Introduction

In this vignette, we demonstrate the block bootstrap functionality implemented in nullranges. See the main nullranges vignette for an overview of the idea of bootstrapping, or the diagram below.

nullranges contains an implementation of a block bootstrap for genomic data, as proposed by Bickel et al. (2010), such that features (ranges) are sampled from the genome in blocks. The original block bootstrapping algorithm for genomic data is implemented in a python software called Genome Structure Correlation, GSC.

Our description of the bootRanges methods is described in Mu et al. (2023).

Quick start

Minimal code for running bootRanges() is shown below. Genome segmentation seg and excluded regions exclude are optional.

eh <- ExperimentHub()
ah <- AnnotationHub()
# some default resources:
seg <- eh[["EH7307"]] # pre-built genome segmentation for hg38
exclude <- ah[["AH107305"]] # Kundaje excluded regions for hg38, see below

set.seed(5) # set seed for reproducibility
blockLength <- 5e5 # size of blocks to bootstrap
R <- 10 # number of iterations of the bootstrap

# input `ranges` require seqlengths, if missing see `GenomeInfoDb::Seqinfo`
seqlengths(ranges)
# next, we remove non-standard chromosomes ...
ranges <- keepStandardChromosomes(ranges, pruning.mode="coarse")
# ... and mitochondrial genome, as these are too short
seqlevels(ranges, pruning.mode="coarse") <- setdiff(seqlevels(ranges), "MT")

# generate bootstraps
boots <- bootRanges(ranges, blockLength=blockLength, R=R,
                    seg=seg, exclude=exclude)
# `boots` can then be used with plyranges commands, e.g. join_overlap_*

The boots object will contain a column, iter which marks the different bootstrap samples that were generated. This allows for tidy analysis with plyranges, e.g. counting the number of overlapping ranges, per bootstrap iteration. For more examples of combining bootRanges with plyranges operations, see the tidy ranges tutorial.

Method overview

Several algorithms are implemented in bootRanges(), including a segmented and unsegmented version, where in the former, blocks are sampled with respect to a particular genome segmentation. Overall, we recommend the segmented block bootstrap given the heterogeneity of structure across the entire genome. If the purpose is block bootstrapping ranges within a smaller set of sequences, such as motifs within transcript sequence, then the unsegmented algorithm would be sufficient.

In a segmented block bootstrap, the blocks are sampled and placed within regions of a genome segmentation. That is, for a genome segmented into states \(1,2, \dots, S\), only blocks from state s will be used to sample the ranges of state s in each bootstrap sample. The process can be visualized in diagram panel (A) below, where a block with length \(L_b\) is randomly sampled with replacement from state “red” and the features (ranges) that overlap this block are then copied to the first tile (which is in the “red” state). The sampling is allowed across chromosome (as shown here), as long as the two blocks are in the same state.

Note that nullranges provides both functions for generating a genome segmentation from e.g. gene density, described below, as well as a default segmentation for hg38 that can be used directly.

An example workflow of bootRanges() used in combination with plyranges (Lee, Cook, and Lawrence 2019) is diagrammed in panel (B) below, and can be summarized as:

  1. Compute statistics of interest between GRanges of feature \(x\) and GRanges of feature \(y\) to assess association in the original data. This could be an enrichment (amount of overlap) or other possible statistics making use of covariates associated with each range
  2. Generate bootstrap samples of \(y\): bootRanges() with optional arguments seg (segmentation) and exclude (excluded regions as compiled by Ogata et al. (2023)) to create a BootRanges object (\(y'\))
  3. Compute the bootstrap distribution of test statistics between GRanges of feature \(x\) and \(y'\) using plyranges (compute overlaps of all features in \(x\) with all features in \(y'\), grouping by the bootstrap sample)
  4. Conpute a bootstrap p-value or \(z\) test to test the null hypothesis that there is no association between \(x\) and \(y\) (e.g. that the bootstrap data often has as high an enrichment as the observed data)

In this vignette, we give an example of segmenting the hg38 genome by Ensembl gene density, performing bootstrap sampling of peaks ranges, and evaluating overlaps for observed peaks and bootstrap peaks. We also provide other examples of statistics that can be computed with the bootRanges framework, including a single cell multi-omics example and a special case of bootstrapping features in one region of the genome.

