Contents

1 Introduction

The speckle package contains functions to analyse differences in cell type proportions in single cell RNA-seq data. As our research into specialised analyses of single cell data continues we anticipate that the package will be updated with new functions.

The propeller method has now been published in Bioinformatics:
Belinda Phipson, Choon Boon Sim, Enzo R Porrello, Alex W Hewitt, Joseph Powell, Alicia Oshlack, propeller: testing for differences in cell type proportions in single cell data, Bioinformatics, 2022;, btac582, https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btac582

The analysis of single cell RNA-seq data consists of a large number of steps, which can be iterative and also depend on the research question. There are many R packages that can do some or most of these steps. The analysis steps are described here briefly.

Once the sequencing data has been summarised into counts over genes, quality control is performed to remove poor quality cells. Poor quality cells are often characterised as having very low total counts (library size) and very few genes detected. Lowly expressed and uninformative genes are filtered out, followed by appropriate normalisation. Dimensionality reduction and clustering of the cells is then performed. Cells that have similar transcriptional profiles cluster together, and these clusters (hopefully) correspond to something biologically relevant, such as different cell types. Differential expression between each cluster compared to all other clusters can highlight genes that are more highly expressed in each cluster. These marker genes help to determine the cell type each cluster corresponds to. Cell type identification is a process that often uses marker genes as well as a list of curated genes that are known to be expressed in each cell type. It is always helpful to visualise the data in a lot of different ways to aid in interpretation of the clusters using tSNE/UMAP plots, clustering trees and heatmaps of known marker genes. An alternative to clustering is classification or label transfer approaches, where reference datasets can be used to annotate new datasets.

2 Installation

if (!require("BiocManager", quietly = TRUE))
    install.packages("BiocManager")

BiocManager::install("speckle")

3 Finding significant differences in cell type proportions using propeller

In order to determine whether there are statistically significant compositional differences between groups, there must be some form of biological replication in the experiment. This is so that we can estimate the variability of the cell type proportion estimates for each group. A classical statistical test for differences between two proportions is typically very sensitive to small changes and will almost always yield a significant p-value. Hence propeller is only suitable to use in single cell experiments where there are multiple groups and multiple biological replicates in at least one of the groups. The absolute minimum sample size is 2 in one group and 1 in the other group/s. Variance estimates are obtained from the group with more than 1 biological replicate which assumes that the cell type proportion variances estimates are similar between experimental conditions.

The propeller test is performed after initial analysis of the single cell data has been done, i.e. after clustering and cell type assignment. The propeller function can take a SingleCellExperiment or Seurat object and extract the necessary information from the metadata. The basic model for propeller is that the cell type proportions for each sample are estimated based on the clustering information provided by the user or extracted from the relevant slots in the data objects. The proportions are then transformed using either an arcsin square root transformation, or logit transformation. For each cell type \(i\), we fit a linear model with group as the explanatory variable using functions from the R Bioconductor package limma. Using limma to obtain p-values has the added benefit of performing empirical Bayes shrinkage of the variances. For every cell type we obtain a p-value that indicates whether that cell type proportion is statistically significantly different between two (or more) groups.

4 Load the libraries

library(speckle)
library(SingleCellExperiment)
library(CellBench)
library(limma)
library(ggplot2)
library(scater)
library(patchwork)
library(edgeR)
library(statmod)

5 Loading data into R

We are using single cell data from the CellBench package to illustrate how propeller works. This is an artificial dataset that is made up of an equal mixture of 3 different cell lines. There are three datasets corresponding to three different technologies: 10x genomics, CelSeq and DropSeq.

sc_data <- load_sc_data()

The way that propeller is designed to be used is in the context of a designed experiment where there are multiple biological replicates and multiple groups. Comparing cell type proportions without biological replication should be done with caution as there will be a large degree of variability in the cell type proportions between samples due to technical factors (cell capture bias, sampling, clustering errors), as well as biological variability. The CellBench dataset does not have biological replication, so we will create several artificial biological replicates by bootstrapping the data. Bootstrapping has the advantage that it induces variability between bootstrap samples by sampling with replacement. Here we will treat the three technologies as the groups, and create artifical biological replicates within each group. Note that bootstrapping only induces sampling variability between our biological replicates, which will almost certainly be much smaller than biological variability we would expect to see in a real dataset.

