pRolocGUI 2.6.0
pRolocGUI is under active development; current
functionality is evolving and new features will be added. This
software is free and open-source. You are invited to open issues
in the Github pRolocGUI
repository
in case you have any questions, suggestions or have found any bugs or typos.
To reach a broader audience for more general questions about
proteomics analyses using R consider of writing to the
Bioconductor Support Forum.
This vignette describes the implemented functionality of the
pRolocGUI
package. The package is based on the MSnSet
class
definitions of MSnbase and on the functions defined in
the pRoloc package. pRolocGUI is
intended for, but not limited to, the interactive visualisation and
analysis of quantitative spatial proteomics data. To achieve
reactivity and interactivity, pRolocGUI
relies on the
shiny
framework. We recommend some
familiarity with the MSnSet
class (see ?MSnSet
for details) and
the pRoloc
vignette (see vignette("pRoloc-tutorial")
) before using
pRolocGUI
.
There are 3 applications distributed with pRolocGUI
which are
wrapped and launched by the pRolocVis
function. These 3 applications
are called according to the argument app
in the pRolocVis
function which may be one of “explore”, “compare” or
“aggregate”.
explore
application launches a interactive spatial map
(dimensionality reduction) of the data, with an alternate
profiles tab for visualisation of protein profiles. There is a
searchable data table for the identification of proteins of
interest and functionality to download figures and export proteins
of interest.compare
application features the same functionality as
the explore
app but allows the comparison of two
MSnSet
instances, e.g. this might be of help for the analyses of
changes in protein localisation in different conditions.aggregate
application allows users to load peptide or
PSM level data and look at the relationship between peptides
and proteins (following aggregation).Once R is started, the first step to enable functionality of the package is to load it, as shown in the code chunk below. We also load the pRolocdata data package, which contains quantitative proteomics datasets.
library("pRolocGUI")
library("pRolocdata")
We begin by loading the dataset hyperLOPIT2015
from the pRolocdata
data package. The data was produced from using the hyperLOPIT
technology on mouse E14TG2a embryonic stem cells (Christoforou et al 2016).
For more background spatial proteomics data anlayses please see
Gatto et al 2010,
Gatto et al 2014 and also the
pRoloc
tutorial vignette.
data(hyperLOPIT2015)
To load one of the applications using the pRolocVis
function and
view the data you are required to specify a minimum of one key
argument, object
, which is the data to display and must be of
class MSnSet
(or a MSnSetList
of
length 2 for the compare
application). Please see
vignette("pRoloc-tutorial")
or vignette("MSnbase-io")
for
importing and loading data. The argument app
tells the pRolocVis
function what type of application to load. One can choose
from: "explore"
(default), "compare"
or "aggregate"
. The optional
argument fcol
is used to specify the
feature meta-data label(s) (fData
column name(s)) to be plotted,
the default is markers
(i.e. the labelled data). For the the compare
app this can be a character
of length 2, where the first element
is the label for dataset 1 and the second element is for dataset 2
(if only one element is provide this label will be used for both
datasets, more detail is provided in the examples further below.)
For example, to load the default pRolocVis
application:
pRolocVis(object = hyperLOPIT2015, fcol = "markers")
Launching any of the pRolocVis
applications will open a new tab in a
separate pop-up window, and then the application can be opened in your
default Internet browser if desired, by clicking the ‘open in browser’
button in the top panel of the window.
To stop the applications from running press Esc
or Ctrl-C
in the
console (or use the “STOP” button when using RStudio) and close the
browser tab, where pRolocVis
is running.
There are 3 different applications, each one designed to address a different specific user requirement.
The explore app is intended for exploratory data analysis, which features a clickable interface and zoomable spatial map. The default spatial map is in the form of a PCA plot, but many other dimensionality reduction techniques are supported including t-SNE and MDS among others. If you would like to search for a particular protein or set of proteins this is the application to use. This app also features a protein profiles tab, designed for examining the patterns of user-specified sets of proteins. For example, if one has several overlapping sub-cellular clusters in their data, as highlighted by the PCA plot or otherwise, one can check for separation in all data dimensions by examining the protein profile patterns. Proteins that co-localise are known to exhibit similar distributions (De Duve’s principale).
The comparison application may be of interest if a user wishes to examine two replicate experiments, or two experiments from different conditions etc. Two spatial maps are loaded side-by-side and one can search and identify common proteins between the two data sets. As per the default application there is also a protein profiles tab to allow one to look at the patterns of protein profiles of interest in each dataset.