Proportional blocks: A finally consideration is whether the blocks used to generate the bootstrap samples should scale proportionally to the segment state length, with the default setting of proportionLength=TRUE. When blocks scale proportionally, blockLength provides the maximal length of a block, while the actual block length used for a segmentation state is proportional to the fraction of genomic basepairs covered by that state. It is theoretically motivated to have the blocks scale with the overall extent of the segment state. However, in practice, if the genome segmentation states are very heterogeneous in size (e.g. orders of magnitude differences), then the blocks constructed via the proportional length method for the smaller segmentation states can be too short to effectively capture inter-range distances. We therefore recommend proportional length blocks unless some segmentation states have a much smaller extent than others, in which case fixed length blocks can be used. This option is visualized on toy data at the end of this vignette.

Segmented block bootstrap

Case study I: DHS

Import excluded regions

To avoid placing bootstrap features into regions of the genome that don’t typically have features, we import excluded regions including ENCODE-produced excludable regions(Amemiya, Kundaje, and Boyle 2019), telomeres from UCSC, centromeres. These, and other excludable sets, are assembled in the excluderanges package (Ogata et al. 2023).

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(AnnotationHub))
ah <- AnnotationHub()
# hg38.Kundaje.GRCh38_unified_Excludable
exclude_1 <- ah[["AH107305"]]
# hg38.UCSC.centromere
exclude_2 <- ah[["AH107354"]]
# hg38.UCSC.telomere
exclude_3 <- ah[["AH107355"]]
# hg38.UCSC.short_arm
exclude_4 <- ah[["AH107356"]]
# combine them
suppressWarnings({
  exclude <- trim(c(exclude_1, exclude_2, exclude_3, exclude_4))
})
exclude <- sort(GenomicRanges::reduce(exclude))

Segmentations choices

For most genomic datasets we examine, the density of ranges of interest (e.g. ChIP- or ATAC-seq peaks) is often correlated to other large-scale patterns of other genomic features, such as density of genes. Bickel et al. (2010) therefore proposed the idea of bootstrapping with respect to a segmented genome given known, large-scale genomic structures such as isochores (“larger than 300kb”).

A genomic segmentation can be considered if it defines large (e.g. on the order of ∼1 Mb), relatively homogeneous segments with respect to feature density, and the variance of the distribution of the test statistics become stable as block length increases (see Mu et al. (2023) Fig 2A).

There are two options for choosing a segmentation, either:

  • Use an exiting segmentation (e.g. ChromHMM, etc.) downloaded from AnnotationHub or external to Bioconductor (BED files imported with rtracklayer)
  • Perform a de novo segmentation of the genome using feature density, e.g. gene density

Pre-built segmentations

Given that these genome segmentation evaluations take time and involve consideration of multiple criteria, we have provided our recommended segmentation for hg38. nullranges has generated pre-built segmentations for easy use, which were generated using code outlined below in the Segmentation by gene density section.

Pre-built segmentations using either CBS or HMM methods with \(L_s=2e6\) considering excludable regions can be downloaded directly from ExperimentHub. We find that the segmentation and block length (500kb) shown in the case study below could be used for most analyses of hg38.

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(ExperimentHub))
eh <- ExperimentHub()
seg_cbs <- eh[["EH7307"]] # prefer CBS for hg38
seg_hmm <- eh[["EH7308"]]
seg <- seg_cbs

Segmentation by gene density

This section describes how we generated the pre-built segmentations, such that users with a different genome can generate a segmentation for their own purposes. First we obtain the Ensembl genes (Howe et al. 2020) for segmenting by gene density. We obtain these using the ensembldb package (Rainer, Gatto, and Weichenberger 2019).

