Contents

1 Introduction

Copy number variation (CNV) is a frequently observed deviation from the diploid state due to duplication or deletion of genomic regions. CNVs can be experimentally detected based on comparative genomic hybridization, and computationally inferred from SNP-arrays or next-generation sequencing data. These technologies for CNV detection have in common that they report, for each sample under study, genomic regions that are duplicated or deleted with respect to a reference. Such regions are denoted as CNV calls in the following and will be considered the starting point for analysis with the CNVRanger package.

The following figure provides an overview of the analysis capabilities of CNVRanger.

(A) The CNVRanger package imports CNV calls from a simple file format into R, and stores them in dedicated Bioconductor data structures, and (B) implements three frequently used approaches for summarizing CNV calls across a population: (i) the CNVRuler procedure that trims region margins based on regional density Kim et al., 2012, (ii) the reciprocal overlap procedure that requires sufficient mutual overlap between calls Conrad et al., 2010, and (iii) the GISTIC procedure that identifies recurrent CNV regions Beroukhim et al., 2007. (C) CNVRanger builds on regioneR for overlap analysis of CNVs with functional genomic regions, (D) implements RNA-seq expression Quantitative Trait Loci (eQTL) analysis for CNVs by interfacing with edgeR, and (E) performs linear regression for genome-wide association studies (GWAS) that intend to link CNVs and quantitative phenotypes.

The key parts of the functionality implemented in CNVRanger were developed, described, and applied in several previous studies:

2 Applicability and Scope

As described in the above publications, CNVRanger has been developed and extensively tested for SNP-based CNV calls as obtained with PennCNV. We also tested CNVRanger for sequencing-based CNV calls as obtained with CNVnator (a read-depth approach) or LUMPY (an approach that combines evidence from split-reads and discordant read-pairs).

In general, CNVRanger can be applied to CNV calls associated with integer copy number states, where we assume the states to be encoded as:

Note that for CNV calling software that uses a different encoding or that does not provide integer copy number states, it is often possible to (at least approximately) transform the output to a format that is compatible with the input format of CNVRanger. See Section 4.1 Input data format for details.

CNVRanger is designed to work with CNV calls from one tool at a time. See EnsembleCNV and FusorSV for combining CNV calls from multiple SNP-based callers or multiple sequencing-based callers, respectively.

CNVRanger assumes CNV calls provided as input to be already filtered by quality, using the software that was used for CNV calling, or specific tools for that purpose. CNVRanger provides downstream summarization and association analysis for CNV calls, it does not implement functions for CNV calling or quality control. CNVRanger is applicable for diploid species only.

3 Key functions

Analysis step Function
(A) Input GenomicRanges::makeGRangesListFromDataFrame
(B) Summarization populationRanges
(C) Overlap analysis regioneR::overlapPermTest
(D) Expression analysis cnvEQTL
(E) Phenotype analysis cnvGWAS

Note: we use the package::function notation for functions from other packages. For functions from this package and base R functions, we use the function name without preceding package name.

4 Reading and accessing CNV data

The CNVRanger package uses Bioconductor core data structures implemented in the GenomicRanges and RaggedExperiment packages to efficiently represent, access, and manipulate CNV data.

We start by loading the package.

library(CNVRanger)

4.1 Input data format

CNVRanger reads CNV calls from a simple file format, providing at least chromosome, start position, end position, sample ID, and integer copy number for each call.

For demonstration, we consider CNV calls as obtained with PennCNV from SNP-chip data in a Brazilian cattle breed (da Silva et al., 2016).

Here, we use a data subset and only consider CNV calls on chromosome 1 and 2, for which there are roughly 3000 CNV calls as obtained for 711 samples. We use read.csv to read comma-separated values, but we could use a different function if the data were provided with a different delimiter (for example, read.delim for tab-separated values).

data.dir <- system.file("extdata", package="CNVRanger")
call.file <- file.path(data.dir, "Silva16_PONE_CNV_calls.csv")
calls <- read.csv(call.file, as.is=TRUE)
nrow(calls)
## [1] 3000
head(calls)
##    chr start    end    NE_id state
## 1 chr1 16947  45013 NE001423     3
## 2 chr1 36337  67130 NE001426     3
## 3 chr1 16947  36337 NE001428     3
## 4 chr1 36337 105963 NE001519     3
## 5 chr1 36337  83412 NE001534     3
## 6 chr1 36337  83412 NE001648     3
length(unique(calls[,"NE_id"]))
## [1] 711

We observe that this example dataset satisfies the basic five-column input format required by CNVRanger.

The last column contains the integer copy number state for each call, encoded as

  • 0: homozygous deletion (2-copy loss)
  • 1: heterozygous deletion (1-copy loss)
  • 2: normal diploid state
  • 3: 1-copy gain
  • 4: amplification (>= 2-copy gain)

For CNV detection software that uses a different encoding, it is necessary to convert to the above encoding. For example, GISTIC uses

  • -2: homozygous deletion (2-copy loss)
  • -1: heterozygous deletion (1-copy loss)
  • 0: normal diploid state
  • 1: 1-copy gain
  • 2: amplification (>= 2-copy gain)

which can be converted by simply adding 2.

In Section 7.2 Application to TCGA data we also describe how to transform segmented log2 copy ratios to integer copy number states.

The basic five-column input format can be augmented with additional columns, providing additional characteristics and metadata for each CNV call. In Section 8 CNV-phenotype association analysis, we demonstrate how to make use of such an extended input format.

4.2 Representation as a GRangesList

Once read into an R data.frame, we group the calls by sample ID and convert them to a GRangesList. Each element of the list corresponds to a sample, and contains the genomic coordinates of the CNV calls for this sample (along with the copy number state in the state metadata column).

grl <- GenomicRanges::makeGRangesListFromDataFrame(calls, 
    split.field="NE_id", keep.extra.columns=TRUE)
grl
## GRangesList object of length 711:
## $NE001357
## GRanges object with 5 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |     state
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer>
##   [1]     chr1   4569526-4577608      * |         3
##   [2]     chr1 15984544-15996851      * |         1
##   [3]     chr1 38306432-38330161      * |         3
##   [4]     chr1 93730576-93819471      * |         0
##   [5]     chr2 40529044-40540747      * |         3
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## $NE001358
## GRanges object with 1 range and 1 metadata column:
##       seqnames              ranges strand |     state
##          <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer>
##   [1]     chr1 105042452-105233446      * |         1
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## $NE001359
## GRanges object with 4 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |     state
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer>
##   [1]     chr1   4569526-4577608      * |         3
##   [2]     chr1 31686841-31695808      * |         0
##   [3]     chr1 93730576-93819471      * |         0
##   [4]     chr2   2527718-2535261      * |         0
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## ...
## <708 more elements>

The advantage of representing the CNV calls as a GRangesList is that it allows to leverage the comprehensive set of operations on genomic regions implemented in the GenomicRanges packages - for instance, sorting of the calls according to their genomic coordinates.

grl <- GenomicRanges::sort(grl)
grl
## GRangesList object of length 711:
## $NE001357
## GRanges object with 5 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |     state
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer>
##   [1]     chr1   4569526-4577608      * |         3
##   [2]     chr1 15984544-15996851      * |         1
##   [3]     chr1 38306432-38330161      * |         3
##   [4]     chr1 93730576-93819471      * |         0
##   [5]     chr2 40529044-40540747      * |         3
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## $NE001358
## GRanges object with 1 range and 1 metadata column:
##       seqnames              ranges strand |     state
##          <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer>
##   [1]     chr1 105042452-105233446      * |         1
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## $NE001359
## GRanges object with 4 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##       seqnames            ranges strand |     state
##          <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer>
##   [1]     chr1   4569526-4577608      * |         3
##   [2]     chr1 31686841-31695808      * |         0
##   [3]     chr1 93730576-93819471      * |         0
##   [4]     chr2   2527718-2535261      * |         0
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## ...
## <708 more elements>

4.3 Representation as a RaggedExperiment

An alternative matrix-like representation of the CNV calls can be obtained with the RaggedExperiment data class. It resembles in many aspects the SummarizedExperiment data class for storing gene expression data as e.g. obtained with RNA-seq.

ra <- RaggedExperiment::RaggedExperiment(grl)
ra
## class: RaggedExperiment 
## dim: 3000 711 
## assays(1): state
## rownames: NULL
## colnames(711): NE001357 NE001358 ... NE003967 NE003968
## colData names(0):

As apparent from the dim slot of the object, it stores the CNV calls in the rows and the samples in the columns. Note that the CN state is now represented as an assay matrix which can be easily accessed and subsetted.

