nf-core/differentialabundance
Differential abundance analysis for feature/ observation matrices from platforms such as RNA-seq
1.2.0
). The latest
stable release is
1.5.0
.
Introduction
Differential analysis is a common task in a variety of use cases. In essence, all these use cases entail taking an input matrix containing features (e.g. genes) and observations (e.g. samples), and comparing groups of observations in all or a subset of the features. The feature/ observation language here reflects our hope that this workflow will extend in future to encompass a variety of applications where an assumption of gene vs sample may not be a valid one- though that is the application to which the first release will apply.
With the above in mind, running this workflow requires:
- a set of abundance values. This can be:
- (for RNA-seq): a matrix of quantifications with observations by column and features by row
- (for Affymetrix microarrays): a tar’d archive of CEL files
- a description of the observations such as a sample sheet from RNA-seq analysis
- a description of the features, for our initial RNA-seq application this can be simply the GTF file from which gene annotations can be derived. For Affymetrix arrays this can be derived from the array platform annotation package automatically. You can also supply your own table.
- a specification of how the matrix should be split, and how the resulting groups should be compared
Observations (samplesheet) input
This may well be the same sample sheet used to generate the input matrix. For example, in RNA-seq this might be the same sample sheet, perhaps derived from fetchngs, that was input to the RNA-seq workflow. It may be necessary to add columns that describe the groups you want to compare.
For example:
The file can be tab or comma separated.
Abundance values
RNA-seq and similar
This is a numeric square matrix file, comma or tab-separated, with a column for every observation, and features corresponding to the supplied feature set. The parameters --observations_id_col
and --features_id_col
define which of the associated fields should be matched in those inputs.
Affymetrix microarrays
This is an archive of CEL files as frequently found in GEO.
Contrasts file
The contrasts file references the observations file to define groups of samples to compare. For example, based on the sample sheet above we could define contrasts like:
The necessary fields in order are:
id
- an arbitrary identifier, will be used to name contrast-wise output filesvariable
- which column from the observations information will be used to define groupsreference
- the base/ reference level for the comparison. If features have higher values in this group than target they will generate negative fold changestarget
- the target/ non-reference level for the comparison. If features have higher values in this group than the reference they will generate positive fold changes
You can optionally supply:
blocking
- semicolon-delimited, any additional variables (also observation columns) that should be modelled alongside the contrast variableexclude_samples_col
andexclude_samples_values
- the former being a valid column in the samples sheet, the latter a semicolon-delimited list of values in that column which should be used to select samples prior to differential modelling. This is helpful where certain samples need to be exluded prior to analysis of a given contrast.
The file can be tab or comma separated.
Feature annotations
GTF file
This is usually the easiest way to supply annotations for RNA-seq features. It should match the GTF used in nf-core/rnaseq if that workflow was used to produce the input expression matrix.
Annotation package identifiers for Affymetrix arrays
For -profile affy
, default behaviour is to derive an annotation table while running the affy/justrma module based on the CDF name discovered there.
Your own features, or no features
To override the above options, you may also supply your own features table as a TSV:
By default, if you don’t provide features, for non-array data the workflow will fall back to attempting to use the matrix itself as a source of feature annotations. For this to work you must make sure to set the features_id_col
, features_name_col
and features_metadata_cols
parameters to the appropriate values, for example by setting them to ‘gene_id’ if that is the identifier column on the matrix. This will cause the gene ID to be used everywhere rather than more accessible gene symbols (as can be derived from the GTF), but the workflow should run.
Shiny app generation
The pipeline is capable of building, and even deploying (to shinyapps.io) for you a Shiny app built with ShinyNGS.
This is enabled with:
… which is the default. By default the app is not deployed, but just output to the output folder under shinyngs_app/[study_name]
.
You have 3 choices in running that application:
- Run locally
- Have shinyapps.io host it for you
- Host on a Shiny server
1. Run locally
You can start the application locally (in an environment where ShinyNGS is installed) like:
This will give you a local URI to access in your browser:
2. Shinyapps.io deployment
shinyapps.io is a hosting solution supplied by Posit (formerly RStudio) which gives you quick and easy access to hosting for Shiny applications. There is a free tier, though you’ll have to pay for features such as authentication and improved resources.
You can upload your app to shinyapps.io youself, or deploy directly to shinyapps.io with this workflow, for which a few things need to happen:
Account and app setup
At https://www.shinyapps.io/, create an account, add a token (via Account -> Tokens) and note your secret and token.
You let Nextflow know about these via secrets:
Configuration
You then need to activate the deployment in your parameters, and supply both your account name and an app name:
With this configuration in place deployment should happen automatically every time you run your workflow.