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(ensembldb))
suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(EnsDb.Hsapiens.v86))
edb <- EnsDb.Hsapiens.v86
filt <- AnnotationFilterList(GeneIdFilter("ENSG", "startsWith"))
g <- genes(edb, filter = filt)

We perform some processing to align the sequences (chromosomes) of g with our excluded regions and our features of interest (DNase hypersensitive sites, or DHS, defined below).

library(GenomeInfoDb)
g <- keepStandardChromosomes(g, pruning.mode = "coarse")
# MT is too small for bootstrapping, so must be removed
seqlevels(g, pruning.mode="coarse") <- setdiff(seqlevels(g), "MT")
# normally we would assign a new style, but for recent host issues
# that produced vignette build problems, we use `paste0`
## seqlevelsStyle(g) <- "UCSC" 
seqlevels(g) <- paste0("chr", seqlevels(g))
genome(g) <- "hg38"
g <- sortSeqlevels(g)
g <- sort(g)
table(seqnames(g))
## 
##  chr1  chr2  chr3  chr4  chr5  chr6  chr7  chr8  chr9 chr10 chr11 chr12 chr13 
##  5194  3971  3010  2505  2868  2863  2867  2353  2242  2204  3235  2940  1304 
## chr14 chr15 chr16 chr17 chr18 chr19 chr20 chr21 chr22  chrX  chrY 
##  2224  2152  2511  2995  1170  2926  1386   835  1318  2359   523

CBS segmentation

We first demonstrate the use of a CBS segmentation as implemented in DNAcopy (Olshen et al. 2004).

We load the nullranges and plyranges packages, and patchwork in order to produce grids of plots.

library(nullranges)
suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(plyranges))
library(patchwork)

We subset the excluded ranges to those which are 500 bp or larger. The motivation for this step is to avoid segmenting the genome into many small pieces due to an abundance of short excluded regions. Note that we re-save the excluded ranges to exclude.

Here, and below, we need to specify plyranges::filter as it conflicts with filter exported by ensembldb.

set.seed(5)
exclude <- exclude %>%
  plyranges::filter(width(exclude) >= 500)
L_s <- 1e6
seg_cbs <- segmentDensity(g, n = 3, L_s = L_s,
                          exclude = exclude, type = "cbs")
## Analyzing: Sample.1
plots <- lapply(c("ranges","barplot","boxplot"), function(t) {
  plotSegment(seg_cbs, exclude, type = t)
})
plots[[1]]

plots[[2]] + plots[[3]]

Note here, the default ranges plot shows the whole genome. Some of the state transitions within small regions cannot be visualized. One can look into specific regions to observe segmentation states, by specifying the region argument.

region <- GRanges("chr16", IRanges(3e7,4e7))
plotSegment(seg_cbs, exclude, type="ranges", region=region)

Alternatively: HMM segmentation

Here we use an alternative segmentation implemented in the RcppHMM CRAN package, using the initGHMM, learnEM, and viterbi functions.

seg_hmm <- segmentDensity(g, n = 3, L_s = L_s,
                          exclude = exclude, type = "hmm")
## Finished at Iteration: 127 with Error: 9.70053e-06
plots <- lapply(c("ranges","barplot","boxplot"), function(t) {
  plotSegment(seg_hmm, exclude, type = t)
})
plots[[1]]

plots[[2]] + plots[[3]]

Running bootRanges

We use a set of DNase hypersensitivity sites (DHS) from the ENCODE project (ENCODE 2012) in A549 cell line (ENCSR614GWM). Here, for speed, we work with a pre-processed data object from ExperimentHub, created using the following steps:

  • Download ENCODE DNase hypersensitive peaks in A549 from AnnotationHub
  • Subset to standard chromosomes and remove mitochondrial DNA
  • Use a chain file from UCSC to lift ranges from hg19 to hg38
  • Sort the DHS features to be bootstrapped

These steps are included in nullrangesData in the inst/scripts/make-dhs-data.R script.

