xSubneterSNPs
is supposed to identify maximum-scoring gene
subnetwork from an input graph with the node information on the
significance (measured as p-values or fdr). To do so, it defines seed
genes and their scores that take into account the distance to and the
significance of input SNPs. It returns an object of class "igraph".
xSubneterSNPs(
data,
include.LD = NA,
LD.customised = NULL,
LD.r2 = 0.8,
significance.threshold = 5e-05,
score.cap = 10,
distance.max = 2e+05,
decay.kernel = c("slow", "linear", "rapid", "constant"),
decay.exponent = 2,
GR.SNP = c("dbSNP_GWAS", "dbSNP_Common", "dbSNP_Single"),
GR.Gene = c("UCSC_knownGene", "UCSC_knownCanonical"),
scoring.scheme = c("max", "sum", "sequential"),
network = c("STRING_highest", "STRING_high", "STRING_medium",
"STRING_low",
"PCommonsUN_high", "PCommonsUN_medium", "PCommonsDN_high",
"PCommonsDN_medium",
"PCommonsDN_Reactome", "PCommonsDN_KEGG", "PCommonsDN_HumanCyc",
"PCommonsDN_PID",
"PCommonsDN_PANTHER", "PCommonsDN_ReconX", "PCommonsDN_TRANSFAC",
"PCommonsDN_PhosphoSite", "PCommonsDN_CTD", "KEGG", "KEGG_metabolism",
"KEGG_genetic",
"KEGG_environmental", "KEGG_cellular", "KEGG_organismal",
"KEGG_disease", "REACTOME"),
STRING.only = c(NA, "neighborhood_score", "fusion_score",
"cooccurence_score",
"coexpression_score", "experimental_score", "database_score",
"textmining_score")[1],
network.customised = NULL,
seed.genes = T,
subnet.significance = 5e-05,
subnet.size = NULL,
test.permutation = F,
num.permutation = 100,
respect = c("none", "degree"),
aggregateBy = c("Ztransform", "fishers", "logistic", "orderStatistic"),
num.subnets = NA,
verbose = T,
silent = F,
RData.location = "http://galahad.well.ox.ac.uk/bigdata",
guid = NULL
)
a named input vector containing the sinificance level for nodes (dbSNP). For this named vector, the element names are dbSNP ID (or in the format such as 'chr16:28525386'), the element values for the significance level (measured as p-value or fdr). Alternatively, it can be a matrix or data frame with two columns: 1st column for dbSNP, 2nd column for the significance level
additional SNPs in LD with Lead SNPs are also included. By default, it is 'NA' to disable this option. Otherwise, LD SNPs will be included based on one or more of 26 populations and 5 super populations from 1000 Genomics Project data (phase 3). The population can be one of 5 super populations ("AFR", "AMR", "EAS", "EUR", "SAS"), or one of 26 populations ("ACB", "ASW", "BEB", "CDX", "CEU", "CHB", "CHS", "CLM", "ESN", "FIN", "GBR", "GIH", "GWD", "IBS", "ITU", "JPT", "KHV", "LWK", "MSL", "MXL", "PEL", "PJL", "PUR", "STU", "TSI", "YRI"). Explanations for population code can be found at http://www.1000genomes.org/faq/which-populations-are-part-your-study
a user-input matrix or data frame with 3 columns: 1st column for Lead SNPs, 2nd column for LD SNPs, and 3rd for LD r2 value. It is designed to allow the user analysing their precalcuated LD info. This customisation (if provided) has the high priority over built-in LD SNPs
the LD r2 value. By default, it is 0.8, meaning that SNPs in LD (r2>=0.8) with input SNPs will be considered as LD SNPs. It can be any value from 0.8 to 1
the given significance threshold. By default, it is set to NULL, meaning there is no constraint on the significance level when transforming the significance level of SNPs into scores. If given, those SNPs below this are considered significant and thus scored positively. Instead, those above this are considered insigificant and thus receive no score
the maximum score being capped. By default, it is set to 10. If NULL, no capping is applied
the maximum distance between genes and SNPs. Only those genes no far way from this distance will be considered as seed genes. This parameter will influence the distance-component weights calculated for nearby SNPs per gene
a character specifying a decay kernel function. It can be one of 'slow' for slow decay, 'linear' for linear decay, and 'rapid' for rapid decay. If no distance weight is used, please select 'constant'
an integer specifying a decay exponent. By default, it sets to 2
the genomic regions of SNPs. By default, it is 'dbSNP_GWAS', that is, SNPs from dbSNP (version 146) restricted to GWAS SNPs and their LD SNPs (hg19). It can be 'dbSNP_Common', that is, Common SNPs from dbSNP (version 146) plus GWAS SNPs and their LD SNPs (hg19). Alternatively, the user can specify the customised input. To do so, first save your RData file (containing an GR object) into your local computer, and make sure the GR object content names refer to dbSNP IDs. Then, tell "GR.SNP" with your RData file name (with or without extension), plus specify your file RData path in "RData.location". Note: you can also load your customised GR object directly