The three single cell experiment objects in sc_data all have differing numbers of genes. The first step is to find all the common genes between all three experiments in order to create one large dataset.

commongenes1 <- rownames(sc_data$sc_dropseq)[rownames(sc_data$sc_dropseq) %in% 
                                                rownames(sc_data$sc_celseq)]
commongenes2 <-  commongenes1[commongenes1 %in% rownames(sc_data$sc_10x)]

sce_10x <- sc_data$sc_10x[commongenes2,]
sce_celseq <- sc_data$sc_celseq[commongenes2,] 
sce_dropseq <- sc_data$sc_dropseq[commongenes2,] 

dim(sce_10x)
## [1] 13575   902
dim(sce_celseq)
## [1] 13575   274
dim(sce_dropseq)
## [1] 13575   225
table(rownames(sce_10x) == rownames(sce_celseq))
## 
##  TRUE 
## 13575
table(rownames(sce_10x) == rownames(sce_dropseq))
## 
##  TRUE 
## 13575

6 Bootstrap additional samples

This dataset does not have any biological replicates, so we will bootstrap additional samples and pretend that they are biological replicates. Bootstrapping won’t replicate true biological variation between samples, but we will ignore that for the purpose of demonstrating how propeller works. Note that we don’t need to simulate gene expression measurements; propeller only uses cluster information, hence we simply bootstrap the column indices of the single cell count matrices.

i.10x <- seq_len(ncol(sce_10x))
i.celseq <- seq_len(ncol(sce_celseq))
i.dropseq <- seq_len(ncol(sce_dropseq))

set.seed(10)
boot.10x <- sample(i.10x, replace=TRUE)
boot.celseq <- sample(i.celseq, replace=TRUE)
boot.dropseq <- sample(i.dropseq, replace=TRUE)

sce_10x_rep2 <- sce_10x[,boot.10x]
sce_celseq_rep2 <- sce_celseq[,boot.celseq]
sce_dropseq_rep2 <- sce_dropseq[,boot.dropseq]

7 Combine all SingleCellExperiment objects

The SingleCellExperiment objects don’t combine very easily, so I will create a new object manually, and retain only the information needed to run propeller.

sample <- rep(c("S1","S2","S3","S4","S5","S6"), 
                c(ncol(sce_10x),ncol(sce_10x_rep2),ncol(sce_celseq),
                ncol(sce_celseq_rep2), 
                ncol(sce_dropseq),ncol(sce_dropseq_rep2)))
cluster <- c(sce_10x$cell_line,sce_10x_rep2$cell_line,sce_celseq$cell_line,
                sce_celseq_rep2$cell_line,sce_dropseq$cell_line,
                sce_dropseq_rep2$cell_line)
group <- rep(c("10x","celseq","dropseq"),
                c(2*ncol(sce_10x),2*ncol(sce_celseq),2*ncol(sce_dropseq)))

allcounts <- cbind(counts(sce_10x),counts(sce_10x_rep2), 
                    counts(sce_celseq), counts(sce_celseq_rep2),
                    counts(sce_dropseq), counts(sce_dropseq_rep2))

sce_all <- SingleCellExperiment(assays = list(counts = allcounts))
sce_all$sample <- sample
sce_all$group <- group
sce_all$cluster <- cluster

8 Visualise the data

Here I am going to use the Bioconductor package scater to visualise the data. The scater vignette goes quite deeply into quality control of the cells and the kinds of QC plots we like to look at. Here we will simply log-normalise the gene expression counts, perform dimensionality reduction (PCA) and generate PCA/TSNE/UMAP plots to visualise the relationships between the cells.

sce_all <- scater::logNormCounts(sce_all)
sce_all <- scater::runPCA(sce_all)
sce_all <- scater::runUMAP(sce_all)

Plot PC1 vs PC2 colouring by cell line and technology:

pca1 <- scater::plotReducedDim(sce_all, dimred = "PCA", colour_by = "cluster") +
    ggtitle("Cell line")
pca2 <- scater::plotReducedDim(sce_all, dimred = "PCA", colour_by = "group") +
    ggtitle("Technology")
pca1 + pca2

Plot UMAP highlighting cell line and technology:

umap1 <- scater::plotReducedDim(sce_all, dimred = "UMAP", 
                                colour_by = "cluster") + 
    ggtitle("Cell line")
umap2 <- scater::plotReducedDim(sce_all, dimred = "UMAP", colour_by = "group") +
    ggtitle("Technology")
umap1 + umap2

For this dataset UMAP is a little bit of an overkill, the PCA plots show the relationships between the cells quite well. PC1 separates cells based on technology, and PC2 separates cells based on the cell line (clusters). From the PCA plots we can see that 10x is quite different to CelSeq and DropSeq, and the H2228 cell line is quite different to the remaining 2 cell lines.

9 Test for differences in cell line proportions in the three technologies

In order to demonstrate propeller I will assume that the cell line information corresponds to clusters and all the analysis steps have beeen performed. Here we are interested in testing whether there are compositional differences between the three technologies: 10x, CelSeq and DropSeq. Since there are more than 2 groups, propeller will perform an ANOVA to determine whether there is a significant shift in the cell type proportions between these three groups.