3. Run your own Shiny server
There is also a Shiny server application, which you can install on your own infrastruture and use to host applications yourself.
Running the pipeline
The typical command for running the pipeline is as follows:
This will launch the pipeline with the docker
configuration profile. See below for more information about profiles.
Note that the pipeline will create the following files in your working directory:
Hints and tips
- If you don’t like the colors used in the report, try a different
RColorBrewer
palette by changing theexploratory_palette_name
and/ordifferential_palette_name
parameters.
Updating the pipeline
When you run the above command, Nextflow automatically pulls the pipeline code from GitHub and stores it as a cached version. When running the pipeline after this, it will always use the cached version if available - even if the pipeline has been updated since. To make sure that you’re running the latest version of the pipeline, make sure that you regularly update the cached version of the pipeline:
Reproducibility
It is a good idea to specify a pipeline version when running the pipeline on your data. This ensures that a specific version of the pipeline code and software are used when you run your pipeline. If you keep using the same tag, you’ll be running the same version of the pipeline, even if there have been changes to the code since.
First, go to the nf-core/differentialabundance releases page and find the latest pipeline version - numeric only (eg. 1.3.1
). Then specify this when running the pipeline with -r
(one hyphen) - eg. -r 1.3.1
. Of course, you can switch to another version by changing the number after the -r
flag.
This version number will be logged in reports when you run the pipeline, so that you’ll know what you used when you look back in the future. For example, at the bottom of the MultiQC reports.
Core Nextflow arguments
NB: These options are part of Nextflow and use a single hyphen (pipeline parameters use a double-hyphen).
-profile
Use this parameter to choose a configuration profile. Profiles can give configuration presets for different compute environments.
Several generic profiles are bundled with the pipeline which instruct the pipeline to use software packaged using different methods (Docker, Singularity, Podman, Shifter, Charliecloud, Conda) - see below.
We highly recommend the use of Docker or Singularity containers for full pipeline reproducibility, however when this is not possible, Conda is also supported.
The pipeline also dynamically loads configurations from https://github.com/nf-core/configs when it runs, making multiple config profiles for various institutional clusters available at run time. For more information and to see if your system is available in these configs please see the nf-core/configs documentation.
Note that multiple profiles can be loaded, for example: -profile test,docker
- the order of arguments is important!
They are loaded in sequence, so later profiles can overwrite earlier profiles.
If -profile
is not specified, the pipeline will run locally and expect all software to be installed and available on the PATH
. This is not recommended, since it can lead to different results on different machines dependent on the computer enviroment.
test
- A profile with a complete configuration for automated testing
- Includes links to test data so needs no other parameters
docker
- A generic configuration profile to be used with Docker
singularity
- A generic configuration profile to be used with Singularity
podman
- A generic configuration profile to be used with Podman
shifter
- A generic configuration profile to be used with Shifter
charliecloud
- A generic configuration profile to be used with Charliecloud
conda
- A generic configuration profile to be used with Conda. Please only use Conda as a last resort i.e. when it’s not possible to run the pipeline with Docker, Singularity, Podman, Shifter or Charliecloud.
-resume
Specify this when restarting a pipeline. Nextflow will use cached results from any pipeline steps where the inputs are the same, continuing from where it got to previously. For input to be considered the same, not only the names must be identical but the files’ contents as well. For more info about this parameter, see this blog post.
You can also supply a run name to resume a specific run: -resume [run-name]
. Use the nextflow log
command to show previous run names.
-c
Specify the path to a specific config file (this is a core Nextflow command). See the nf-core website documentation for more information.
Custom configuration
Resource requests
Whilst the default requirements set within the pipeline will hopefully work for most people and with most input data, you may find that you want to customise the compute resources that the pipeline requests. Each step in the pipeline has a default set of requirements for number of CPUs, memory and time. For most of the steps in the pipeline, if the job exits with any of the error codes specified here it will automatically be resubmitted with higher requests (2 x original, then 3 x original). If it still fails after the third attempt then the pipeline execution is stopped.
For example, if the nf-core/differentialabundance pipeline is failing after multiple re-submissions of the DESEQ2_DIFFERENTIAL
process due to an exit code of 137
this would indicate that there is an out of memory issue:
For beginners
A first step to bypass this error, you could try to increase the amount of CPUs, memory, and time for the whole pipeline. Therefor you can try to increase the resource for the parameters --max_cpus
, --max_memory
, and --max_time
. Based on the error above, you have to increase the amount of memory. Therefore you can go to the parameter documentation of differentialabundance and scroll down to the show hidden parameter
button to get the default value for --max_memory
. In this case 128GB, you than can try to run your pipeline again with --max_memory 200GB -resume
to skip all process, that were already calculated. If you can not increase the resource of the complete pipeline, you can try to adapt the resource for a single process as mentioned below.