RaggedExperiment::assay(ra[1:5,1:5])
##                        NE001357 NE001358 NE001359 NE001360 NE001361
## chr1:4569526-4577608          3       NA       NA       NA       NA
## chr1:15984544-15996851        1       NA       NA       NA       NA
## chr1:38306432-38330161        3       NA       NA       NA       NA
## chr1:93730576-93819471        0       NA       NA       NA       NA
## chr2:40529044-40540747        3       NA       NA       NA       NA

As with SummarizedExperiment objects, additional information for the samples are annotated in the colData slot. For example, we annotate the steer weight and its feed conversion ratio (FCR) using simulated data. Feed conversion ratio is the ratio of dry matter intake to live-weight gain. A typical range of feed conversion ratios is 4.5-7.5 with a lower number being more desirable as it would indicate that a steer required less feed per pound of gain.

weight <- rnorm(ncol(ra), mean=1100, sd=100)
fcr <- rnorm(ncol(ra), mean=6, sd=1.5)
RaggedExperiment::colData(ra)$weight <- round(weight, digits=2)
RaggedExperiment::colData(ra)$fcr <- round(fcr, digits=2)
RaggedExperiment::colData(ra)
## DataFrame with 711 rows and 2 columns
##             weight       fcr
##          <numeric> <numeric>
## NE001357   1120.80      7.22
## NE001358   1173.75      3.65
## NE001359   1159.98      7.50
## NE001360   1153.58      5.67
## NE001361   1253.18      7.46
## ...            ...       ...
## NE003962   1238.91      4.79
## NE003963   1026.03      8.56
## NE003966   1111.77      6.38
## NE003967    950.15      2.67
## NE003968   1216.55      7.90

5 Summarizing individual CNV calls across a population

In CNV analysis, it is often of interest to summarize individual calls across the population, (i.e. to define CNV regions), for subsequent association analysis with expression and phenotype data. In the simplest case, this just merges overlapping individual calls into summarized regions. However, this typically inflates CNV region size, and more appropriate approaches have been developed for this purpose.

As mentioned in the Introduction, we emphasize the need for quality control of CNV calls and appropriate accounting for sources of technical bias before applying these summarization functions (or in general downstream analysis with CNVRanger).

For instance, protocols for read-depth CNV calling typically exclude calls overlapping defined repetitive and low-complexity regions including the UCSC list of segmental duplications Trost et al., 2018, Zhou et al., 2018. We also note that CNVnator, a very popular read-depth CNV caller, implements the \(q0\)-filter to explicitely flag and, if desired, exclude calls that are likely to stem from such regions.
If systematically over-represented in the input CNV calls, summarization procedures such as GISTIC will identify these regions as recurrent independent of whether there are biological or technical reasons for that.

5.1 Trimming low-density areas

Here, we use the approach from CNVRuler to summarize CNV calls to CNV regions (see Figure 1 in Kim et al., 2012 for an illustration of the approach). This trims low-density areas as defined by the density argument, which is set here to <10% of the number of calls within a summarized region.

cnvrs <- populationRanges(grl, density=0.1)
cnvrs
## GRanges object with 303 ranges and 2 metadata columns:
##         seqnames              ranges strand |      freq        type
##            <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <numeric> <character>
##     [1]     chr1        16947-111645      * |       103        gain
##     [2]     chr1     1419261-1630187      * |        18        gain
##     [3]     chr1     1896112-2004603      * |       218        gain
##     [4]     chr1     4139727-4203274      * |         1        gain
##     [5]     chr1     4554832-4577608      * |        23        gain
##     ...      ...                 ...    ... .       ...         ...
##   [299]     chr2 136310067-136322489      * |         2        loss
##   [300]     chr2 136375337-136386940      * |         1        loss
##   [301]     chr2 136455546-136466040      * |         1        loss
##   [302]     chr2 136749793-136802493      * |        39        both
##   [303]     chr2 139194749-139665914      * |        58        both
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths

Note that CNV frequency (number of samples overlapping each region) and CNV type (gain, loss, or both) have also been annotated in the columns freq and type, respectively.

5.2 Reciprocal overlap

We also provide an implementation of the Reciprocal Overlap (RO) procedure that requires calls to sufficiently overlap with one another as e.g. used by Conrad et al., 2010. This merges calls with an RO above a threshold as given by the ro.thresh argument. For example, an RO of 0.51 between two genomic regions A and B requires that B overlaps at least 51% of A, and that A also overlaps at least 51% of B.

ro.cnvrs <- populationRanges(grl[1:100], mode="RO", ro.thresh=0.51)
ro.cnvrs
## GRanges object with 85 ranges and 2 metadata columns:
##        seqnames              ranges strand |      freq        type
##           <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <numeric> <character>
##    [1]     chr1         16947-45013      * |         6        gain
##    [2]     chr1         36337-67130      * |         6        gain
##    [3]     chr1        36337-105963      * |         6        gain
##    [4]     chr1     1419261-1506862      * |         3        gain
##    [5]     chr1     1539361-1625471      * |         3        gain
##    ...      ...                 ...    ... .       ...         ...
##   [81]     chr2 136215094-136232653      * |         2        loss
##   [82]     chr2 136749793-136776410      * |         1        gain
##   [83]     chr2 138738929-139004086      * |         1        loss
##   [84]     chr2 139194749-139274355      * |         1        gain
##   [85]     chr2 139324752-139665914      * |         3        loss
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths

5.3 Identifying recurrent regions

In particular in cancer, it is important to distinguish driver from passenger mutations, i.e. to distinguish meaningful events from random background aberrations. The GISTIC method identifies those regions of the genome that are aberrant more often than would be expected by chance, with greater weight given to high amplitude events (high-level copy-number gains or homozygous deletions) that are less likely to represent random aberrations (Beroukhim et al., 2007).

By setting est.recur=TRUE, we deploy a GISTIC-like significance estimation

cnvrs <- populationRanges(grl, density=0.1, est.recur=TRUE)
cnvrs
## GRanges object with 303 ranges and 3 metadata columns:
##         seqnames              ranges strand |      freq        type     pvalue
##            <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <numeric> <character>  <numeric>
##     [1]     chr1        16947-111645      * |       103        gain 0.00980392
##     [2]     chr1     1419261-1630187      * |        18        gain 0.10784314
##     [3]     chr1     1896112-2004603      * |       218        gain 0.00000000
##     [4]     chr1     4139727-4203274      * |         1        gain 0.55882353
##     [5]     chr1     4554832-4577608      * |        23        gain 0.08823529
##     ...      ...                 ...    ... .       ...         ...        ...
##   [299]     chr2 136310067-136322489      * |         2        loss  0.2361111
##   [300]     chr2 136375337-136386940      * |         1        loss  0.4212963
##   [301]     chr2 136455546-136466040      * |         1        loss  0.4212963
##   [302]     chr2 136749793-136802493      * |        39        both  0.0588235
##   [303]     chr2 139194749-139665914      * |        58        both  0.0392157
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths

and filter for recurrent CNVs that exceed a significance threshold of 0.05.

subset(cnvrs, pvalue < 0.05)
## GRanges object with 17 ranges and 3 metadata columns:
##        seqnames              ranges strand |      freq        type     pvalue
##           <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <numeric> <character>  <numeric>
##    [1]     chr1        16947-111645      * |       103        gain 0.00980392
##    [2]     chr1     1896112-2004603      * |       218        gain 0.00000000
##    [3]     chr1   15984544-15996851      * |       116        loss 0.01851852
##    [4]     chr1   31686841-31695808      * |       274        loss 0.00462963
##    [5]     chr1   69205418-69219486      * |        46        loss 0.04166667
##    ...      ...                 ...    ... .       ...         ...        ...
##   [13]     chr2   97882695-97896935      * |        80        loss  0.0231481
##   [14]     chr2 124330343-124398570      * |        39        loss  0.0462963
##   [15]     chr2 135096060-135271140      * |        84        gain  0.0196078
##   [16]     chr2 135290754-135553033      * |        83        gain  0.0294118
##   [17]     chr2 139194749-139665914      * |        58        both  0.0392157
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 2 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths

We can illustrate the landscape of recurrent CNV regions using the function plotRecurrentRegions. We therefore provide the summarized CNV regions, a valid UCSC genome assembly, and a chromosome of interest.

plotRecurrentRegions(cnvrs, genome="bosTau6", chr="chr1")

The function plots (from top to bottom): (i) an ideogram of the chromosome (note that staining bands are not available for bosTau6), (ii) a genome axis indicating the chromosomal position, (iii) a bar plot showing for each CNV region the number of samples with a CNV call in that region, and (iv) an annotation track that indicates whether this is a recurrent region according to a significance threshold (an argument to the function, default: 0.05).