The propeller function can take a SingleCellExperiment object or Seurat object as input and extract the three necessary pieces of information from the cell information stored in colData. The three essential pieces of information are

If these arguments are not explicitly passed to the propeller function, then these are extracted from the SingleCellExperiment or Seurat object. Upper or lower case is acceptable, but the variables need to be named exactly as stated in the list above. For a Seurat object, the cluster information is extracted from Idents(x).

The default of propeller is to perform the logit transformation:

# Perform logit transformation
propeller(sce_all)
##        BaselineProp PropMean.10x PropMean.celseq PropMean.dropseq Fstatistic
## H1975     0.3579586    0.3392461       0.3941606        0.3888889  3.9948367
## H2228     0.3322627    0.3481153       0.2974453        0.3111111  3.4005262
## HCC827    0.3097787    0.3126386       0.3083942        0.3000000  0.2076966
##           P.Value        FDR
## H1975  0.01841045 0.05003357
## H2228  0.03335571 0.05003357
## HCC827 0.81245349 0.81245349

An alternative variance stabilising transformation is the arcsin square root transformation.

# Perform arcsin square root transformation
propeller(sce_all, transform="asin")
##        BaselineProp PropMean.10x PropMean.celseq PropMean.dropseq Fstatistic
## H1975     0.3579586    0.3392461       0.3941606        0.3888889  4.1485415
## H2228     0.3322627    0.3481153       0.2974453        0.3111111  3.3063237
## HCC827    0.3097787    0.3126386       0.3083942        0.3000000  0.2024889
##           P.Value        FDR
## H1975  0.01578743 0.04736228
## H2228  0.03665067 0.05497600
## HCC827 0.81669558 0.81669558

The results from using the two different transforms are a little bit different, with the H1975 cell line being statistically significant using the arc sin square root transform, and not significant after using the logit transform.

Another option for running propeller is for the user to supply the cluster, sample and group information explicitly to the propeller function.

propeller(clusters=sce_all$cluster, sample=sce_all$sample, group=sce_all$group)
##        BaselineProp PropMean.10x PropMean.celseq PropMean.dropseq Fstatistic
## H1975     0.3579586    0.3392461       0.3941606        0.3888889  3.9948367
## H2228     0.3322627    0.3481153       0.2974453        0.3111111  3.4005262
## HCC827    0.3097787    0.3126386       0.3083942        0.3000000  0.2076966
##           P.Value        FDR
## H1975  0.01841045 0.05003357
## H2228  0.03335571 0.05003357
## HCC827 0.81245349 0.81245349

The cell lines were mixed together in roughly equal proportions (~0.33) and hence we don’t expect to see significant differences between the three clusters. However, because bootstrapping the samples doesn’t incorporate enough variability between the samples to mimic true biological variability, we can see that the H1975 cluster looks significantly different between the three technologies. The proportion of this cell line is closer to 0.4 for CelSeq and DropSeq, and 0.34 for the 10x data.

10 Visualise the results

In the speckle package there is a plotting function plotCellTypeProps that takes a Seurat or SingleCellExperiment object, extracts sample and cluster information and outputs a barplot of cell type proportions between the samples. The user also has the option of supplying the cluster and sample cell information instead of an R object. The output is a ggplot2 object that the user can then manipulate however they please.

plotCellTypeProps(sce_all)

Alternatively, we can obtain the cell type proportions and transformed proportions directly by running the getTransformedProps function which takes the cluster and sample information as input. The output from getTransformedProps is a list with the cell type counts, transformed proportions and proportions as elements.

props <- getTransformedProps(sce_all$cluster, sce_all$sample, transform="logit")
barplot(props$Proportions, col = c("orange","purple","dark green"),legend=TRUE, 
        ylab="Proportions")

Call me old-school, but I still like looking at stripcharts to visualise results and see whether the significant p-values make sense.

par(mfrow=c(1,3))
for(i in seq(1,3,1)){
stripchart(props$Proportions[i,]~rep(c("10x","celseq","dropseq"),each=2),
            vertical=TRUE, pch=16, method="jitter",
            col = c("orange","purple","dark green"),cex=2, ylab="Proportions")
title(rownames(props$Proportions)[i])
}

If you are interested in seeing which models best fit the data in terms of the cell type variances, there are two plotting functions that can do this: plotCellTypeMeanVar and plotCellTypePropsMeanVar. For this particular dataset it isn’t very informative because there are only three cell “types” and no biogical variability.

par(mfrow=c(1,1))
plotCellTypeMeanVar(props$Counts)

plotCellTypePropsMeanVar(props$Counts)

11 Fitting linear models using the transformed proportions directly

If you are like me, you won’t feel very comfortable with a black-box approach where one function simply spits out a table of results. If you would like to have more control over your linear model and include extra covariates then you can fit a linear model in a more direct way using the transformed proportions that can be obtained by running the getTransformedProps function.