For speed of the vignette, we restrict to a smaller number of DHS, filtering by the signal value. We also remove unrelated metadata columns that we don’t need for the bootstrap analysis. Because we are interested in signal value for DHS peaks later, we only keep this column. Consider, when creating bootstrapped data, that you will be creating an object many times larger than your original data (i.e. multipled by R the number of bootstrap iterations), so filtering down to key ranges and selecting only the relevant metadata can help make the analysis much more efficient.

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(nullrangesData))
dhs <- DHSA549Hg38()
dhs <- dhs %>% plyranges::filter(signalValue > 100) %>%
  mutate(id = seq_along(.)) %>%
  plyranges::select(id, signalValue)
length(dhs)
## [1] 6214
table(seqnames(dhs))
## 
##  chr1  chr2  chr3  chr4  chr5  chr6  chr7  chr8  chr9 chr10 chr11 chr12 chr13 
##  1436   252   108    30   148    51   184   146   155   443   436   526    20 
## chr14 chr15 chr16 chr17 chr18 chr19 chr20 chr21 chr22  chrX  chrY 
##   197   265   214   715    20   649   142    31    19    17    10

Now we apply a segmented block bootstrap with blocks of size 500kb, to the peaks. Here we show generation of 50 iterations of a block bootstrap followed by a typical overlap analysis using plyranges (Lee, Cook, and Lawrence 2019).

Note that we have already removed non-standard chromosomes and mitochondrial chromosome, as these are typically shorter than our desired blockLength (see e.g. code in Quick Start above).

set.seed(5) # for reproducibility
R <- 50
blockLength <- 5e5
boots <- bootRanges(dhs, blockLength, R = R, seg = seg, exclude=exclude)
boots
## BootRanges object with 310434 ranges and 3 metadata columns:
##            seqnames            ranges strand |        id signalValue  iter
##               <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <integer>   <numeric> <Rle>
##        [1]     chr1     242791-242940      * |       347         120     1
##        [2]     chr1     256031-256180      * |       348         194     1
##        [3]     chr1     391535-391684      * |      5301         109     1
##        [4]     chr1     421046-421195      * |      5302         106     1
##        [5]     chr1     438186-438335      * |      5303         232     1
##        ...      ...               ...    ... .       ...         ...   ...
##   [310430]     chrY 27090908-27091057      * |      2133         105    50
##   [310431]     chrY 27194968-27195117      * |      2134         128    50
##   [310432]     chrY 27224188-27224337      * |      2135         153    50
##   [310433]     chrY 27234153-27234302      * |      2136         125    50
##   [310434]     chrY 27789879-27790028      * |      2116         118    50
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 24 sequences from hg38 genome

What is returned here? The bootRanges function returns a BootRanges object, which is a simple sub-class of GRanges. The iteration (iter) and (optionally) the block length (blockLength) are recorded as metadata columns, accessible via mcols. We return the bootstrapped ranges as GRanges rather than GRangesList, as the former is more compatible with downstream overlap joins with plyranges, where the iteration column can be used with group_by to provide per bootstrap summary statistics, as shown below.

Note that we use the exclude object from the previous step, which does not contain small ranges. If one wanted to also avoid generation of bootstrapped features that overlap small excluded ranges, then omit this filtering step (use the original, complete exclude feature set).

Assessing quality of bootstrap samples

We can examine properties of permuted y over iterations, and compare to the original y. To do so, we first add the original features as iter=0. Then compute summaries:

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(tidyr))
combined <- dhs %>% 
  mutate(iter=0) %>%
  bind_ranges(boots) %>% 
  plyranges::select(iter)
stats <- combined %>% 
  group_by(iter) %>%
  summarize(n = n()) %>%
  as_tibble()
head(stats)
## # A tibble: 6 × 2
##   iter      n
##   <fct> <int>
## 1 0      6214
## 2 1      6144
## 3 2      6265
## 4 3      6233
## 5 4      6291
## 6 5      6357

We can also look at distributions of various aspects, e.g. here the inter-feature distance of features, across a few of the bootstraps and the original feature set y.