6 Overlap analysis of CNVs with functional genomic regions

Once individual CNV calls have been summarized across the population, it is typically of interest whether the resulting CNV regions overlap with functional genomic regions such as genes, promoters, or enhancers.

To obtain the location of protein-coding genes, we query available Bos taurus annotation from Ensembl

library(AnnotationHub)
ah <- AnnotationHub::AnnotationHub()
ahDb <- AnnotationHub::query(ah, pattern = c("Bos taurus", "EnsDb"))
ahDb
## AnnotationHub with 25 records
## # snapshotDate(): 2023-04-24
## # $dataprovider: Ensembl
## # $species: Bos taurus, Bos indicus x Bos taurus
## # $rdataclass: EnsDb
## # additional mcols(): taxonomyid, genome, description,
## #   coordinate_1_based, maintainer, rdatadateadded, preparerclass, tags,
## #   rdatapath, sourceurl, sourcetype 
## # retrieve records with, e.g., 'object[["AH53189"]]' 
## 
##              title                                         
##   AH53189  | Ensembl 87 EnsDb for Bos Taurus               
##   AH53693  | Ensembl 88 EnsDb for Bos Taurus               
##   AH56658  | Ensembl 89 EnsDb for Bos Taurus               
##   AH57731  | Ensembl 90 EnsDb for Bos Taurus               
##   AH60745  | Ensembl 91 EnsDb for Bos Taurus               
##   ...        ...                                           
##   AH104793 | Ensembl 107 EnsDb for Bos taurus              
##   AH109265 | Ensembl 108 EnsDb for Bos taurus              
##   AH109507 | Ensembl 109 EnsDb for Bos indicus x Bos taurus
##   AH109512 | Ensembl 109 EnsDb for Bos indicus x Bos taurus
##   AH109513 | Ensembl 109 EnsDb for Bos taurus

and retrieve gene coordinates in the UMD3.1 assembly (Ensembl 92).

ahEdb <- ahDb[["AH60948"]]
## loading from cache
## require("ensembldb")
bt.genes <- ensembldb::genes(ahEdb)
GenomeInfoDb::seqlevelsStyle(bt.genes) <- "UCSC"
bt.genes
## GRanges object with 24616 ranges and 8 metadata columns:
##                      seqnames              ranges strand |            gene_id
##                         <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> |        <character>
##   ENSBTAG00000046619     chr1         19774-19899      - | ENSBTAG00000046619
##   ENSBTAG00000006858     chr1         34627-35558      + | ENSBTAG00000006858
##   ENSBTAG00000039257     chr1         69695-71121      - | ENSBTAG00000039257
##   ENSBTAG00000035349     chr1         83323-84281      - | ENSBTAG00000035349
##   ENSBTAG00000001753     chr1       124849-179713      - | ENSBTAG00000001753
##                  ...      ...                 ...    ... .                ...
##   ENSBTAG00000025951     chrX 148526584-148535857      + | ENSBTAG00000025951
##   ENSBTAG00000029592     chrX 148538917-148539037      - | ENSBTAG00000029592
##   ENSBTAG00000016989     chrX 148576705-148582356      - | ENSBTAG00000016989
##   ENSBTAG00000025952     chrX 148774930-148780901      - | ENSBTAG00000025952
##   ENSBTAG00000047839     chrX 148804071-148805135      + | ENSBTAG00000047839
##                        gene_name   gene_biotype seq_coord_system
##                      <character>    <character>      <character>
##   ENSBTAG00000046619     RF00001           rRNA       chromosome
##   ENSBTAG00000006858                 pseudogene       chromosome
##   ENSBTAG00000039257             protein_coding       chromosome
##   ENSBTAG00000035349                 pseudogene       chromosome
##   ENSBTAG00000001753             protein_coding       chromosome
##                  ...         ...            ...              ...
##   ENSBTAG00000025951             protein_coding       chromosome
##   ENSBTAG00000029592     RF00001           rRNA       chromosome
##   ENSBTAG00000016989             protein_coding       chromosome
##   ENSBTAG00000025952             protein_coding       chromosome
##   ENSBTAG00000047839       P2RY8 protein_coding       chromosome
##                                 description      gene_id_version      symbol
##                                 <character>          <character> <character>
##   ENSBTAG00000046619                   NULL ENSBTAG00000046619.1     RF00001
##   ENSBTAG00000006858                   NULL ENSBTAG00000006858.5            
##   ENSBTAG00000039257                   NULL ENSBTAG00000039257.2            
##   ENSBTAG00000035349                   NULL ENSBTAG00000035349.3            
##   ENSBTAG00000001753                   NULL ENSBTAG00000001753.4            
##                  ...                    ...                  ...         ...
##   ENSBTAG00000025951                   NULL ENSBTAG00000025951.4            
##   ENSBTAG00000029592                   NULL ENSBTAG00000029592.1     RF00001
##   ENSBTAG00000016989                   NULL ENSBTAG00000016989.5            
##   ENSBTAG00000025952                   NULL ENSBTAG00000025952.3            
##   ENSBTAG00000047839 P2Y receptor family .. ENSBTAG00000047839.1       P2RY8
##                       entrezid
##                         <list>
##   ENSBTAG00000046619      <NA>
##   ENSBTAG00000006858      <NA>
##   ENSBTAG00000039257      <NA>
##   ENSBTAG00000035349      <NA>
##   ENSBTAG00000001753    507243
##                  ...       ...
##   ENSBTAG00000025951      <NA>
##   ENSBTAG00000029592      <NA>
##   ENSBTAG00000016989      <NA>
##   ENSBTAG00000025952    785083
##   ENSBTAG00000047839 100299937
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 48 sequences (1 circular) from UMD3.1 genome

To speed up the example, we restrict analysis to chromosomes 1 and 2.

sel.genes <- subset(bt.genes, seqnames %in% paste0("chr", 1:2))
sel.genes <- subset(sel.genes, gene_biotype == "protein_coding")
sel.cnvrs <- subset(cnvrs, seqnames %in% paste0("chr", 1:2))

6.1 Finding and illustrating overlaps

The findOverlaps function from the GenomicRanges package is a general function for finding overlaps between two sets of genomic regions. Here, we use the function to find protein-coding genes (our query region set) overlapping the summarized CNV regions (our subject region set).

Resulting overlaps are represented as a Hits object, from which overlapping query and subject regions can be obtained with dedicated accessor functions (named queryHits and subjectHits, respectively). Here, we use these functions to also annotate the CNV type (gain/loss) for genes overlapping with CNVs.

olaps <- GenomicRanges::findOverlaps(sel.genes, sel.cnvrs, ignore.strand=TRUE)
qh <- S4Vectors::queryHits(olaps)
sh <- S4Vectors::subjectHits(olaps)
cgenes <- sel.genes[qh]
cgenes$type <- sel.cnvrs$type[sh]
subset(cgenes, select = "type")
## GRanges object with 123 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##                      seqnames              ranges strand |        type
##                         <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <character>
##   ENSBTAG00000039257     chr1         69695-71121      - |        gain
##   ENSBTAG00000021819     chr1     1467704-1496151      - |        gain
##   ENSBTAG00000019404     chr1     1563137-1591758      - |        gain
##   ENSBTAG00000015212     chr1     1593295-1627137      - |        gain
##   ENSBTAG00000000597     chr1   18058709-18207251      + |        loss
##                  ...      ...                 ...    ... .         ...
##   ENSBTAG00000003822     chr2 136193743-136239981      - |        loss
##   ENSBTAG00000013281     chr2 136276529-136314563      + |        loss
##   ENSBTAG00000009251     chr2 136317925-136337845      - |        loss
##   ENSBTAG00000008510     chr2 136362255-136444097      + |        loss
##   ENSBTAG00000014221     chr2 136457565-136461977      + |        loss
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 48 sequences (1 circular) from UMD3.1 genome

It might also be of interest to illustrate the original CNV calls on overlapping genomic features (here: protein-coding genes). For this purpose, an oncoPrint plot provides a useful summary in a rectangular fashion (genes in the rows, samples in the columns). Stacked barplots on the top and the right of the plot display the number of altered genes per sample and the number of altered samples per gene, respectively.

cnvOncoPrint(grl, cgenes)

6.2 Overlap permutation test

As a certain amount of overlap can be expected just by chance, an assessment of statistical significance is needed to decide whether the observed overlap is greater (enrichment) or less (depletion) than expected by chance.