We have already obtained the proportions and transformed proportions when we ran the getTransformedProps function above. This function outputs a list object with three elements: Counts, TransformedProps and Proportions. These are all matrices with clusters/cell types in the rows and samples in the columns.

names(props)
## [1] "Counts"           "TransformedProps" "Proportions"
props$TransformedProps
##         sample
## clusters         S1         S2         S3         S4         S5         S6
##   H1975  -0.6323232 -0.7014598 -0.3408295 -0.5234288 -0.3706312 -0.5379980
##   H2228  -0.6225683 -0.6323232 -0.8672551 -0.8498919 -0.8993542 -0.6931472
##   HCC827 -0.8291800 -0.7467614 -0.9023576 -0.7150060 -0.8357613 -0.8567766

First we need to set up our sample information in much the same way we would if we were analysing bulk RNA-seq data. We can pretend that we have pairing information which corresponds to our original vs bootstrapped samples to make our model a little more complicated for demonstration purposes.

group <- rep(c("10x","celseq","dropseq"),each=2)
pair <- rep(c(1,2),3)
data.frame(group,pair)
##     group pair
## 1     10x    1
## 2     10x    2
## 3  celseq    1
## 4  celseq    2
## 5 dropseq    1
## 6 dropseq    2

We can set up a design matrix taking into account group and pairing information. Please note that the way that propeller has been designed is such that the group information is always first in the design matrix specification, and there is NO intercept. If you are new to design matrices and linear modelling, I would highly recommend reading the limma manual, which is incredibly extensive and covers a variety of different experimental set ups.

design <- model.matrix(~ 0 + group + pair)
design
##   group10x groupcelseq groupdropseq pair
## 1        1           0            0    1
## 2        1           0            0    2
## 3        0           1            0    1
## 4        0           1            0    2
## 5        0           0            1    1
## 6        0           0            1    2
## attr(,"assign")
## [1] 1 1 1 2
## attr(,"contrasts")
## attr(,"contrasts")$group
## [1] "contr.treatment"

In our example, we have three groups, 10x, CelSeq and DropSeq. In order to perform an ANOVA to test for cell type composition differences between these 3 technologies, we can use the propeller.anova function. The coef argument tells the function which columns of the design matrix correspond to the groups we are interested in testing. Here we are interested in the first three columns.

propeller.anova(prop.list=props, design=design, coef = c(1,2,3), 
                robust=TRUE, trend=FALSE, sort=TRUE)
##        PropMean.group10x PropMean.groupcelseq PropMean.groupdropseq Fstatistic
## H1975          0.3392461            0.3941606             0.3888889  7.0766800
## H2228          0.3481153            0.2974453             0.3111111  6.0238846
## HCC827         0.3126386            0.3083942             0.3000000  0.3679255
##             P.Value         FDR
## H1975  0.0008445725 0.002533718
## H2228  0.0024202496 0.003630374
## HCC827 0.6921687242 0.692168724

Note that the p-values are smaller here than before because we have specified a pairing vector that states which samples were bootstrapped and which are the original samples.

If we were interested in testing only 10x versus DropSeq we could alternatively use the propeller.ttest function and specify a contrast that tests for this comparison with our design matrix.

design
##   group10x groupcelseq groupdropseq pair
## 1        1           0            0    1
## 2        1           0            0    2
## 3        0           1            0    1
## 4        0           1            0    2
## 5        0           0            1    1
## 6        0           0            1    2
## attr(,"assign")
## [1] 1 1 1 2
## attr(,"contrasts")
## attr(,"contrasts")$group
## [1] "contr.treatment"
mycontr <- makeContrasts(group10x-groupdropseq, levels=design)
propeller.ttest(props, design, contrasts = mycontr, robust=TRUE, trend=FALSE, 
                sort=TRUE)
##        PropMean.group10x PropMean.groupdropseq PropRatio Tstatistic    P.Value
## H1975          0.3392461             0.3888889 0.8723472 -3.0851275 0.02152145
## H2228          0.3481153             0.3111111 1.1189420  2.4498658 0.04979982
## HCC827         0.3126386             0.3000000 1.0421286  0.8460825 0.42995196
##               FDR
## H1975  0.06456434
## H2228  0.07469974
## HCC827 0.42995196

Finally note that the robust and trend parameters are parameters for the eBayes function in limma. When robust = TRUE, robust empirical Bayes shrinkage of the variances is performed which mitigates the effects of outlying observations. We set trend = FALSE as we don’t expect a mean-variance trend after performing our variance stabilising transformation. There may also be an error when trend is set to TRUE because there are often not enough data points to estimate the trend.