The aggregate app is for examining the effect that peptide or PSM aggregation may have on the protein level data.
explore
applicationThe explore
(default) app is characterised by an interactive and
searchable spatial map, by default this is a Principal Components
Analysis (PCA) plot. PCA is an
ordinance method that can be used to transform a high-dimensional
dataset into a smaller lower-dimenensional set of uncorrelated
variables (principal components), such that the first principal
component has the largest possible variance to account for as much
variability in the data as possible. Each succeeding component in turn
has the highest variance possible under the constraint that it be
orthogonal to the preceding components. Thus, PCA is particularly
useful for visualisation of multidimensional data in 2-dimensions,
wherein all the proteins can be plotted on the same figure. Other
dimensionality reduction methods are supported such as t-SNE,
among others (please see ?plot2D
and the argument method
)
The application is subdivided in to different tabs: (1) Spatial Map, (2) Profiles, (3) Profiles (by class), (4) Table Selection, (5) Sample info and (6) Colour picker. A searchable data table containing the experimental feature meta-data is permanantly dispalyed at the bottom of the screen for ease. You can browse between the tabs by simply clicking on them at the top of the screen.
To run the explore
application using pRolocVis
:
pRolocVis(object = hyperLOPIT2015, fcol = "markers")
Viewing The Spatial Map tab is characterised by its main panel which shows
a PCA plot for the selected MSnSet
. By default a PCA plot is used to
display the data and the first two principal components are plotted.
The left sidebar panel controls what class labels (sub-cellular compartments)
to highlight on the PCA plot. Labels can be selected by clicking on and off
the coloured data class names, or removed/highlighted by clicking the
“Select/clear all” button. The right sidebar contains the map controls.
This features a ‘transparancy’ slider to control the opacity of the highlighted
data points, and other buttons which are in detail below.
Searching Below the spatial map is a searchable data table containing
the fetaure meta data (fData
). For LOPIT experiments, such as the
one used in this example, this may contain protein accession numbers,
protein entry names, protein description, the number of quantified
peptides per protein, and columns containing sub-cellular localisation
information.
One can search for proteins of interest by using the white search box, above the table. Searching is done by partial pattern matching with table elements. Any matches or partial text matches that are found are highlighted in the data table. The search supports batch searching so users can paste their favourite sets of proteins, protein accessions/keywords must be separated by spaces.
To select/unselect a protein of interest one can simply click/unclick on the corresponding entry in the table or double click directly on a protein of interest on the interactive PCA plot. If a protein(s) in the table is clicked and selected the row in the table will turn grey and the protein(s) will be highlighted on the PCA plot by a dark grey circle(s), if the ‘Show labels’ box is checked (the default) in the right sidebar panel the protein names for the selected protein(s) will also be shown on the plot. Any selected proteins on the plot or in the table can be cleared at any time by clicking the ‘Clear selection’ button in the right sidebar panel.
Saving selected proteins
Once proteins have been highlighted in the table and/or the plot
they can be exported using the “Save selection” button in the
right sidebar. This will download the ids (as defined by featureNames
in the MSnSet
object) of the current protein selection to a .csv file.
Zooming If a user wishes to examine a protein(s) in more detail, one can zoom in on specific points by hovering the mouse over the plot, then clicking and drawing a (square) brush and then clicking the ‘Zoom/reset button’ in the right sidebar to zoom to the brushed area. This process can be repeated until the desired level of zoom is reached. The plot can be resetted to the original size by clicking the ‘Zoom/reset button’ once again.
Downloading figures All visualisations in the app (the map and two profile plots) can be downloaded as high resolution PDFs by clicking the “Download Plot” button in the right sidebar panel.
Hiding the sidebar panels The left and right sidebar panels can be shown/hidden at any time by clicking the icons in the main dashboard.
The profiles tabs
There are two profiles tabs in pRolocGUI
which display the
protein profile quantitation data that is stored in the exprs
data slot
of the MSnSet
. For the hyperLOPIT2015
dataset this is the relative
abundances of each protein across the 20 fractions (2 x 10-plex replicates).
The first “Profiles” tab shows two ribbons plots, one for each dataset. As per the Spatial Map tab, the plot is updated according to the input classes selected in the sidebar panel on the left. A ribbon is plotted for each each sub-cellular class between the 5th and 95th percentile value per channel. The mean class profile is also highlighted by a bold line. Unknown/unlabelled profiles are shown as dark gray lines.
The profiles tab is useful to look for discrimination between
different sub-cellular niches in an easy and direct manor
where all proteins belonging to the same sub-cellular niche/data
cluster (as specified by fcol
when the app is launched) are
loaded together. The protein distribution patterns can then be
examined on a group by group basis. Proteins of interest can be
searched in the data table and once clicked, the distribution(s)
of selected protein(s) are shown by dotted black lines.
There is a second profiles tab called “Profiles (by class)” which shows the protein profiles faceted by their class labels. This static plot can be useful when comparing the trend between classes, especially when two or more classes have very similar trends.
Table Selection The Table Selection tab provides an interface for data table column selection. Multiple columns can be selected on and off by clicking/unclicking the checkboxes that correspond to the columns in the data table.
Sample Information
The tab “Sample Info” stores any sample information that is stored in
the pData
slot of the MSnSet
.
Colour Picker This tab provides an interface to select and set colours for the class labels.
compare
applicationThe comparison application may be of interest if a user wishes to examine two replicate experiments, or two experiments from different conditions etc. Two Spatial Map plots are loaded side-by-side (the default method is PCA) and one can search and identify common proteins between the two data sets.
