In this worked example you will replicate a PCA on a published dataset.
The example is split into 2 Parts:
In this Data Preparation phase, you will do the following things:
vcfR::read.vcfR())vcfR::extract.gt())t())for()
loop).csv file
for the next step (write.csv())This worked example is based on a paper in the journal Molecular Ecology from 2017 by Jennifer Walsh titled Subspecies delineation amid phenotypic, geographic and genetic discordance in a songbird.
The study investigated variation between two bird species in the genus Ammodramus: A. nenlsoni and A. caudacutus.
The species A. nenlsoni has been divided into 3 sub-species: A. n. nenlsoni, A.n. alterus, and A n. subvirgatus. The other species, A. caudacutus, has been divided into two subspecies, A.c. caudacutus and A.c. diversus.
The purpose of this study was to investigate to what extent these five subspecies recognized by taxonomists are supported by genetic data. The author’s collected DNA from 75 birds (15 per subspecies) and genotyped 1929 SNPs. They then analyzed the data with Principal Components Analysis (PCA), among other genetic analyzes.
This tutorial will work through all of the steps necessary to re-analyze Walsh et al.s data
In the code below all code is provided. Your tasks will be to do 2 things:
Load the vcfR and other packages with library().
library(vcfR)
## Warning: package 'vcfR' was built under R version 4.2.2
##
## ***** *** vcfR *** *****
## This is vcfR 1.13.0
## browseVignettes('vcfR') # Documentation
## citation('vcfR') # Citation
## ***** ***** ***** *****
library(vegan)
## Loading required package: permute
## Loading required package: lattice
## This is vegan 2.6-2
library(ggplot2)
library(ggpubr)
Make sure that your working directory is set to the location of the
file all_loci.vcf.
getwd()
## [1] "C:/Users/Zachy/OneDrive/Desktop/compbioFall22"
list.files()
## [1] "07-mean_imputation.docx"
## [2] "07-mean_imputation.html"
## [3] "07-mean_imputation.Rmd"
## [4] "08-PCA_worked.html"
## [5] "08-PCA_worked.Rmd"
## [6] "09-PCA_worked_example-SNPs-part1.Rmd"
## [7] "21.16015248-16255248.ALL.chr21_GRCh38.genotypes.20170504.vcf.gz"
## [8] "all_loci-1.vcf"
## [9] "all_loci.vcf"
## [10] "bird_snps_remove_NAs.html"
## [11] "bird_snps_remove_NAs.Rmd"
## [12] "my_snp.vcf.gz"
## [13] "removing_fixed_alleles.html"
## [14] "removing_fixed_alleles.Rmd"
## [15] "rsconnect"
## [16] "Screenshot 2022-11-28 082623.jpg"
## [17] "SNPs_cleaned.csv"
## [18] "TestPage.html"
## [19] "TestPage.Rmd"
## [20] "transpose_VCF_data.html"
## [21] "transpose_VCF_data.Rmd"
## [22] "walsh2017morphology.csv"
## [23] "working_directory_practice.html"
## [24] "working_directory_practice.Rmd"
list.files(pattern = "vcf")
## [1] "21.16015248-16255248.ALL.chr21_GRCh38.genotypes.20170504.vcf.gz"
## [2] "all_loci-1.vcf"
## [3] "all_loci.vcf"
## [4] "my_snp.vcf.gz"
Reading the VCF file and loading the data onto a variable to utilize by the ‘read.vcfR’
snps <- vcfR::read.vcfR("all_loci.vcf", convertNA = TRUE)
## Scanning file to determine attributes.
## File attributes:
## meta lines: 8
## header_line: 9
## variant count: 1929
## column count: 81
##
Meta line 8 read in.
## All meta lines processed.
## gt matrix initialized.
## Character matrix gt created.
## Character matrix gt rows: 1929
## Character matrix gt cols: 81
## skip: 0
## nrows: 1929
## row_num: 0
##
Processed variant 1000
Processed variant: 1929
## All variants processed
Use vcfR::extract.gt() to get the genotype scores.
snps_num <- vcfR::extract.gt(snps,
element = "GT",
IDtoRowNames = F,
as.numeric = T,
convertNA = T,
return.alleles = F)
Using the ‘t()’ function to transpose the data to a formal orientation
snps_num_t <- t(snps_num)
Converting to dataframe
snps_num_df <- data.frame(snps_num_t)
Here’s a function that will look for NAs in single column or vector, and tell us the index values.
find_NAs <- function(x){
NAs_TF <- is.na(x)
i_NA <- which(NAs_TF == TRUE)
N_NA <- length(i_NA)
cat("Results:",N_NA, "NAs present\n.")