12 More complex (or just different) experimental designs

12.1 Fitting a continuous variable rather than groups

Let us assume that we expect that the different technologies have a meaningful ordering to them, and we would like to find the cell types that are increasing or decreasing along this trend. In more complex scenarios beyond group comparisons I would recommend taking the transformed proportions from the getTransformedProps function and using the linear model fitting functions from the limma package directly.

Let us assume that the ordering of the technologies is 10x->celseq->dropseq. Then we can recode them 1, 2, 3 and treat the technologies as a continuous variable. Obviously this scenario doesn’t make much sense biologically, but we will continue for demonstration purposes.

group
## [1] "10x"     "10x"     "celseq"  "celseq"  "dropseq" "dropseq"
dose <- rep(c(1,2,3), each=2) 

des.dose <- model.matrix(~dose)
des.dose
##   (Intercept) dose
## 1           1    1
## 2           1    1
## 3           1    2
## 4           1    2
## 5           1    3
## 6           1    3
## attr(,"assign")
## [1] 0 1
fit <- lmFit(props$TransformedProps,des.dose)
fit <- eBayes(fit, robust=TRUE)
topTable(fit)
##              logFC    AveExpr          t    P.Value adj.P.Val         B
## H1975   0.10628845 -0.5177784  2.0704318 0.06064165 0.1819250 -3.687156
## H2228  -0.08440249 -0.7607566 -1.6441071 0.12607773 0.1891166 -4.324650
## HCC827 -0.02914913 -0.8143071 -0.5678067 0.58063487 0.5806349 -5.283017

Here the log fold changes are reported on the transformed data, so they are not as easy to interpret directly. The positive logFC indicates that the cell type proportions are increasing (for example for H1975), and a negative logFC indicates that the proportions are decreasing across the ordered technologies 10x -> celseq -> dropseq.

You can get the estimates from the model on the proportions directly by fitting the same model to the proportions. Here the logFC is the slope of the trend line on the proportions, and the AveExpr is the average of the proportions across all technologies.

fit.prop <- lmFit(props$Proportions,des.dose)
fit.prop <- eBayes(fit.prop, robust=TRUE)
topTable(fit.prop)
##              logFC   AveExpr         t   P.Value adj.P.Val         B
## H1975   0.02482138 0.3740985  2.142542 0.0533486 0.1600458 -4.492397
## H2228  -0.01850209 0.3188906 -1.597071 0.1362331 0.2043497 -5.498815
## HCC827 -0.00631929 0.3070109 -0.545471 0.5954236 0.5954236 -6.610444

You could plot the continuous variable dose against the proportions and add trend lines, for example.

fit.prop$coefficients
##        (Intercept)        dose
## H1975    0.3244558  0.02482138
## H2228    0.3558947 -0.01850209
## HCC827   0.3196495 -0.00631929
par(mfrow=c(1,3))
for(i in seq(1,3,1)){
    plot(dose, props$Proportions[i,], main = rownames(props$Proportions)[i], 
        pch=16, cex=2, ylab="Proportions", cex.lab=1.5, cex.axis=1.5,
        cex.main=2)
    abline(a=fit.prop$coefficients[i,1], b=fit.prop$coefficients[i,2], col=4, 
            lwd=2)
}

What I recommend in this instance is using the p-values from the analysis on the transformed data, and the reported statistics (i.e. the coefficients from the model) obtained from the analysis on the proportions for visualisation purposes.

12.2 Including random effects

If you have a random effect that you would like to account for in your analysis, for example repeated measures on the same individual, then you can use the duplicateCorrelation function from the limma.

For illustration purposes, let us assume that pair indicates samples taken from the same individual (or they could represent technical replicates), and we would like to account for this in our analysis using a random effect. Again, we fit our models on the transformed proportions in order to obtain the p-values.

We will formulate the design matrix with an intercept for this example, and test the differences in technologies relative to 10x. The block parameter will be the pair variable. Note that the design matrix now does not include pair as a fixed effect.

des.tech <- model.matrix(~group)

dupcor <- duplicateCorrelation(props$TransformedProps, design=des.tech,
                                block=pair)
dupcor
## $consensus.correlation
## [1] 0.4487241
## 
## $cor
## [1] 0.4487241
## 
## $atanh.correlations
## [1] 1.18162437 0.03262062 0.23505963

The consensus correlation is quite high (0.4487241), which we expect because we bootstrapped these additional samples.