Advanced option on process level
To bypass this error you would need to find exactly which resources are set by the DESEQ2_DIFFERENTIAL
process. The quickest way is to search for process DESEQ2_DIFFERENTIAL
in the nf-core/differentialabundance Github repo.
We have standardised the structure of Nextflow DSL2 pipelines such that all module files will be present in the modules/
directory and so, based on the search results, the file we want is modules/nf-core/deseq2/differential/main.nf
.
If you click on the link to that file you will notice that there is a label
directive at the top of the module that is set to label process_medium
.
The Nextflow label
directive allows us to organise workflow processes in separate groups which can be referenced in a configuration file to select and configure subset of processes having similar computing requirements.
The default values for the process_medium
label are set in the pipeline’s base.config
which in this case is defined as 2GB.
Providing you haven’t set any other standard nf-core parameters to cap the maximum resources used by the pipeline then we can try and bypass the DESEQ2_DIFFERENTIAL
process failure by creating a custom config file that sets a higher memory.
The custom config below can then be provided to the pipeline via the -c
parameter as highlighted in previous sections.
NB: We specify the full process name i.e.
NFCORE_DIFFERENTIALABUNDANCE:DIFFERENTIALABUNDANCE::DESEQ2_DIFFERENTIAL
in the config file because this takes priority over the short name (DESEQ2_DIFFERENTIAL
) and allows existing configuration using the full process name to be correctly overridden.If you get a warning suggesting that the process selector isn’t recognised check that the process name has been specified correctly.
Updating containers (advanced users)
The Nextflow DSL2 implementation of this pipeline uses one container per process which makes it much easier to maintain and update software dependencies. If for some reason you need to use a different version of a particular tool with the pipeline then you just need to identify the process
name and override the Nextflow container
definition for that process using the withName
declaration. For example, in the nf-core/viralrecon pipeline a tool called Pangolin has been used during the COVID-19 pandemic to assign lineages to SARS-CoV-2 genome sequenced samples. Given that the lineage assignments change quite frequently it doesn’t make sense to re-release the nf-core/viralrecon everytime a new version of Pangolin has been released. However, you can override the default container used by the pipeline by creating a custom config file and passing it as a command-line argument via -c custom.config
.
-
Check the default version used by the pipeline in the module file for Pangolin
-
Find the latest version of the Biocontainer available on Quay.io
-
Create the custom config accordingly:
-
For Docker:
-
For Singularity:
-
For Conda:
-
NB: If you wish to periodically update individual tool-specific results (e.g. Pangolin) generated by the pipeline then you must ensure to keep the
work/
directory otherwise the-resume
ability of the pipeline will be compromised and it will restart from scratch.
nf-core/configs
In most cases, you will only need to create a custom config as a one-off but if you and others within your organisation are likely to be running nf-core pipelines regularly and need to use the same settings regularly it may be a good idea to request that your custom config file is uploaded to the nf-core/configs
git repository. Before you do this please can you test that the config file works with your pipeline of choice using the -c
parameter. You can then create a pull request to the nf-core/configs
repository with the addition of your config file, associated documentation file (see examples in nf-core/configs/docs
), and amending nfcore_custom.config
to include your custom profile.
See the main Nextflow documentation for more information about creating your own configuration files.
If you have any questions or issues please send us a message on Slack on the #configs
channel.
Azure Resource Requests
To be used with the azurebatch
profile by specifying the -profile azurebatch
.
We recommend providing a compute params.vm_type
of Standard_D16_v3
VMs by default but these options can be changed if required.
Note that the choice of VM size depends on your quota and the overall workload during the analysis. For a thorough list, please refer the Azure Sizes for virtual machines in Azure.
Running in the background
Nextflow handles job submissions and supervises the running jobs. The Nextflow process must run until the pipeline is finished.
The Nextflow -bg
flag launches Nextflow in the background, detached from your terminal so that the workflow does not stop if you log out of your session. The logs are saved to a file.
Alternatively, you can use screen
/ tmux
or similar tool to create a detached session which you can log back into at a later time.
Some HPC setups also allow you to run nextflow within a cluster job submitted your job scheduler (from where it submits more jobs).
Nextflow memory requirements
In some cases, the Nextflow Java virtual machines can start to request a large amount of memory.
We recommend adding the following line to your environment to limit this (typically in ~/.bashrc
or ~./bash_profile
):