDB( DnaseHS_db, gr.list )
str( TF.gene.binding.db )
## List of 2
## $ Gene Keys : chr [1:54] "100507501" "10209" "10277" "10458" ...
## $ ChIP Targets:List of 1
## ..$ wgEncodeEH002402: int [1:54] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ...
The function, accepts any Genomic Range object that includes a metacolumn with a gene ID (stored in the @elementMetadata@listdata [["gene_id"]] slot of the object) for each genomic segment. For example, asignation of peaks to genes can be done by providing a list of all the genes in the genome:
## Loading required package: GenomicFeatures
## Loading required package: AnnotationDbi
data( "gr.list", package="TFEA.ChIP") # Loading example datasets for this function
txdb <- TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene
Genes <- genes( txdb )
## 403 genes were dropped because they have exons located on both strands
## of the same reference sequence or on more than one reference sequence,
## so cannot be represented by a single genomic range.
## Use 'single.strand.genes.only=FALSE' to get all the genes in a
## GRangesList object, or use suppressMessages() to suppress this message.
TF.gene.binding.db <- makeChIPGeneDB( Genes, gr.list, distanceMargin = 0 )
str( TF.gene.binding.db )
## List of 2
## $ Gene Keys : chr [1:23056] "1" "10" "100" "1000" ...
## $ ChIP Targets:List of 1
## ..$ wgEncodeEH002402: int [1:21] 2516 3096 3539 5836 7995 9125 10750 10795 13308 13542 ...
In this case the information about Dnase hypersensitivity is disregarded and peaks are asigned to overlapping genes (or genes closer than distanceMargin residues).
At the beginning of a session, use the function set_user_data to use your TFBS binary matrix and metadata table with the rest of the package.
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Edgar, R et al. (2002) Nucleic Acids Res. 30:207-10↩
Barrett, T et al. (2013) Nucleic Acids Res. 41(Database issue):D991-5↩
Subramanian, Tamayo, et al. (2005) PNAS 102, 15545-15550↩
Mootha, Lindgren, et al. (2003) Nat Genet 34, 267-273↩
Jeanne Chèneby, Marius Gheorghe, Marie Artufel, Anthony Mathelier, Benoit Ballester; ReMap 2018: an updated atlas of regulatory regions from an integrative analysis of DNA-binding ChIP-seq experiments, Nucleic Acids Research, Volume 46, Issue D1, 4 January 2018, Pages D267–D275, https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkx1092↩
Tiana, M et al. The SIN3A histone deacetylase complex is required for a complete transcriptional response to hypoxia. https://doi.org/10.1101/182691 ↩
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