the genomic regions of genes. By default, it is 'UCSC_knownGene', that is, UCSC known genes (together with genomic locations) based on human genome assembly hg19. It can be 'UCSC_knownCanonical', that is, UCSC known canonical genes (together with genomic locations) based on human genome assembly hg19. Alternatively, the user can specify the customised input. To do so, first save your RData file (containing an GR object) into your local computer, and make sure the GR object content names refer to Gene Symbols. Then, tell "GR.Gene" with your RData file name (with or without extension), plus specify your file RData path in "RData.location". Note: you can also load your customised GR object directly
the method used to calculate seed gene scores under a set of SNPs. It can be one of "sum" for adding up, "max" for the maximum, and "sequential" for the sequential weighting. The sequential weighting is done via: \(\sum_{i=1}{\frac{R_{i}}{i}}\), where \(R_{i}\) is the \(i^{th}\) rank (in a descreasing order)
the built-in network. Currently two sources of network information are supported: the STRING database (version 10) and the Pathway Commons database (version 7). STRING is a meta-integration of undirect interactions from the functional aspect, while Pathways Commons mainly contains both undirect and direct interactions from the physical/pathway aspect. Both have scores to control the confidence of interactions. Therefore, the user can choose the different quality of the interactions. In STRING, "STRING_highest" indicates interactions with highest confidence (confidence scores>=900), "STRING_high" for interactions with high confidence (confidence scores>=700), "STRING_medium" for interactions with medium confidence (confidence scores>=400), and "STRING_low" for interactions with low confidence (confidence scores>=150). For undirect/physical interactions from Pathways Commons, "PCommonsUN_high" indicates undirect interactions with high confidence (supported with the PubMed references plus at least 2 different sources), "PCommonsUN_medium" for undirect interactions with medium confidence (supported with the PubMed references). For direct (pathway-merged) interactions from Pathways Commons, "PCommonsDN_high" indicates direct interactions with high confidence (supported with the PubMed references plus at least 2 different sources), and "PCommonsUN_medium" for direct interactions with medium confidence (supported with the PubMed references). In addition to pooled version of pathways from all data sources, the user can also choose the pathway-merged network from individual sources, that is, "PCommonsDN_Reactome" for those from Reactome, "PCommonsDN_KEGG" for those from KEGG, "PCommonsDN_HumanCyc" for those from HumanCyc, "PCommonsDN_PID" for those froom PID, "PCommonsDN_PANTHER" for those from PANTHER, "PCommonsDN_ReconX" for those from ReconX, "PCommonsDN_TRANSFAC" for those from TRANSFAC, "PCommonsDN_PhosphoSite" for those from PhosphoSite, and "PCommonsDN_CTD" for those from CTD. For direct (pathway-merged) interactions sourced from KEGG, it can be 'KEGG' for all, 'KEGG_metabolism' for pathways grouped into 'Metabolism', 'KEGG_genetic' for 'Genetic Information Processing' pathways, 'KEGG_environmental' for 'Environmental Information Processing' pathways, 'KEGG_cellular' for 'Cellular Processes' pathways, 'KEGG_organismal' for 'Organismal Systems' pathways, and 'KEGG_disease' for 'Human Diseases' pathways. 'REACTOME' for protein-protein interactions derived from Reactome pathways
the further restriction of STRING by interaction type. If NA, no such restriction. Otherwide, it can be one or more of "neighborhood_score","fusion_score","cooccurence_score","coexpression_score","experimental_score","database_score","textmining_score". Useful options are c("experimental_score","database_score"): only experimental data (extracted from BIND, DIP, GRID, HPRD, IntAct, MINT, and PID) and curated data (extracted from Biocarta, BioCyc, GO, KEGG, and Reactome) are used
an object of class "igraph". By default, it is NULL. It is designed to allow the user analysing their customised network data that are not listed in the above argument 'network'. This customisation (if provided) has the high priority over built-in network