The regioneR package implements a general framework for testing overlaps of genomic regions based on permutation sampling. This allows to repeatedly sample random regions from the genome, matching size and chromosomal distribution of the region set under study (here: the CNV regions). By recomputing the overlap with the functional features in each permutation, statistical significance of the observed overlap can be assessed.

We demonstrate in the following how this strategy can be used to assess the overlap between the detected CNV regions and protein-coding regions in the cattle genome. We expect to find a depletion as protein-coding regions are highly conserved and rarely subject to long-range structural variation such as CNV. Hence, is the overlap between CNVs and protein-coding genes less than expected by chance?

To answer this question, we apply an overlap permutation test with 100 permutations (ntimes=100), while maintaining chromosomal distribution of the CNV region set (per.chromosome=TRUE). Furthermore, we use the option count.once=TRUE to count an overlapping CNV region only once, even if it overlaps with 2 or more genes. We also allow random regions to be sampled from the entire genome (mask=NA), although in certain scenarios masking certain regions such as telomeres and centromeres is advisable. Also note that we use 100 permutations for demonstration only. To draw robust conclusions a minimum of 1000 permutations should be carried out.

library(regioneR)
library(BSgenome.Btaurus.UCSC.bosTau6.masked)
res <- regioneR::overlapPermTest(A=sel.cnvrs, B=sel.genes, ntimes=100, 
    genome="bosTau6", mask=NA, per.chromosome=TRUE, count.once=TRUE)
res
## $numOverlaps
## P-value: 0.0297029702970297
## Z-score: -2.0496
## Number of iterations: 100
## Alternative: less
## Evaluation of the original region set: 97
## Evaluation function: numOverlaps
## Randomization function: randomizeRegions
## 
## attr(,"class")
## [1] "permTestResultsList"
summary(res[[1]]$permuted)
##    Min. 1st Qu.  Median    Mean 3rd Qu.    Max. 
##    96.0   109.0   113.0   114.3   121.2   133.0

The resulting permutation p-value indicates a significant depletion. Out of the 303 CNV regions, 97 overlap with at least one gene. In contrast, when repeatedly drawing random regions matching the CNV regions in size and chromosomal distribution, the mean number of overlapping regions across permutations was 114.3 \(\pm\) 8.5.

This finding is consistent with our observations across the whole genome (da Silva et al., 2016) and findings from the 1000 Genomes Poject (Sudmant et al., 2015).

plot(res)

Note: the function regioneR::permTest allows to incorporate user-defined functions for randomizing regions and evaluating additional measures of overlap such as total genomic size in bp.

7 CNV-expression association analysis

Studies of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) aim at the discovery of genetic variants that explain variation in gene expression levels (Nica and Dermitzakis, 2013). Mainly applied in the context of SNPs, the concept also naturally extends to the analysis of CNVs.

The CNVRanger package implements association testing between CNV regions and RNA-seq read counts using edgeR, which applies generalized linear models based on the negative-binomial distribution while incorporating normalization factors for different library sizes.

In the case of only one CN state deviating from 2n for a CNV region under investigation, this reduces to the classical 2-group comparison. For more than two states (e.g. 0n, 1n, 2n), edgeR’s ANOVA-like test is applied to test all deviating groups for significant expression differences relative to 2n.

7.1 Application to individual CNV and RNA-seq assays

We demonstrate the functionality by loading RNA-seq read count data from skeletal muscle samples for 183 Nelore cattle steers, which we analyzed for CNV-expression effects as previously described (Geistlinger et al., 2018).

rseq.file <- file.path(data.dir, "counts_cleaned.txt")
rcounts <- read.delim(rseq.file, row.names=1, stringsAsFactors=FALSE)
rcounts <- as.matrix(rcounts)
dim(rcounts)
## [1] 939 183
rcounts[1:5, 1:5]
##                    NE001407 NE001408 NE001424 NE001439 NE001448
## ENSBTAG00000000088       64       65      233      135      134
## ENSBTAG00000000160       20       28       50       13       18
## ENSBTAG00000000176      279      373      679      223      417
## ENSBTAG00000000201      252      271      544      155      334
## ENSBTAG00000000210      268      379      486      172      443

For demonstration, we restrict analysis to the 939 genes on chromosome 1 and 2, and store the RNA-seq expression data in a SummarizedExperiment.

library(SummarizedExperiment)
rranges <- GenomicRanges::granges(sel.genes)[rownames(rcounts)]
rse <- SummarizedExperiment(assays=list(rcounts=rcounts), rowRanges=rranges)
rse
## class: RangedSummarizedExperiment 
## dim: 939 183 
## metadata(0):
## assays(1): rcounts
## rownames(939): ENSBTAG00000000088 ENSBTAG00000000160 ...
##   ENSBTAG00000048210 ENSBTAG00000048228
## rowData names(0):
## colnames(183): NE001407 NE001408 ... NE003840 NE003843
## colData names(0):

Assuming distinct modes of action, effects observed in the CNV-expression analysis are typically divided into (i) local effects (cis), where expression changes coincide with CNVs in the respective genes, and (ii) distal effects (trans), where CNVs supposedly affect trans-acting regulators such as transcription factors.

However, due to power considerations and to avoid detection of spurious effects, stringent filtering of (i) not sufficiently expressed genes, and (ii) CNV regions with insufficient sample size in groups deviating from 2n, should be carried out when testing for distal effects. Local effects have a clear spatial indication and the number of genes locating in or close to a CNV region of interest is typically small; testing for differential expression between CN states is thus generally better powered for local effects and less stringent filter criteria can be applied.

In the following, we carry out CNV-expression association analysis by providing the CNV regions to test (cnvrs), the individual CNV calls (grl) to determine per-sample CN state in each CNV region, the RNA-seq read counts (rse), and the size of the genomic window around each CNV region (window). The window argument thereby determines which genes are considered for testing for each CNV region and is set here to 1 Mbp.

Further, use the filter.by.expr and min.samples arguments to exclude from the analysis (i) genes with very low read count across samples, and (ii) CNV regions with fewer than min.samples samples in a group deviating from 2n.

res <- cnvEQTL(cnvrs, grl, rse, window = "1Mbp", verbose = TRUE)
## Restricting analysis to 179 intersecting samples
## Preprocessing RNA-seq data ...
## Summarizing per-sample CN state in each CNV region
## Excluding 286 cnvrs not satisfying min.samples threshold
## Analyzing 12 regions with >=1 gene in the given window
## 1 of 12
## 2 of 12
## 3 of 12
## 4 of 12
## 5 of 12
## 6 of 12
## 7 of 12
## 8 of 12
## 9 of 12
## 10 of 12
## 11 of 12
## 12 of 12
res
## GRangesList object of length 12:
## $`chr1:16947-111645`
## GRanges object with 5 ranges and 5 metadata columns:
##                      seqnames         ranges strand | logFC.CN0 logFC.CN1
##                         <Rle>      <IRanges>  <Rle> | <numeric> <numeric>
##   ENSBTAG00000018278     chr1  922635-929992      + |        NA        NA
##   ENSBTAG00000021997     chr1 944294-1188287      - |        NA        NA
##   ENSBTAG00000020035     chr1  351708-362907      + |        NA        NA
##   ENSBTAG00000011528     chr1  463572-478996      - |        NA        NA
##   ENSBTAG00000012594     chr1  669920-733729      - |        NA        NA
##                        logFC.CN3     PValue AdjPValue
##                        <numeric>  <numeric> <numeric>
##   ENSBTAG00000018278 -0.19485971 0.00731515  0.400665
##   ENSBTAG00000021997  0.08124960 0.17961602  0.841565
##   ENSBTAG00000020035 -0.07450286 0.74032511  0.997719
##   ENSBTAG00000011528 -0.01183926 0.91556541  0.997719
##   ENSBTAG00000012594  0.00661189 0.94305715  0.997719
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 48 sequences (1 circular) from UMD3.1 genome
## 
## ...
## <11 more elements>

The resulting GRangesList contains an entry for each CNV region tested, storing the genes tested in the genomic window around the CNV region, and (i) log2 fold change with respect to the 2n group, (ii) edgeR’s DE p-value, and (iii) the (per default) Benjamini-Hochberg adjusted p-value.