A MSnSetList
of length 2 must be supplied as input, containing
the two datasets one wishes to compare. In the example below
we load two replicate datasets of mouse embryonic stem cells
produced using the hyperLOPIT technology.
data(hyperLOPIT2015ms3r1)
data(hyperLOPIT2015ms3r2)
mydata <- MSnSetList(list(hyperLOPIT2015ms3r1, hyperLOPIT2015ms3r2))
pRolocVis(mydata, app = "compare", fcol = "markers")
This will load the datasets hyperLOPIT2015ms3r1
and hyperLOPIT2015ms3r2
side by side and use the column name called markers
for the colour
labelling in both plots.
If we pass a fcol
of length 2 to the app we can specify
different feature data columns by which to the label the
dataset. For example, in the proceeding example we load
data from a LOPIT-DC experiment, lopitdcU2OS2018
, and then
a hyperLOPIT experiment, hyperLOPITU2OS2018
. If we wish to
display the feature data contained in the column called
markers
for hyperLOPITU2OS2018
, but a different set of
features for lopitdcU2OS2018
, called final.assignment
we would specify this using fcol
as follows.
data("hyperLOPITU2OS2018")
data("lopitdcU2OS2018")
xx <- MSnSetList(list(hyperLOPITU2OS2018, lopitdcU2OS2018))
if (interactive()) {
pRolocVis(xx, app = "compare", fcol = c("markers", "final.assignment"))
}
The compare app has the same functionality as the explore application for protein profile visualisation,interactive searchable datatable that allows both batch import and export, colour selection and options to download the visualisations. Visualisations and tables that appear in each tab are loaded side-by-side, one per dataset.
aggregate
applicationThe aggregate app allows users to look both the peptide (and/or PSM) and/or protein level data together and explore the effects of PSM/protein aggregation to protein and identify protein groups with interesting expression patterns.
To run the aggregate
app we first load a PSM level dataset from
pRolocdata
. The dataset hyperLOPIT2015ms2psm
contains PSM
level intensity data, where each row corresponds to one PSM
and each column is the TMT-plex. Please see ?hyperLOPIT2015ms2psm
for more information.
We can launch the pRolocVis
function and look at the PSM data
without aggregating to peptide
## load PSM data
data("hyperLOPIT2015ms2psm")
## Visualise the PSMs per to protein group
pRolocVis(hyperLOPIT2015ms2psm, app = "aggregate", fcol = "markers",
groupBy = "Protein.Group.Accessions")
Or we can first aggregate from PSM to peptide and then launch the
app to look at the relationships between peptide level data and
protein groups. For this latter case we can use the combineFeatures
function from MSnbase
.
## Combine PSM data to peptides
hl <- combineFeatures(hyperLOPIT2015ms2psm,
groupBy = fData(hyperLOPIT2015ms2psm)$Sequence,
method = median)
## Visualise peptides according to protein group
pRolocVis(hyperLOPIT2015ms2psm, app = "aggregate", fcol = "markers",
groupBy = "Protein.Group.Accessions")
The main body of the app contains (1) a aggvar
distance plot and a
(2) PCA plot of the PSMs/peptides. The aggvar
distance plot shows the
(log10) number of features (in this example peptides) per protein group
and the aggregation summarising distance per protein group.
The app uses the function aggvar
from
MSnbase package.
As described in the ?aggvar
documentation, the app, can take max
or mean
as a function,
and this can be selected in the left sidebar panel. By default,
on loading the max is calculated. Using max as a function,
one can help identify protein groups with single extreme outliers,
such as, for example, a mis-identified peptide that was erroneously
assigned to that protein group. The mean can also be used as a function
to identify more systematic inconsistencies where, for example,
the subsets of peptide (or PSM) feautres correspond to proteins
with different expression patterns.
Both the aggvar plot and PCA plot are interactive,
and similarly to the other pRolocVis
apps you can click
individual proteins or peptides in either the aggvar
or PCA plot, to search and highlight peptides and
proteins of interest. When a protein group is clicked
in the left plot, the peptides and associated protein
group are automatically shown on the right PCA plot.
As previously mentioned aggvar
can use either max or mean as
a function. In the left sidebar there is a drop down menu for
users to try each method.
Gatto L., Vizcaíno J.A., Hermjakob H., Huber W. and Lilley K.S. Organelle proteomics experimental designs and analysis Proteomics, 10:22, 3957-3969, 2010.
Gatto L., Breckels L.M., Burger T., Nightingale D., Groen A.J., Campbell C., Nikolovski N., Mulvey C.M., Christoforou A., Ferro M., Lilley K.S. A foundation for reliable spatial proteomics data analysis, Mol Cell Proteomics. 2014 Aug;13(8):1937-52.
Christoforou A., Mulvey C.M., Breckels L.M., Hayward P.C., Geladaki E., Hurrell T., et al. A draft map of the mouse pluripotent stem cell spatial proteome. Nat Commun. 2016 Jan 12;7:9992.