# Fitting the linear model accounting for pair as a random effect
fit1 <- lmFit(props$TransformedProps, design=des.tech, block=pair, 
                correlation=dupcor$consensus)
fit1 <- eBayes(fit1)
summary(decideTests(fit1))
##        (Intercept) groupcelseq groupdropseq
## Down             3           1            0
## NotSig           0           1            2
## Up               0           1            1
# Differences between celseq vs 10x
topTable(fit1,coef=2)
##              logFC    AveExpr          t     P.Value  adj.P.Val          B
## H1975   0.23476231 -0.5177784  3.4283447 0.007527919 0.01228234 -0.5326733
## H2228  -0.23112780 -0.7607566 -3.3752682 0.008188225 0.01228234 -0.7050810
## HCC827 -0.02071113 -0.8143071 -0.3024544 0.769179122 0.76917912 -6.1005579
# Differences between dropseq vs 10x
topTable(fit1, coef=3)
##              logFC    AveExpr          t    P.Value  adj.P.Val         B
## H1975   0.21257690 -0.5177784  3.1043607 0.01263326 0.03789977 -1.480722
## H2228  -0.16880498 -0.7607566 -2.4651387 0.03585510 0.05378264 -3.158016
## HCC827 -0.05829827 -0.8143071 -0.8513571 0.41664753 0.41664753 -5.679554

For celseq vs 10x, H1975 and H2228 are significantly different, with a greater proportion of H1975 cells detected in celseq, and fewer H2228 cells. For dropseq vs 10x, there is a higher proportion of H1975 cells.

If you want to do an ANOVA between the three groups:

topTable(fit1, coef=2:3)
##        groupcelseq groupdropseq    AveExpr         F      P.Value   adj.P.Val
## H1975   0.23476231   0.21257690 -0.5177784 7.1651895 0.0007730325 0.002319097
## H2228  -0.23112780  -0.16880498 -0.7607566 6.0992266 0.0022446030 0.003366904
## HCC827 -0.02071113  -0.05829827 -0.8143071 0.3725273 0.6889908724 0.688990872

Generally, you can perform any analysis on the transformed proportions that you would normally do when using limma (i.e. on roughly normally distributed data). For more complex random effects models with 2 or more random effects, you can use the *[lme4](https://bioconductor.org/packages/3.17/lme4)* package. You could also try thedream package.

13 Using propeller on any proportions data

The statistical methods used in propeller are generalisable to any proportions data. For example, we have successfully applied propeller to Nanostring GeoMx data, where cell type proportions were inferred using deconvolution methods.

An example of how to do this analysis is shown here for single cell data from young and old PBMC single cell data, where only the cell type proportions data is included as a resource in the following paper:
Huang Z. et al. (2021) Effects of sex and aging on the immune cell landscape as assessed by single-cell transcriptomic analysis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 118, e2023216118.

The proportions data is available in the speckle package and can be accessed with the data function. It is a list object that contains three components: a data frame of cell type proportions, a data frame of sample information including sex and age, and the total number of cells.

data("pbmc_props")
pbmc.props <- pbmc_props$proportions
pbmc.sample.info <- pbmc_props$sample_info
tot.cells <- pbmc_props$total_cells
par(mfrow=c(1,1))
barplot(as.matrix(pbmc.props),col=ggplotColors(nrow(pbmc.props)),
        ylab="Cell type proportions", xlab="Samples")

We can convert the proportions data into the list object that the propeller functions expect using the convertDataToList function. This function can take either counts or proportions, specified with the data.type parameter.

prop.list <- convertDataToList(pbmc.props,data.type="proportions", 
                               transform="logit", scale.fac=tot.cells/20)

The scale.fac parameter can be a vector or scalar. It is the number of cells sequenced per sample. Here we are taking a best guess because from the published paper all we know is that in total 1.7468410^{5} were sequenced for the whole dataset. As there are 20 samples, we divide the total number of cells by 20 to get a rough estimate of total number of cells per sample. This is used specifically when the logit transform is used, but not needed for the arcsin square root transformation. If scale.fac is a vector, it should be the same length as the number of samples in the study.

We can now test young vs old, taking sex into account.

designAS <- model.matrix(~0+pbmc.sample.info$age + pbmc.sample.info$sex)
colnames(designAS) <- c("old","young","MvsF")

