rlog
is less sensitive
to size factors, which can be an issue when size factors vary widely.
These transformations are useful when checking for outliers or as input for
machine learning techniques such as clustering or linear discriminant analysis.
varianceStabilizingTransformation(object, blind = TRUE, fitType = "parametric")
getVarianceStabilizedData(object)
object
,
this parameter is passed on to estimateDispersions
(options described there).varianceStabilizingTransformation
returns a
DESeqTransform
if a DESeqDataSet
was provided,
or returns a a matrix if a count matrix was provided.
Note that for DESeqTransform
output, the matrix of
transformed values is stored in assay(vsd)
.
getVarianceStabilizedData
also returns a matrix.
counts(dds)
), the full variance function
is calculated from the raw variance (by scaling according to the size factor and adding
the shot noise). We recommend a blind estimation of the variance function, i.e.,
one ignoring conditions. This is performed by default, and can be modified using the
'blind' argument.Note that neither rlog transformation nor the VST are used by the
differential expression estimation in DESeq
, which always
occurs on the raw count data, through generalized linear modeling which
incorporates knowledge of the variance-mean dependence. The rlog transformation
and VST are offered as separate functionality which can be used for visualization,
clustering or other machine learning tasks. See the transformation section of the
vignette for more details.
The transformation does not require that one has already estimated size factors and dispersions.
A typical workflow is shown in Section Variance stabilizing transformation in the package vignette.
If estimateDispersions
was called with:
fitType="parametric"
,
a closed-form expression for the variance stabilizing
transformation is used on the normalized
count data. The expression can be found in the file vst.pdf
which is distributed with the vignette.
fitType="local"
,
the reciprocal of the square root of the variance of the normalized counts, as derived
from the dispersion fit, is then numerically
integrated, and the integral (approximated by a spline function) is evaluated for each
count value in the column, yielding a transformed value.
fitType="mean"
, a VST is applied for Negative Binomial distributed counts, 'k',
with a fixed dispersion, 'a': ( 2 asinh(sqrt(a k)) - log(a) - log(4) )/log(2).
In all cases, the transformation is scaled such that for large counts, it becomes asymptotically (for large values) equal to the logarithm to base 2 of normalized counts.
The variance stabilizing transformation from a previous dataset
can be frozen and reapplied to new samples. See the 'Data quality assessment'
section of the vignette for strategies to see if new samples are
sufficiently similar to previous datasets.
The frozen VST is accomplished by saving the dispersion function
accessible with dispersionFunction
, assigning this
to the DESeqDataSet
with the new samples, and running
varianceStabilizingTransformation with 'blind' set to FALSE
(see example below).
Then the dispersion function from the previous dataset will be used
to transform the new sample(s).
Limitations: In order to preserve normalization, the same
transformation has to be used for all samples. This results in the
variance stabilizition to be only approximate. The more the size
factors differ, the more residual dependence of the variance on the
mean will be found in the transformed data. rlog
is a
transformation which can perform better in these cases.
As shown in the vignette, the function meanSdPlot
from the package vsn can be used to see whether this is a problem.
Simon Anders, Wolfgang Huber: Differential expression analysis for sequence count data. Genome Biology 2010, 11:106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/gb-2010-11-10-r106
plotPCA
, rlog
, normTransform
dds <- makeExampleDESeqDataSet(m=6)
vsd <- varianceStabilizingTransformation(dds)
dists <- dist(t(assay(vsd)))
plot(hclust(dists))
# learn the dispersion function of a dataset
design(dds) <- ~ 1
dds <- estimateSizeFactors(dds)
dds <- estimateDispersions(dds)
# use the previous dispersion function for a new sample
ddsNew <- makeExampleDESeqDataSet(m=1)
ddsNew <- estimateSizeFactors(ddsNew)
dispersionFunction(ddsNew) <- dispersionFunction(dds)
vsdNew <- varianceStabilizingTransformation(ddsNew, blind=FALSE)
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