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(ggridges))
suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(purrr))
suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(ggplot2))
interdist <- function(dat) {
    x <- dat[-1,]
    y <- dat[-nrow(dat),]
    ifelse(x$seqnames == y$seqnames,
           x$start + floor((x$width - 1)/2) -
           y$start - floor((y$width - 1)/2), NA)
}
# just looking at first 3 iterations...
combined %>% plyranges::filter(iter %in% 0:3) %>%
  mutate(iter = droplevels(iter)) %>%
  plyranges::select(iter) %>%
  as_tibble() %>% 
  nest(data = !iter) %>%
  mutate(interdist = map(data, interdist)) %>% 
  dplyr::select(iter, interdist) %>% 
  unnest(interdist) %>% 
  mutate(type = ifelse(iter == 0, "original", "boot"),
         interdist = pmax(interdist, 0)) %>%
  filter(!is.na(interdist)) %>%
  ggplot(aes(log10(interdist + 1), iter, fill=type)) +
  geom_density_ridges(alpha = 0.75) +
  geom_text(data = head(stats, 4),
            aes(x=1.5, y=iter, label=paste0("n=",n), fill=NULL),
            vjust=1.5)

Bootstrapping and plyranges

We will now show how to combine bootstrapping with plyranges to perform statistical enrichment analysis. The general idea will be to combine the long vector of bootstrapped ranges, indexed by iter, with another set of ranges to compute enrichment. We will explore this idea across a number of case studies below. In pseudocode, the general outline will be:

# pseudocode for the general paradigm:
boots <- bootRanges(y) # make bootstrapped y
x %>% join_overlap_inner(boots) %>% # overlaps of x with bootstrapped y
  group_by(x_id, iter) %>% # collate by x ID and the bootstrap iteration
  summarize(some_statistic = ...) %>% # compute some summary on metadata
  as_tibble() %>% # pass to tibble
  complete(
    x_id, iter, # for any missing combinations of x ID and iter...
    fill=list(some_statistic = 0) # ...fill in missing values
  )

Statistic I: the total number of overlaps

Suppose we have a set of features x and we are interested in evaluating the enrichment of this set with the DHS. We can calculate for example the sum observed number of overlaps for features in x with DHS in whole genome (or something more complicated, e.g. the maximum log fold change or signal value for DHS peaks within a maxgap window of x).

x <- GRanges("chr2", IRanges(1 + 50:99 * 1e6, width=1e6), x_id=1:50)
x <- x %>% mutate(n_overlaps = count_overlaps(., dhs))
sum( x$n_overlaps )
## [1] 64

We can repeat this with the bootstrapped features using a group_by command, a summarize, followed by a second group_by and summarize. If it is your first time working with plyranges, it may help you to step through these commands one by one, breaking the pipe at intermediate points, to understand what the intermediate output is, and how it combines to provide the final statistics.

Note that we need to use tidyr::complete in order to fill in combinations of x and iter where the overlap was 0.

boot_stats <- x %>% join_overlap_inner(boots) %>%
  group_by(x_id, iter) %>%
  summarize(n_overlaps = n()) %>%
  as_tibble() %>%
  complete(x_id, iter, fill=list(n_overlaps = 0)) %>%
  group_by(iter) %>%
  summarize(sumOverlaps = sum(n_overlaps))

The above code, first grouping by x_id and iter, then subsequently by iter is general and allows for more complex analysis than just mean overlap (e.g. how many times an x range has 1 or more overlap, what is the mean or max signal value for peaks overlapping ranges in x, etc.).

If one is interested in assessing feature-wise statistics instead of genome-wise statistics, eg.,the mean observed number of overlaps per feature or mean base pair overlap in x, one can also group by both (block,iter). 10,000 total blocks may therefore be sufficient to derive a bootstrap distribution, avoiding the need to generate many bootstrap genomes of data.