# Young vs old
mycontr <- makeContrasts(young-old, levels=designAS)
propeller.ttest(prop.list = prop.list,design = designAS, contrasts = mycontr,
                robust=TRUE,trend=FALSE,sort=TRUE)
##           PropMean.old PropMean.young PropRatio  Tstatistic      P.Value
## CD8.Naive 0.0251316033   0.0901386289 3.5866645  4.56531629 0.0001655915
## CD16      0.0346697484   0.0184110417 0.5310405 -3.53845105 0.0019313526
## T-mito    0.0050757865   0.0030999505 0.6107330 -2.70564864 0.0130970606
## INTER     0.0237901860   0.0160354568 0.6740366 -2.34264441 0.0288651941
## CD4-CD8-  0.0160339954   0.0301971880 1.8833227  2.26893189 0.0338557770
## TREG      0.0224289338   0.0173984106 0.7757128 -2.26167176 0.0342259694
## CD14      0.1381079661   0.1087546814 0.7874613 -1.75042587 0.0943497196
## ABC       0.0042268748   0.0024242272 0.5735271 -1.53059704 0.1406904913
## CD4.Naive 0.1048008357   0.1320789977 1.2602857  1.46557604 0.1574740245
## MBC       0.0358736549   0.0452983191 1.2627183  1.33884893 0.1948341805
## CD8.CTL   0.1154952554   0.0782456785 0.6774796 -1.31085637 0.2039626408
## PC        0.0054708831   0.0049397487 0.9029162 -1.26307895 0.2203089287
## pre-DC    0.0002285096   0.0003193005 1.3973177  1.24144109 0.2280358887
## CDC1      0.0005479607   0.0008647764 1.5781725  1.19434388 0.2455671742
## CD8.Tem   0.0639345157   0.0802785262 1.2556367  1.14556222 0.2646082927
## NK3       0.0886767142   0.0704022112 0.7939199 -1.02022467 0.3191513408
## NK1       0.0125858088   0.0102540186 0.8147286 -0.64532282 0.5256577519
## NBC       0.0487575349   0.0498363513 1.0221261  0.49890406 0.6229966249
## CD4.Tem   0.0873700973   0.0832684783 0.9530547 -0.40297138 0.6909611645
## CD4.Tcm   0.0799349205   0.0746146497 0.9334425  0.23348683 0.8176285211
## PDC       0.0031666984   0.0034597825 1.0925519  0.20366298 0.8405637766
## CD4+CD8+  0.0142514516   0.0133167354 0.9344126 -0.11420442 0.9101389532
## NK2       0.0568274310   0.0528156246 0.9294037  0.04492635 0.9645875142
## CDC2      0.0126126342   0.0135472159 1.0740989  0.03134858 0.9752816776
##                   FDR
## CD8.Naive 0.003974195
## CD16      0.023176231
## T-mito    0.104776485
## INTER     0.136903877
## CD4-CD8-  0.136903877
## TREG      0.136903877
## CD14      0.323484753
## ABC       0.419930732
## CD4.Naive 0.419930732
## MBC       0.420972299
## CD8.CTL   0.420972299
## PC        0.420972299
## pre-DC    0.420972299
## CDC1      0.420972299
## CD8.Tem   0.423373268
## NK3       0.478727011
## NK1       0.742105062
## NBC       0.830662167
## CD4.Tem   0.872793050
## CD4.Tcm   0.960644316
## PDC       0.960644316
## CD4+CD8+  0.975281678
## NK2       0.975281678
## CDC2      0.975281678

We see that the CD8 naive cells are enriched in the young samples, while CD16 cells are enriched in the old samples. We can visualise the significant cell types to check they make sense:

group.immune <- paste(pbmc.sample.info$sex, pbmc.sample.info$age, sep=".")
par(mfrow=c(1,2))
stripchart(as.numeric(pbmc.props["CD8.Naive",])~group.immune,
           vertical=TRUE, pch=c(8,16), method="jitter",
           col = c(ggplotColors(20)[20],"hotpink",4, "darkblue"),cex=2,
           ylab="Proportions", cex.axis=1.25, cex.lab=1.5,
           group.names=c("F.Old","F.Young","M.Old","M.Young"))
title("CD8.Naive: Young Vs Old", cex.main=1.5, adj=0)

stripchart(as.numeric(pbmc.props["CD16",])~group.immune,
           vertical=TRUE, pch=c(8,16), method="jitter",
           col = c(ggplotColors(20)[20],"hotpink",4, "darkblue"),cex=2,
           ylab="Proportions", cex.axis=1.25, cex.lab=1.5,
           group.names=c("F.Old","F.Young","M.Old","M.Young"))
title("CD16: Young Vs Old", cex.main=1.5, adj=0)

14 Tips for clustering

The experimental groups are likely to contribute large sources of variation in the data. In the CellBench data the technology effect is larger than the cell line effect. In order to cluster the data to produce meaningful cell types that will then feed into meaningful tests for proportions, the cell types should be represented in as many samples as possible. Users should consider using integration techniques on their single cell data prior to clustering, integrating on biological sample or perhaps experimental group. See methods such as Harmony, Liger and Seurat’s integration technique for more information.

Cell type label assignment should not be too refined such that every sample has many unique cell types. The propeller function can handle proportions of 0 and 1 without breaking, but it is not very meaningful if every cell type difference is statistically significant. Consider testing cell type categories that are broader for more meaningful results, perhaps by combining clusters that are highly similar. The refined clusters can always be explored in terms of gene expression differences later on. One can also test for cell type proportion differences within a broader cell type lineage using propeller.

It may be appropriate to perform cell type assignment using classification methods rather than clustering. This allows the user to classify cells into known cell types, but you may run the risk of missing novel cell types. A combination of approaches may be necessary depending on the dataset. Good luck. The more heterogenous the dataset, the more tricky this becomes.