7.2 Application to TCGA data stored in a MultiAssayExperiment

In the previous section, we individually prepared the CNV and RNA-seq data for CNV-expression association analysis. In the following, we demonstrate how to perform an integrated preparation of the two assays when stored in a MultiAssayExperiment. We therefore consider glioblastoma GBM data from The Cancer Genome Atlas TCGA, which can conveniently be accessed with the curatedTCGAData package.

library(curatedTCGAData)
gbm <- curatedTCGAData::curatedTCGAData("GBM",
        assays=c("GISTIC_Peaks", "CNVSNP", "RNASeq2GeneNorm"),
        version = "1.1.38",
        dry.run=FALSE)
gbm
## A MultiAssayExperiment object of 3 listed
##  experiments with user-defined names and respective classes.
##  Containing an ExperimentList class object of length 3:
##  [1] GBM_CNVSNP-20160128: RaggedExperiment with 146852 rows and 1104 columns
##  [2] GBM_GISTIC_Peaks-20160128: RangedSummarizedExperiment with 68 rows and 577 columns
##  [3] GBM_RNASeq2GeneNorm-20160128: SummarizedExperiment with 20501 rows and 166 columns
## Functionality:
##  experiments() - obtain the ExperimentList instance
##  colData() - the primary/phenotype DataFrame
##  sampleMap() - the sample coordination DataFrame
##  `$`, `[`, `[[` - extract colData columns, subset, or experiment
##  *Format() - convert into a long or wide DataFrame
##  assays() - convert ExperimentList to a SimpleList of matrices
##  exportClass() - save data to flat files

The returned MultiAssayExperiment contains three assays:

  • the SNP-based CNV calls stored in a RaggedExperiment (GBM_CNVSNP),
  • the recurrent CNV regions summarized across the population using the GISTIC method (GBM_GISTIC_Peaks), and
  • the normalized RNA-seq gene expression values in a SummarizedExperiment (GBM_RNASeq2GeneNorm).

To annotate the genomic coordinates of the genes measured in the RNA-seq assay, we use the function symbolsToRanges from the TCGAutils package. For demonstration, we restrict the analysis to chromosome 1 and 2.

library(TCGAutils)
gbm <- TCGAutils::symbolsToRanges(gbm, unmapped=FALSE)
## Warning in (function (seqlevels, genome, new_style) : cannot switch some hg19's
## seqlevels from UCSC to NCBI style
## Warning: 'experiments' dropped; see 'metadata'
for(i in 1:3) 
{
    rr <- rowRanges(gbm[[i]])
    GenomeInfoDb::genome(rr) <- "NCBI37"
    GenomeInfoDb::seqlevelsStyle(rr) <- "UCSC"
    ind <- as.character(seqnames(rr)) %in% c("chr1", "chr2")
    rowRanges(gbm[[i]]) <- rr
    gbm[[i]] <- gbm[[i]][ind,]
}
gbm
## A MultiAssayExperiment object of 3 listed
##  experiments with user-defined names and respective classes.
##  Containing an ExperimentList class object of length 3:
##  [1] GBM_CNVSNP-20160128: RaggedExperiment with 17818 rows and 1104 columns
##  [2] GBM_GISTIC_Peaks-20160128: RangedSummarizedExperiment with 12 rows and 577 columns
##  [3] GBM_RNASeq2GeneNorm-20160128_ranged: RangedSummarizedExperiment with 2874 rows and 166 columns
## Functionality:
##  experiments() - obtain the ExperimentList instance
##  colData() - the primary/phenotype DataFrame
##  sampleMap() - the sample coordination DataFrame
##  `$`, `[`, `[[` - extract colData columns, subset, or experiment
##  *Format() - convert into a long or wide DataFrame
##  assays() - convert ExperimentList to a SimpleList of matrices
##  exportClass() - save data to flat files

We now restrict the analysis to intersecting patients of the three assays using MultiAssayExperiment’s intersectColumns function, and select Primary Solid Tumor samples using the splitAssays function from the TCGAutils package.

gbm <- MultiAssayExperiment::intersectColumns(gbm)
TCGAutils::sampleTables(gbm)
## $`GBM_CNVSNP-20160128`
## 
##  01  02  10  11 
## 154  13 146   1 
## 
## $`GBM_GISTIC_Peaks-20160128`
## 
##  01 
## 154 
## 
## $`GBM_RNASeq2GeneNorm-20160128_ranged`
## 
##  01  02 
## 147  13
data(sampleTypes, package="TCGAutils")
sampleTypes
##    Code                                        Definition Short.Letter.Code
## 1    01                               Primary Solid Tumor                TP
## 2    02                             Recurrent Solid Tumor                TR
## 3    03   Primary Blood Derived Cancer - Peripheral Blood                TB
## 4    04      Recurrent Blood Derived Cancer - Bone Marrow              TRBM
## 5    05                          Additional - New Primary               TAP
## 6    06                                        Metastatic                TM
## 7    07                             Additional Metastatic               TAM
## 8    08                        Human Tumor Original Cells              THOC
## 9    09        Primary Blood Derived Cancer - Bone Marrow               TBM
## 10   10                              Blood Derived Normal                NB
## 11   11                               Solid Tissue Normal                NT
## 12   12                                Buccal Cell Normal               NBC
## 13   13                           EBV Immortalized Normal              NEBV
## 14   14                                Bone Marrow Normal               NBM
## 15   15                                    sample type 15              15SH
## 16   16                                    sample type 16              16SH
## 17   20                                   Control Analyte             CELLC
## 18   40 Recurrent Blood Derived Cancer - Peripheral Blood               TRB
## 19   50                                        Cell Lines              CELL
## 20   60                          Primary Xenograft Tissue                XP
## 21   61                Cell Line Derived Xenograft Tissue               XCL
## 22   99                                    sample type 99              99SH
gbm <- TCGAutils::TCGAsplitAssays(gbm, sampleCodes="01")
gbm
## A MultiAssayExperiment object of 3 listed
##  experiments with user-defined names and respective classes.
##  Containing an ExperimentList class object of length 3:
##  [1] 01_GBM_CNVSNP-20160128: RaggedExperiment with 17818 rows and 154 columns
##  [2] 01_GBM_GISTIC_Peaks-20160128: RangedSummarizedExperiment with 12 rows and 154 columns
##  [3] 01_GBM_RNASeq2GeneNorm-20160128_ranged: RangedSummarizedExperiment with 2874 rows and 147 columns
## Functionality:
##  experiments() - obtain the ExperimentList instance
##  colData() - the primary/phenotype DataFrame
##  sampleMap() - the sample coordination DataFrame
##  `$`, `[`, `[[` - extract colData columns, subset, or experiment
##  *Format() - convert into a long or wide DataFrame
##  assays() - convert ExperimentList to a SimpleList of matrices
##  exportClass() - save data to flat files

The SNP-based CNV calls from TCGA are provided as segmented log2 copy number ratios.

ind <- grep("CNVSNP", names(gbm))
head( mcols(gbm[[ind]]) )
## DataFrame with 6 rows and 2 columns
##   Num_Probes Segment_Mean
##    <numeric>    <numeric>
## 1        166       0.1112
## 2          3      -1.2062
## 3      40303       0.1086
## 4        271      -0.3065
## 5      88288       0.1049
## 6      33125       0.3510
summary( mcols(gbm[[ind]])$Segment_Mean )
##    Min. 1st Qu.  Median    Mean 3rd Qu.    Max. 
## -8.2199 -0.9779 -0.0035 -0.6395  0.0493  6.9689

It is thus necessary to convert them to integer copy number states for further analysis with CNVRanger.

In a diploid genome, a single-copy gain in a perfectly pure, homogeneous sample has a copy ratio of 3/2. On log2 scale, this is log2(3/2) = 0.585, and a single-copy loss is log2(1/2) = -1.0.

We can roughly convert a log ratio lr to an integer copy number by

round( (2^lr) * 2)

Note that this is not the ideal way to calculate absolute integer copy numbers. Especially in cancer, differences in tumor purity, tumor ploidy, and subclonality can substantially interfere with the assumption of a pure homogeneous sample. See ABSOLUTE and the PureCN package for accurately taking such tumor characteristics into account.