return(i_NA)
}
Can through the dataframe to determine the amount of rows and remove the na
# N_rows
# number of rows (individuals)
N_rows <- nrow(snps_num_t)
# N_NA
# vector to hold output (number of NAs)
N_NA <- rep(x = 0, times = N_rows)
# N_SNPs
# total number of columns (SNPs)
N_SNPs <- ncol(snps_num_t)
# the for() loop
for(i in 1:N_rows){
# for each row, find the location of
## NAs with snps_num_t()
i_NA <- find_NAs(snps_num_t[i,])
# then determine how many NAs
## with length()
N_NA_i <- length(i_NA)
# then save the output to
## our storage vector
N_NA[i] <- N_NA_i
}
## Results: 28 NAs present
## .Results: 20 NAs present
## .Results: 28 NAs present
## .Results: 24 NAs present
## .Results: 23 NAs present
## .Results: 63 NAs present
## .Results: 51 NAs present
## .Results: 38 NAs present
## .Results: 34 NAs present
## .Results: 24 NAs present
## .Results: 48 NAs present
## .Results: 21 NAs present
## .Results: 42 NAs present
## .Results: 78 NAs present
## .Results: 45 NAs present
## .Results: 21 NAs present
## .Results: 42 NAs present
## .Results: 34 NAs present
## .Results: 66 NAs present
## .Results: 54 NAs present
## .Results: 59 NAs present
## .Results: 52 NAs present
## .Results: 47 NAs present
## .Results: 31 NAs present
## .Results: 63 NAs present
## .Results: 40 NAs present
## .Results: 40 NAs present
## .Results: 22 NAs present
## .Results: 60 NAs present
## .Results: 48 NAs present
## .Results: 961 NAs present
## .Results: 478 NAs present
## .Results: 59 NAs present
## .Results: 26 NAs present
## .Results: 285 NAs present
## .Results: 409 NAs present
## .Results: 1140 NAs present
## .Results: 600 NAs present
## .Results: 1905 NAs present
## .Results: 25 NAs present
## .Results: 1247 NAs present
## .Results: 23 NAs present
## .Results: 750 NAs present
## .Results: 179 NAs present
## .Results: 433 NAs present
## .Results: 123 NAs present
## .Results: 65 NAs present
## .Results: 49 NAs present
## .Results: 192 NAs present
## .Results: 433 NAs present
## .Results: 66 NAs present
## .Results: 597 NAs present
## .Results: 1891 NAs present
## .Results: 207 NAs present
## .Results: 41 NAs present
## .Results: 268 NAs present
## .Results: 43 NAs present
## .Results: 110 NAs present
## .Results: 130 NAs present
## .Results: 90 NAs present
## .Results: 271 NAs present
## .Results: 92 NAs present
## .Results: 103 NAs present
## .Results: 175 NAs present
## .Results: 31 NAs present
## .Results: 66 NAs present
## .Results: 64 NAs present
## .Results: 400 NAs present
## .Results: 192 NAs present
## .Results: 251 NAs present
## .Results: 69 NAs present
## .Results: 58 NAs present
## .
Using a histogram we can visualize the amount of NAs in the dataset of each row
# 50% of N_SNPs
cutoff50 <- N_SNPs*0.5
hist(N_NA)
abline(v = cutoff50,
col = 2,
lwd = 2,
lty = 2)
Converting the amount of NAs in a row to a percentrage
percent_NA <- N_NA/N_SNPs*100
# Call which() on percent_NA
i_NA_50percent <- which(percent_NA > 50)
snps_num_t02 <- snps_num_t[-i_NA_50percent, ]
Each step cleans the data to a summarized and boiled down data set Row names will contain all data Row names 02 will contain those without sample_ Sample will contain only the ID of the SNP pop id will only contain the ID
row_names <- row.names(snps_num_t02) # Key
row_names02 <- gsub("sample_","",row_names)
sample_id <- gsub("^([ATCG]*)(_)(.*)",
"\\3",
row_names02)
pop_id <- gsub("[01-9]*",
"",
sample_id)
table(pop_id)
## pop_id
## Alt Cau Div Nel Sub
## 15 12 15 15 11
The function below will remove invariant columns from a dataframe, as
long as you add return(x) to the end.
invar_omit <- function(x){
cat("Dataframe of dim",dim(x), "processed...\n")
sds <- apply(x, 2, sd, na.rm = TRUE)
i_var0 <- which(sds == 0)
cat(length(i_var0),"columns removed\n")
if(length(i_var0) > 0){
x <- x[, -i_var0]
}
## add return() with x in it
return(x)
}
snps_no_invar <- invar_omit(snps_num_t02)
## Dataframe of dim 68 1929 processed...
## 591 columns removed
Removing all the NA and Invariables and replacing them with the mean value of the column
snps_noNAs <- snps_no_invar
N_col <- ncol(snps_no_invar)
for(i in 1:N_col){
# get the current column
column_i <- snps_noNAs[, i]
# get the mean of the current column
mean_i <- mean(column_i, na.rm = TRUE)
# get the NAs in the current column
NAs_i <- which(is.na(column_i))
# record the number of NAs
N_NAs <- length(NAs_i)
# replace the NAs in the current column
column_i[NAs_i] <- mean_i
# replace the original column with the
## updated columns
snps_noNAs[, i] <- column_i
}
Save the data as a .csv file which can be loaded again later.
write.csv(snps_noNAs, file = "SNPs_cleaned.csv",
row.names = F)
Check for the presence of the file with list.files()
list.files(pattern = ".csv")
## [1] "SNPs_cleaned.csv" "walsh2017morphology.csv"
In Part 2, we will re-load the SNPs_cleaned.csv file and
carry an an analysis with PCA.