15 Session Info

sessionInfo()
## R version 4.3.0 RC (2023-04-13 r84269)
## 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] stats4    stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets  methods  
## [8] base     
## 
## other attached packages:
##  [1] statmod_1.5.0               edgeR_3.42.0               
##  [3] patchwork_1.1.2             scater_1.28.0              
##  [5] scuttle_1.10.0              ggplot2_3.4.2              
##  [7] limma_3.56.0                CellBench_1.16.0           
##  [9] tibble_3.2.1                magrittr_2.0.3             
## [11] SingleCellExperiment_1.22.0 SummarizedExperiment_1.30.0
## [13] Biobase_2.60.0              GenomicRanges_1.52.0       
## [15] GenomeInfoDb_1.36.0         IRanges_2.34.0             
## [17] S4Vectors_0.38.0            BiocGenerics_0.46.0        
## [19] MatrixGenerics_1.12.0       matrixStats_0.63.0         
## [21] speckle_1.0.0               BiocStyle_2.28.0           
## 
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
##   [1] RcppAnnoy_0.0.20          splines_4.3.0            
##   [3] later_1.3.0               bitops_1.0-7             
##   [5] filelock_1.0.2            polyclip_1.10-4          
##   [7] lifecycle_1.0.3           globals_0.16.2           
##   [9] lattice_0.21-8            MASS_7.3-59              
##  [11] plotly_4.10.1             sass_0.4.5               
##  [13] rmarkdown_2.21            jquerylib_0.1.4          
##  [15] yaml_2.3.7                httpuv_1.6.9             
##  [17] Seurat_4.3.0              sctransform_0.3.5        
##  [19] sp_1.6-0                  spatstat.sparse_3.0-1    
##  [21] reticulate_1.28           cowplot_1.1.1            
##  [23] pbapply_1.7-0             DBI_1.1.3                
##  [25] RColorBrewer_1.1-3        lubridate_1.9.2          
##  [27] abind_1.4-5               zlibbioc_1.46.0          
##  [29] Rtsne_0.16                purrr_1.0.1              
##  [31] RCurl_1.98-1.12           rappdirs_0.3.3           
##  [33] GenomeInfoDbData_1.2.10   ggrepel_0.9.3            
##  [35] irlba_2.3.5.1             listenv_0.9.0            
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##  [39] spatstat.random_3.1-4     fitdistrplus_1.1-11      
##  [41] parallelly_1.35.0         DelayedMatrixStats_1.22.0
##  [43] leiden_0.4.3              codetools_0.2-19         
##  [45] DelayedArray_0.26.0       tidyselect_1.2.0         
##  [47] farver_2.1.1              viridis_0.6.2            
##  [49] ScaledMatrix_1.8.0        BiocFileCache_2.8.0      
##  [51] spatstat.explore_3.1-0    jsonlite_1.8.4           
##  [53] BiocNeighbors_1.18.0      ellipsis_0.3.2           
##  [55] progressr_0.13.0          ggridges_0.5.4           
##  [57] survival_3.5-5            tools_4.3.0              
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##  [63] xfun_0.39                 dplyr_1.1.2              
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##  [79] utf8_1.2.3                tidyr_1.3.0              
##  [81] generics_0.1.3            data.table_1.14.8        
##  [83] FNN_1.1.3.2               httr_1.4.5               
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##  [95] scales_1.2.1              png_0.1-8                
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##  [99] nlme_3.1-162              curl_5.0.0               
## [101] cachem_1.0.7              zoo_1.8-12               
## [103] stringr_1.5.0             KernSmooth_2.23-20       
## [105] vipor_0.4.5               parallel_4.3.0           
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## [109] grid_4.3.0                vctrs_0.6.2              
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## [113] BiocSingular_1.16.0       beachmat_2.16.0          
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## [119] evaluate_0.20             magick_2.7.4             
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## [123] compiler_4.3.0            rlang_1.1.0              
## [125] future.apply_1.10.0       labeling_0.4.2           
## [127] ggbeeswarm_0.7.1          plyr_1.8.8               
## [129] stringi_1.7.12            viridisLite_0.4.1        
## [131] deldir_1.0-6              BiocParallel_1.34.0      
## [133] assertthat_0.2.1          munsell_0.5.0            
## [135] lazyeval_0.2.2            spatstat.geom_3.1-0      
## [137] Matrix_1.5-4              sparseMatrixStats_1.12.0 
## [139] bit64_4.0.5               future_1.32.0            
## [141] shiny_1.7.4               highr_0.10               
## [143] ROCR_1.0-11               igraph_1.4.2             
## [145] memoise_2.0.1             bslib_0.4.2              
## [147] bit_4.0.5