However, without additional information we transform the log ratios into integer copy number states using the rough approximation outlined above.

smean <- mcols(gbm[[ind]])$Segment_Mean
state <- round(2^smean * 2)
state[state > 4] <- 4
mcols(gbm[[ind]])$state <- state
gbm[[ind]] <- gbm[[ind]][state != 2,]
mcols(gbm[[ind]]) <- mcols(gbm[[ind]])[,3:1]
table(mcols(gbm[[ind]])$state)
## 
##    0    1    3    4 
## 2401 4084 1005  747

The data is now ready for CNV-expression association analysis, where we find only four CNV regions with sufficient sample size for testing using the default value of 10 for the minSamples argument.

res <- cnvEQTL(cnvrs="01_GBM_GISTIC_Peaks-20160128", 
    calls="01_GBM_CNVSNP-20160128", 
    rcounts="01_GBM_RNASeq2GeneNorm-20160128_ranged", 
    data=gbm, window="1Mbp", verbose=TRUE)
## Warning: 'experiments' dropped; see 'metadata'
## harmonizing input:
##   removing 154 sampleMap rows not in names(experiments)
## Preprocessing RNA-seq data ...
## Summarizing per-sample CN state in each CNV region
## Excluding 4 cnvrs not satisfying min.samples threshold
## Analyzing 8 regions with >=1 gene in the given window
## 1 of 8
## 2 of 8
## 3 of 8
## 4 of 8
## 5 of 8
## 6 of 8
## 7 of 8
## 8 of 8
res
## GRangesList object of length 8:
## $`chr1:3394251-6475685`
## GRanges object with 29 ranges and 5 metadata columns:
##           seqnames          ranges strand |   logFC.CN1 logFC.CN3 logFC.CN4
##              <Rle>       <IRanges>  <Rle> |   <numeric> <numeric> <numeric>
##     RPL22     chr1 6245080-6259679      - |   -0.658495        NA        NA
##      ICMT     chr1 6281253-6296044      - |   -0.564167        NA        NA
##     PHF13     chr1 6673756-6684093      + |   -0.619671        NA        NA
##    KLHL21     chr1 6650779-6662929      - |   -0.694953        NA        NA
##   DNAJC11     chr1 6694228-6761966      - |   -0.553213        NA        NA
##       ...      ...             ...    ... .         ...       ...       ...
##    PRDM16     chr1 2985742-3355185      + |  0.07407792        NA        NA
##     PLCH2     chr1 2407754-2436969      + | -0.09360410        NA        NA
##      HES5     chr1 2460184-2461684      - | -0.07076490        NA        NA
##    KCNAB2     chr1 6052358-6161253      + |  0.02270206        NA        NA
##     AJAP1     chr1 4715105-4843851      + | -0.00589544        NA        NA
##                PValue   AdjPValue
##             <numeric>   <numeric>
##     RPL22 3.17431e-13 3.74115e-12
##      ICMT 5.92048e-11 6.51253e-10
##     PHF13 7.99840e-10 6.94598e-09
##    KLHL21 4.25175e-08 2.80615e-07
##   DNAJC11 8.95532e-08 5.68318e-07
##       ...         ...         ...
##    PRDM16    0.799680    0.844680
##     PLCH2    0.813965    0.844680
##      HES5    0.866778    0.888313
##    KCNAB2    0.918541    0.929811
##     AJAP1    0.984917    0.984917
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 25 sequences (1 circular) from NCBI37 genome
## 
## ...
## <7 more elements>

We can illustrate differential expression of genes in the neighborhood of a CNV region of interest using the function plotEQTL.

res[2]
## GRangesList object of length 1:
## $`chr1:7908902-8336254`
## GRanges object with 10 ranges and 5 metadata columns:
##           seqnames          ranges strand | logFC.CN1 logFC.CN3 logFC.CN4
##              <Rle>       <IRanges>  <Rle> | <numeric> <numeric> <numeric>
##     PARK7     chr1 8021714-8045342      + | -0.635217        NA        NA
##      RERE     chr1 8412464-8877699      - | -0.728731        NA        NA
##    CAMTA1     chr1 6845384-7829766      + | -0.575241        NA        NA
##   SLC45A1     chr1 8384390-8404227      + | -0.649793        NA        NA
##      ENO1     chr1 8921059-8939151      - | -0.450444        NA        NA
##     VAMP3     chr1 7831329-7841492      + | -0.394773        NA        NA
##      PER3     chr1 7844380-7905237      + | -0.509090        NA        NA
##      H6PD     chr1 9294863-9331394      + | -0.373501        NA        NA
##    ERRFI1     chr1 8071779-8086393      - | -0.401913        NA        NA
##    SLC2A5     chr1 9097005-9148510      - | -0.275412        NA        NA
##                PValue   AdjPValue
##             <numeric>   <numeric>
##     PARK7 1.98085e-09 1.55638e-08
##      RERE 3.82426e-09 2.86820e-08
##    CAMTA1 1.16870e-08 8.38415e-08
##   SLC45A1 3.03837e-06 1.51918e-05
##      ENO1 4.89267e-04 1.61458e-03
##     VAMP3 7.54705e-04 2.22368e-03
##      PER3 1.70370e-02 3.47051e-02
##      H6PD 2.16178e-02 4.29751e-02
##    ERRFI1 1.09928e-01 1.72744e-01
##    SLC2A5 2.40240e-01 3.22273e-01
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 25 sequences (1 circular) from NCBI37 genome
(r <- GRanges(names(res)[2]))
## GRanges object with 1 range and 0 metadata columns:
##       seqnames          ranges strand
##          <Rle>       <IRanges>  <Rle>
##   [1]     chr1 7908902-8336254      *
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
plotEQTL(cnvr=r, genes=res[[2]], genome="hg19", cn="CN1")

The plot shows consistent decreased expression (negative log2 fold change) of genes in the neighborhood of the CNV region, when comparing samples with a one copy loss (1\(n\)) in that region to the 2\(n\) reference group.

Note that a significant expression change is not only observed for genes locating within the CNV region (dosage effect, here: PARK7), but also genes locating in close proximity of the CNV region (neighborhood effect, here: CAMTA1 and RERE). This is consistent with previous observations in mouse Cahan et al., 2009 and our observations in cattle Geistlinger et al., 2018.

8 CNV-phenotype association analysis

Specifically developed for CNV calls inferred from SNP-chip data, CNVRanger allows to carry out a probe-level genome-wide association study (GWAS) with quantitative phenotypes. CNV calls from other sources such as sequencing data are also supported by using the start and end position of each call as the corresponding probes.

As previously described da Silva et al., 2016, we construct CNV segments from probes representing common CN polymorphisms (allele frequency >1%), and carry out a GWAS using a standard linear regression of phenotype on allele dosage with the lm function.

For CNV segments composed of multiple probes, the segment p-value is chosen from the probe p-values, using either the probe with minimum p-value or the probe with maximum CNV frequency.

For demonstration, we use CNV data of a wild population of songbirds (da Silva et al., 2018).

cnv.loc <- file.path(data.dir, "CNVOut.txt") 
cnv.calls <- read.delim(cnv.loc, as.is=TRUE) 
head(cnv.calls)
##   chr    start      end sample.id state num.snps  start.probe    end.probe
## 1  25  6463188  6475943      1068     3       12 AX-100224358 AX-100363929
## 2   1 98166149 98184039      1068     3       28 AX-100796878 AX-100422118
## 3   4 67895958 67938901      1068     3        8 AX-100222654 AX-100726215
## 4   8 30702029 30722351      1334     3       13 AX-100160546 AX-100828216
## 5   2   877347   942971      1334     3       26 AX-100292215 AX-100391883
## 6   1 98147555 98186543       546     3       48 AX-100939600 AX-100309013

Here, we use the extensibility of the basic five-column input format described in Section 4.1. In addition to the required five columns (providing chromosome, start position, end position, sample ID, and integer copy number state), we provided three optional columns storing the number of probes supporting the call, and the Affymetrix ID of the first and last probe contained in the call.

As these columns are optional, it is not ultimately necessary to provide them in order to run a CNV GWAS. However, we recommend to provide this information when available as it allows for a more fine-grained probe-by-probe GWAS.