Finally we can plot a histogram. In this case, as the x features were arbitrary, our observed value falls within the distribution of sum number of overlap bootstrapped peaks with \(x\).

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(ggplot2))
ggplot(boot_stats, aes(sumOverlaps)) +
  geom_histogram(binwidth=5)+
  geom_vline(xintercept = sum(x$n_overlaps), linetype = "dashed")

Statistic II: the sum of signal value for nearby peaks

x_obs <- x %>% join_overlap_inner(dhs,maxgap=1e3)
sum(x_obs$signalValue )
## [1] 9503
boot_stats <- x %>% join_overlap_inner(boots,maxgap=1e3)  %>%
  group_by(x_id, iter) %>%
  summarize(Signal = sum(signalValue)) %>%
  as_tibble() %>% 
  complete(x_id, iter, fill=list(Signal = 0)) %>%
  group_by(iter) %>%
  summarize(sumSignal = sum(Signal))

Still in this case, our observed value falls within the distribution of bootstrapped statistics.

ggplot(boot_stats, aes(sumSignal)) +
  geom_histogram()+
  geom_vline(xintercept = sum(x_obs$signalValue), linetype = "dashed")

Case study II: Single cell multi-omics

This case study provides an example of a more complex statistic of interest. Instead of computing simple overlap, or some function of a single metadata column, e.g. signal above, a statistic can be computed on a count matrix from a SummerizedExperiment or SingleCellExperiment. Here we provide unevaluated code for such an example.

We use a trick to perform computation on a count matrix within plyranges: we extract count matrix data from a SingleCellExperiment (e.g. pseudobulk summaries of cell type specific expression or accessibility) and save it in a GRanges’s metadata column as a NumericList() format. This allows us to perform the block bootstrap and quickly compute statistics using plyranges. The case study we consider here is to assess the correlation of gene expression and promoter peak accessibility from a dataset of Chromium Single Cell Multiome ATAC + Gene Expression.

We first load the 10X Multiome data, as compiled by the MOFA2 tutorial. The first two pre-processed steps are included in nullrangesData in the inst/scripts/make-multiome-data.R script. Here, we aggregate 14 cell types across cluster-sample groups.

## split sparse count matrix into NumericList
# sc_rna <- rna_Granges[-which(rna.sd==0)] %>%
#   mutate(counts1 = NumericList(asplit(rna.scaled, 1))) %>% sort()
# sc_promoter <- promoter_Granges[-which(promoter.sd==0)] %>%
#   mutate(counts2 = NumericList(asplit(promoter.scaled, 1))) %>% sort()
suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(nullrangesData))
data("sc_rna")
sc_rna
sc_rna$counts1
nct <- length(sc_rna$counts1[[1]])
print(paste("There are", nct, "cell types"))
data("sc_promoter")
## bootstrap promoters
library(BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg38)
genome <- BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg38
seqlengths(sc_promoter) <- seqlengths(genome)[1:22] # pull chrom lens from USCS
bootranges <- bootRanges(sc_promoter, blockLength = 5e5, R=50)

There are two options for downstream pipelines for computing statistics after generating a BootRanges object. One is to use plyranges in downstream analysis as in the previous sections, while another is to create a tidySummarizedExperiment object used to compute the statistics of interest.

Plyranges

We can compute the mean correlation of the all pairs of genes and promoter peaks over all bootstrap iterations and compare to the observed statistic. The histogram will show that our observed value falls far from the distribution of bootstrapped statistics, as we expected for this dataset.

