Alan Murphy and Nathan Skene 2021-09-30
If you have previously used the EWCE package from
neurogenomics/EWCE. This
package, which is available on Bioconductor (3.13, R >= 4.1) offers
functional improvements. One thing to note is that all functions which
previously used dot ‘.’ notations to separate words have been updated to
underscores ’_’ (e.g, bootstrap.enrichment.test()
is now
bootstrap_enrichment_test()
). The package vignette
website gives
further details.
The EWCE package is designed to facilitate expression weighted celltype enrichment analysis as described in our Frontiers in Neuroscience paper.1
The package was originally designed to work with the single cell cortical transcriptome data from the Linnarsson lab2 which is available at http://linnarssonlab.org/cortex/. Using this package it is possible to read in any single cell transcriptome data, provided that you have a cell by gene expression matrix (with each cell as a seperate column) and a seperate annotation dataframe, with a row for each cell.
The EWCE process involves testing for whether the genes in a target list have higher levels of expression in a given cell type than can reasonably be expected by chance. The probability distribution for this is estimated by randomly generating gene lists of equal length from a set of background genes.
The EWCE method can be applied to any gene list. In the paper we reported it’s application to genetic and transcriptomic datasets, and in this vignette we detail how this can be done.
Note that throughout this vignette we use the terms ‘cell type’ and ‘sub-cell type’ to refer to two levels of annotation of what a cell type is. This is described in further detail in our paper1, but relates to the two levels of annotation provided in the Linnarsson dataset2. In this dataset a cell is described as having a cell type (i.e. ‘Interneuron’) and subcell type (i.e. ‘Int11’ a.k.a Interneuron type 11).
The process for using EWCE essentially involves three steps.
First, one needs to load the relevant single cell transcriptome dataset.
Single cell transcriptome data is read in from a text file using the
read_celltype_data
.
The user then obtains a gene set and a suitable background gene set. As the choice of gene sets is up to the user we do not provide functions for doing this. Appropriate choice of background set is discussed in the associated publication.
Bootstrapping is then performed using the bootstrap_enrichment_test
function.
The EWCE package is available on Bioconductor (3.13). To be able to install the package one needs first to install >= R (version 4.1) which can be found at https://cran.r-project.org/.
if (!require("BiocManager"))
install.packages("BiocManager")
BiocManager::install("EWCE")
The devel version of EWCE which contains the newest features can be installed from github by run the following lines of code:
if (!require("devtools")) {
install.packages("devtools")
}
devtools::install_github("neurogenomics/ewceData")
devtools::install_github("nathanskene/ewce")
You can then load the package and data package:
library(EWCE)
library(ewceData)
Images with the latest version of EWCE are regularly pushed to Dockerhub. If you already have docker installed you can load up a working copy using the following commands. Note, that you will need to replace the initial directory path with a location on your computer that you wish to be able to access from within the docker image.
docker pull nathanskene/ewce
docker run --name=ewce -e PASSWORD=ewcedocker -p 8790:8790 -d -v /User/$USER:/var/ewce nathanskene/ewce:latest
docker exec -ti ewce R
See the vignette website for up-to-date instructions on usage.
If you have any problems please do file an issue here on github.
If you use the EWCE package as well then please cite
If you use the cortex/hippocampus single cell data associated with this package then please cite the following papers:
1. Skene, N. & Grant, S. Identification of vulnerable cell types in major brain disorders using single cell transcriptomes and expression weighted cell type enrichment. Frontiers in Neuroscience (2016). doi:10.3389/fnins.2016.00016
2. Zeisel, A. et al. Cell types in the mouse cortex and hippocampus revealed by single-cell RNA-seq. Science 347, 1138–1142 (2015).