As described in Section 4.2, we store the CNV calls in a GRangesList for further analysis.

cnv.calls <- GenomicRanges::makeGRangesListFromDataFrame(cnv.calls, 
    split.field="sample.id", keep.extra.columns=TRUE)
sort(cnv.calls)
## GRangesList object of length 10:
## $`112`
## GRanges object with 2 ranges and 4 metadata columns:
##       seqnames              ranges strand |     state  num.snps  start.probe
##          <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <integer>  <character>
##   [1]        1 100727703-100730748      * |         0         8 AX-100388724
##   [2]       10   19062731-19096193      * |         3         9 AX-100271359
##          end.probe
##        <character>
##   [1] AX-100765659
##   [2] AX-100147230
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 10 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## $`175`
## GRanges object with 2 ranges and 4 metadata columns:
##       seqnames          ranges strand |     state  num.snps  start.probe
##          <Rle>       <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <integer>  <character>
##   [1]        8 4122253-4193189      * |         3        62 AX-100097083
##   [2]       27 2299391-2308228      * |         3         6 AX-100610990
##          end.probe
##        <character>
##   [1] AX-100912769
##   [2] AX-100178489
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 10 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## $`356`
## GRanges object with 1 range and 4 metadata columns:
##       seqnames              ranges strand |     state  num.snps  start.probe
##          <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <integer>  <character>
##   [1]        1 100728444-100730748      * |         0         6 AX-100700982
##          end.probe
##        <character>
##   [1] AX-100765659
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 10 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## 
## ...
## <7 more elements>

In the following, we use genomic estimated breeding values (GEBVs) for breeding time (BT) as the quantitative phenotype, and accordingly analyze for each CNV region whether change in copy number is associated with change in the genetic potential for breeding time.

8.1 Setting up a CNV-GWAS

We read phenotype information from a tab-delimited file, containing exactly four columns: sample ID, family ID, sex, and the quantitative phenotype (here: breeding time, BT) because we use the PLINK input format for compatibility.

phen.loc <- file.path(data.dir, "Pheno.txt")
colData <- read.delim(phen.loc, as.is=TRUE)
head(colData)
##   sample.id fam sex        BT
## 1       911  NA   2 -2.842842
## 2       622  NA   2 -2.884186
## 3      1195 622   2 -3.062731
## 4       112  NA   2 -3.161435
## 5       175  NA   2 -3.597768
## 6      2391  NA   2  3.623262

Although fam and sex are listed as columns, this info is not considered in the current implementation and can be set to NA.

As described in Section 4.3, we combine the CNV calls with the phenotype information in a RaggedExperiment for coordinated representation and analysis.

mcols(cnv.calls) <- colData
re <- RaggedExperiment::RaggedExperiment(cnv.calls)
re
## class: RaggedExperiment 
## dim: 19 10 
## assays(4): state num.snps start.probe end.probe
## rownames: NULL
## colnames(10): 112 175 ... 1334 2391
## colData names(4): sample.id fam sex BT

If probe information is available and has been annotated to the CNV calls, as we did above, the probe IDs and corresponding genomic positions should be provided in a separate file.

Map file is expected to be a tab-delimited file containing exactly three columns: probe ID,chromosome, and the position in bp. Map file is optional. If no map file is provided a pseudomap will be automatically generated.

map.loc <- file.path(data.dir, "MapPenn.txt")
map.df <- read.delim(map.loc, as.is=TRUE)
head(map.df)
##           Name Chr Position
## 1 AX-100939600   1 98147555
## 2 AX-100088448   1 98148072
## 3 AX-100954037   1 98150537
## 4 AX-100836117   1 98151270
## 5 AX-100027637   1 98151959
## 6 AX-100215062   1 98151992

Given a RaggedExperiment storing CNV calls together with phenotype information, and optionally a map file for probe-level coordinates, the setupCnvGWAS function sets up all files needed for the GWAS analysis.

The information required for analysis is stored in the resulting phen.info list:

phen.info <- setupCnvGWAS("example", cnv.out.loc=re, map.loc=map.loc)
phen.info
## $samplesPhen
##  [1] "911"  "622"  "1195" "112"  "175"  "2391" "1068" "546"  "356"  "1334"
## 
## $phenotypes
## [1] "BT"
## 
## $phenotypesdf
##           BT
## 1  -2.842842
## 2  -2.884186
## 3  -3.062731
## 4  -3.161435
## 5  -3.597768
## 6   3.623262
## 7   3.216123
## 8   3.129881
## 9   3.106459
## 10  3.004740
## 
## $phenotypesSam
##    samplesPhen        BT
## 1          911 -2.842842
## 2          622 -2.884186
## 3         1195 -3.062731
## 4          112 -3.161435
## 5          175 -3.597768
## 6         2391  3.623262
## 7         1068  3.216123
## 8          546  3.129881
## 9          356  3.106459
## 10        1334  3.004740
## 
## $FamID
##    samplesPhen  V2
## 1          911  NA
## 2          622  NA
## 3         1195 622
## 4          112  NA
## 5          175  NA
## 6         2391  NA
## 7         1068  NA
## 8          546  NA
## 9          356  NA
## 10        1334  NA
## 
## $SexIds
##    samplesPhen V2
## 1          911  2
## 2          622  2
## 3         1195  2
## 4          112  2
## 5          175  2
## 6         2391  2
## 7         1068  2
## 8          546  2
## 9          356  2
## 10        1334  2
## 
## $all.paths
##                                     Inputs 
##  "~/.local/share/CNVRanger/example/Inputs" 
##                                    Results 
## "~/.local/share/CNVRanger/example/Results"

The last item of the list displays the working directory:

all.paths <- phen.info$all.paths
all.paths
##                                     Inputs 
##  "~/.local/share/CNVRanger/example/Inputs" 
##                                    Results 
## "~/.local/share/CNVRanger/example/Results"

For the GWAS, chromosome names are assumed to be integer (i.e. 1, 2, 3, ...). Non-integer chromosome names can be encoded by providing a data.frame that describes the mapping from character names to corresponding integers.

For the example data, chromosomes 1A, 4A, 25LG1, 25LG2, and LGE22 are correspondingly encoded via

# Define chr correspondence to numeric
chr.code.name <- data.frame(   
                    V1 = c(16, 25, 29:31), 
                    V2 = c("1A", "4A", "25LG1", "25LG2", "LGE22"))

8.2 Running a CNV-GWAS

We can then run the actual CNV-GWAS, here without correction for multiple testing which is done for demonstration only. In real analyses, multiple testing correction is recommended to avoid inflation of false positive findings.

segs.pvalue.gr <- cnvGWAS(phen.info, chr.code.name=chr.code.name, method.m.test="none")
segs.pvalue.gr
## GRanges object with 16 ranges and 6 metadata columns:
##        seqnames              ranges strand |   SegName MinPvalue    NameProbe
##           <Rle>           <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer> <numeric>  <character>
##    [1]        1   98171563-98184039      * |         2 0.0323047 AX-100337994
##    [2]        8     4121283-4188293      * |         7 0.0349439 AX-100097083
##    [3]        8             4193189      * |         8 0.1124385 AX-100912769
##    [4]        1   98186123-98186543      * |         3 0.1201779 AX-100364577
##    [5]        1   98147555-98171009      * |         1 0.1976503 AX-100195917
##    ...      ...                 ...    ... .       ...       ...          ...
##   [12]       18     1278467-1295371      * |        13  0.385570 AX-100573546
##   [13]       11            18840662      * |        12  0.392639 AX-100673859
##   [14]       21     3326720-3329134      * |        14  0.392639 AX-100389358
##   [15]       11   18836038-18839377      * |        11  0.968849 AX-100780252
##   [16]        1 100728444-100730326      * |         4  0.972202 AX-100700982
##          Frequency MinPvalueAdjusted   Phenotype
##        <character>         <numeric> <character>
##    [1]           3           0.03230          BT
##    [2]           3           0.03494          BT
##    [3]           2           0.11244          BT
##    [4]           2           0.12018          BT
##    [5]           4           0.19765          BT
##    ...         ...               ...         ...
##   [12]           1           0.38557          BT
##   [13]           1           0.39264          BT
##   [14]           1           0.39264          BT
##   [15]           2           0.96885          BT
##   [16]           2           0.97220          BT
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 10 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths

The CNV-GWAS uses the concept of CNV segments to define more fine-grained CNV loci within CNV regions.

Definition of CNV segments. The figure shows construction of a CNV segment from 4 individual CNV calls in a CNV region based on pairwise copy number concordance between adjacent probes.