logical to indicate whether the identified network is restricted to seed genes (ie nearby genes that are located within defined distance window centred on lead or LD SNPs). By default, it sets to true
the given significance threshold. By default, it is set to NULL, meaning there is no constraint on nodes/genes. If given, those nodes/genes with p-values below this are considered significant and thus scored positively. Instead, those p-values above this given significance threshold are considered insigificant and thus scored negatively
the desired number of nodes constrained to the resulting subnet. It is not nulll, a wide range of significance thresholds will be scanned to find the optimal significance threshold leading to the desired number of nodes in the resulting subnet. Notably, the given significance threshold will be overwritten by this option
logical to indicate whether the permutation test is perform to estimate the significance of identified network with the same number of nodes. By default, it sets to false
the number of permutations generating the null distribution of the identified network
how to respect nodes to be sampled. It can be one of 'none' (randomly sampling) and 'degree' (degree-preserving sampling)
the aggregate method used to aggregate edge confidence p-values. It can be either "orderStatistic" for the method based on the order statistics of p-values, or "fishers" for Fisher's method, "Ztransform" for Z-transform method, "logistic" for the logistic method. Without loss of generality, the Z-transform method does well in problems where evidence against the combined null is spread widely (equal footings) or when the total evidence is weak; Fisher's method does best in problems where the evidence is concentrated in a relatively small fraction of the individual tests or when the evidence is at least moderately strong; the logistic method provides a compromise between these two. Notably, the aggregate methods 'Ztransform' and 'logistic' are preferred here
the number of subnets to be iteratively identified. If NA, this functionality is disabled. If NULL, all subnets will be identified until subnet.significance is no less than 0.05
logical to indicate whether the messages will be displayed in the screen. By default, it sets to true for display
logical to indicate whether the messages will be silent completely. By default, it sets to false. If true, verbose will be forced to be false
the characters to tell the location of built-in
RData files. See xRDataLoader
for details
a valid (5-character) Global Unique IDentifier for an OSF
project. See xRDataLoader
for details
a subgraph with a maximum score, an object of class "igraph". It has ndoe attributes: significance, score, type. If permutation test is enabled, it also has a graph attribute (combinedP) and an edge attribute (edgeConfidence)
# NOT RUN {
# Load the XGR package and specify the location of built-in data
library(XGR)
RData.location <- "http://galahad.well.ox.ac.uk/bigdata/"
# a) provide the seed SNPs with the weight info
## load ImmunoBase
ImmunoBase <- xRDataLoader(RData.customised='ImmunoBase',
RData.location=RData.location)
## get lead SNPs reported in AS GWAS and their significance info (p-values)
gr <- ImmunoBase$AS$variant
data <- GenomicRanges::mcols(gr)[,c(1,3)]
# b) perform network analysis
# b1) find maximum-scoring subnet based on the given significance threshold
subnet <- xSubneterSNPs(data=data, network="STRING_high", seed.genes=F,
subnet.significance=0.01, RData.location=RData.location)
# b2) find maximum-scoring subnet with the desired node number=30
subnet <- xSubneterSNPs(data=data, network="STRING_high", seed.genes=F,
subnet.size=30, RData.location=RData.location)
# c) save subnet results to the files called 'subnet_edges.txt' and 'subnet_nodes.txt'
output <- igraph::get.data.frame(subnet, what="edges")
utils::write.table(output, file="subnet_edges.txt", sep="\t",
row.names=FALSE)
output <- igraph::get.data.frame(subnet, what="vertices")
utils::write.table(output, file="subnet_nodes.txt", sep="\t",
row.names=FALSE)
# d) visualise the identified subnet
## do visualisation with nodes colored according to the significance
xVisNet(g=subnet, pattern=-log10(as.numeric(V(subnet)$significance)),
vertex.shape="sphere", colormap="wyr")
## do visualisation with nodes colored according to transformed scores
xVisNet(g=subnet, pattern=as.numeric(V(subnet)$score),
vertex.shape="sphere")
# e) visualise the identified subnet as a circos plot
library(RCircos)
xCircos(g=subnet, entity="Gene", colormap="white-gray",
RData.location=RData.location)
# }
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