Figure 1: Definition of CNV segments
The figure shows construction of a CNV segment from 4 individual CNV calls in a CNV region based on pairwise copy number concordance between adjacent probes.

This procedure was originally proposed in our previous work in Nelore cattle (da Silva et al., 2016) and defines CNV segments based on CNV genotype similarity of subsequent SNP probes.

The default is min.sim=0.95, which will continuously add probe positions to a given CNV segment until the pairwise genotype similarity drops below 95%. An example of detailed up-down CNV genotype concordance that is used for the construction of CNV segments is given in S12 Table in da Silva et al., 2016.

Only one of the p-values of the probes contained in a CNV segment is chosen as the segment p-value. This is similar to a common approach used in differential expression (DE) analysis of microarray gene expression data, where typically the most significant DE probe is chosen in case of multiple probes mapping to the same gene.

Here, the representative probe for the CNV segment can be chosen to be the probe with lowest p-value (assign.probe="min.pvalue", default) or the one with highest CNV frequency (assign.probe="high.freq").

Multiple testing correction based on the number of CNV segments tested is carried out using the FDR approach (default). Results can then be displayed as for regular GWAS via a Manhattan plot (which can optionally be exported to a pdf file).

## Define the chromosome order in the plot
order.chrs <- c(1:24, "25LG1", "25LG2", 27:28, "LGE22", "1A", "4A")

## Chromosome sizes
chr.size.file <- file.path(data.dir, "Parus_major_chr_sizes.txt")
chr.sizes <- scan(chr.size.file)
chr.size.order <- data.frame(chr=order.chrs, sizes=chr.sizes, stringsAsFactors=FALSE)

## Plot a pdf file with a manhatthan within the 'Results' workfolder
plotManhattan(all.paths, segs.pvalue.gr, chr.size.order, plot.pdf=FALSE)

8.3 Producing a GDS file in advance

The genomic data structure (GDS) file format supports efficient memory management for genotype analysis. To make use of this efficient data representation, CNV genotypes analyzed with the cnvGWAS function are stored in a CNV.gds file, which is automatically produced and placed in the Inputs folder (i.e. all.paths[1]).

Therefore, running a GWAS implies that any GDS file produced by previous analysis will be overwritten. Use produce.gds=FALSE to avoid overwriting in the GWAS run.

For convenience, a GDS file can be produced before the GWAS analysis with the generateGDS function. This additionally returns a GRanges object containing the genomic position, name and, frequency of each probe used to construct the CNV segments for the GWAS analysis.

Note that probes.cnv.gr object contains the integer chromosome names (as the GDS file on disk). Only the segs.pvalue.gr, which stores the GWAS results, has the character chromosome names.

## Create a GDS file in disk and export the SNP probe positions
probes.cnv.gr <- generateGDS(phen.info, chr.code.name=chr.code.name)
probes.cnv.gr
## GRanges object with 189 ranges and 3 metadata columns:
##         seqnames    ranges strand |         Name      freq    snp.id
##            <Rle> <IRanges>  <Rle> |  <character> <integer> <integer>
##     [1]        1  98147555      * | AX-100939600         2         1
##     [2]        1  98148072      * | AX-100088448         2         2
##     [3]        1  98150537      * | AX-100954037         2         3
##     [4]        1  98151270      * | AX-100836117         2         4
##     [5]        1  98151959      * | AX-100027637         2         5
##     ...      ...       ...    ... .          ...       ...       ...
##   [185]       25   6471766      * | AX-100066308         1       185
##   [186]       25   6473449      * | AX-100023435         1       186
##   [187]       25   6474550      * | AX-100397956         1       187
##   [188]       25   6475943      * | AX-100363929         1       188
##   [189]       27   2308228      * | AX-100178489         1       189
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 15 sequences from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths
## Run GWAS with existent GDS file
segs.pvalue.gr <- cnvGWAS(phen.info, chr.code.name=chr.code.name, produce.gds=FALSE)

8.4 Using relative signal intensities

SNP-based CNV callers such as PennCNV and Birdsuit infer CNVs from SNP-chip intensities (log R ratios, LRRs) and allele frequencies (B allelel frequencies, BAFs). As an auxiliary analysis, it can be interesting to carry out the GWAS based on the LRR relative signal intensities itself (da Silva et al., 2018).

To perform the GWAS using LRR values, import the LRR/BAF values and set run.lrr=TRUE in the cnvGWAS function:

# List files to import LRR/BAF 
files <- list.files(data.dir, pattern = "\\.cnv.txt.adjusted$")
samples <- sub(".cnv.txt.adjusted$", "", files)
samples <- sub("^GT","", samples)
sample.files <- data.frame(file.names=files, sample.names=samples)
 
# All missing samples will have LRR = '0' and BAF = '0.5' in all SNPs listed in the GDS file
importLrrBaf(all.paths, data.dir, sample.files, verbose=FALSE)

# Read the GDS to check if the LRR/BAF nodes were added
cnv.gds <- file.path(all.paths[1], "CNV.gds")
(genofile <- SNPRelate::snpgdsOpen(cnv.gds, allow.fork=TRUE, readonly=FALSE))
## File: /home/biocbuild/.local/share/CNVRanger/example/Inputs/CNV.gds (49.7K)
## +    [  ] *
## |--+ sample.id   { Str8 10 ZIP_ra(122.7%), 61B }
## |--+ snp.id   { Str8 189 ZIP_ra(45.4%), 301B }
## |--+ snp.rs.id   { Str8 189 ZIP_ra(31.9%), 791B }
## |--+ snp.position   { Int32 189 ZIP_ra(86.2%), 659B }
## |--+ snp.chromosome   { Str8 189 ZIP_ra(11.8%), 56B }
## |--+ genotype   { Bit2 189x10, 473B } *
## |--+ CNVgenotype   { Float64 189x10, 14.8K }
## |--+ phenotype   [ data.frame ] *
## |  |--+ samplesPhen   { Str8 10, 44B }
## |  \--+ BT   { Float64 10, 80B }
## |--+ FamID   { Str8 10, 13B }
## |--+ Sex   { Str8 10, 20B }
## |--+ Chr.names   [ data.frame ] *
## |  |--+ V1   { Float64 5, 40B }
## |  \--+ V2   { Str8 5, 24B }
## |--+ LRR   { Float64 189x10, 14.8K }
## \--+ BAF   { Float64 189x10, 14.8K }
gdsfmt::closefn.gds(genofile)

# Run the CNV-GWAS with existent GDS
segs.pvalue.gr <- cnvGWAS(phen.info, chr.code.name=chr.code.name, produce.gds=FALSE, run.lrr=TRUE)

9 Session info

sessionInfo()
## R version 4.3.1 (2023-06-16)
## Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu (64-bit)
## Running under: Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS
## 
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS:   /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.17-bioc/R/lib/libRblas.so 
## LAPACK: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/lapack/liblapack.so.3.10.0
## 
## locale:
##  [1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8       LC_NUMERIC=C              
##  [3] LC_TIME=en_GB              LC_COLLATE=C              
##  [5] LC_MONETARY=en_US.UTF-8    LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8   
##  [7] LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8       LC_NAME=C                 
##  [9] LC_ADDRESS=C               LC_TELEPHONE=C            
## [11] LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8 LC_IDENTIFICATION=C       
## 
## time zone: America/New_York
## tzcode source: system (glibc)
## 
## attached base packages:
## [1] grid      stats4    stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets 
## [8] methods   base     
## 
## other attached packages:
##  [1] ensembldb_2.24.0                           
##  [2] AnnotationFilter_1.24.0                    
##  [3] GenomicFeatures_1.52.1                     
##  [4] AnnotationDbi_1.62.2                       
##  [5] Gviz_1.44.0                                
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##  [8] MultiAssayExperiment_1.26.0                
##  [9] SummarizedExperiment_1.30.2                
## [10] Biobase_2.60.0                             
## [11] MatrixGenerics_1.12.3                      
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## [13] BSgenome.Btaurus.UCSC.bosTau6.masked_1.3.99
## [14] BSgenome.Btaurus.UCSC.bosTau6_1.4.0        
## [15] BSgenome_1.68.0                            
## [16] rtracklayer_1.60.0                         
## [17] Biostrings_2.68.1                          
## [18] XVector_0.40.0                             
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## [20] AnnotationHub_3.8.0                        
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## [22] dbplyr_2.3.3                               
## [23] CNVRanger_1.16.5                           
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