cor_gr <- sc_rna %>% join_overlap_inner(sc_promoter, maxgap=1000) %>%
  mutate(rho = 1/(nct-1) * sum(counts1 * counts2)) %>%
  summarise(meanCor = mean(rho))
## mean correlation distribution
cor_boot <- sc_rna %>%
  join_overlap_inner(bootranges, maxgap=1000) %>%
  # vectorized code are 10 times faster than cor(counts1, counts2) for plyranges pipeline
  mutate(rho = 1/(nct-1) * sum(counts1 * counts2)) %>%
  select(rho, iter) %>%
  group_by(iter) %>%
  summarise(meanCor = mean(rho)) %>%
  as.data.frame()
ggplot(cor_boot, aes(meanCor)) +
  geom_histogram(binwidth=0.01)+
  geom_vline(xintercept = cor_gr$meanCor,linetype = "dashed")+
  theme_classic()

If one is interested in assessing the significance of gene-promoter pairs per gene, one can also use plyranges::select (gene, peak, rho) and plyranges::group_by gene.

tidySummarizedExperiment

In order to use tidySummarizedExperiment to compute the same operation, we first must create an RangedSE for each modality, and then we can find the overlaps..

library(tidySummarizedExperiment)
library(purrr)

# make an SE where each row is an overlap
makeOverlapSE <- function(se_rna, se_promoter) {
  idx <- rowRanges(se_rna) %>% join_overlap_inner(rowRanges(se_promoter),maxgap = 1000)
  assay_x <- assay(se_rna, "rna")[ idx$gene, ]
  assay_y <- assay(se_promoter, "promoter")[ idx$peak, ]
  # this is needed to build the SE
  rownames(assay_x) <- rownames(assay_y) <- seq_along( idx$gene )
  names(idx) <- seq_along( idx$gene )
  SummarizedExperiment(
    assays=list(x=assay_x, y=assay_y),
    rowRanges=idx
  )
}

# create SE for observed data
se_rna <- SummarizedExperiment(
  assays=list(rna=do.call(rbind,sc_rna$counts1)),
  rowRanges=sc_rna)
se_promoter <- SummarizedExperiment(
  assays=list(promoter=do.call(rbind,sc_promoter$counts2)),
  rowRanges=sc_promoter)

se <- makeOverlapSE(se_rna, se_promoter)
se <- se %>%
  as_tibble() %>%
  nest(data = -.feature) %>%
  mutate(rho = map(data,
    function(data) data %>% summarize(rho = cor(x, y))
  )) %>%
  unnest(rho) %>%
  select(-data)

print(paste("mean correlation is", mean(se$rho)))

Repeating for the bootstrapping case

# create SE for bootranges data
se_promoter_boots <- SummarizedExperiment(
  assays=list(promoter=do.call(rbind,bootranges$counts2)),
  rowRanges=bootranges)
se_boots <- makeOverlapSE(se_rna, se_promoter_boots)

se_boots <- se_boots %>%
  as_tibble() %>%
  nest(data = -c(.feature,iter)) %>%
  # vectorized code similar to cor(counts1, counts2) for tidySE pipeline
  mutate(rho = map(data,
                   function(data) data %>% summarize(rho = cor(x, y))
  )) %>%
  unnest(rho) %>%
  select(-data)

cor_boot <- se_boots %>% group_by(iter) %>% 
  summarise(meanCor = mean(rho)) 
ggplot(cor_boot, aes(meanCor)) +
  geom_histogram(binwidth=0.01)+
  geom_vline(xintercept = mean(se$rho),linetype = "dashed")+
  theme_classic()

For more examples of combining bootRanges from nullranges with plyranges piped operations, see the relevant chapter in the tidy-ranges-tutorial book.

Case study III: Block bootstrap one region

Generally, it makes sense to block bootstrap the entire genome at once. This is motivated by the “tidy analysis” paradigm where loops are avoided by stacking data into a longer format. This makes computation more efficient in our case (as a single overlap call can be made with all regions of interest at once, across multiple bootstrap iterations), and it also can simplify code and avoid repetition.

However, in some cases, there is a single region of interest, and it is desired to generate bootstrap data within this one region. For this, we have a convenience function that enables bootstrap computation.

Suppose we have data in the following region of chromosome 1:

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(nullrangesData))
dhs <- DHSA549Hg38()
region <- GRanges("chr1", IRanges(10e6 + 1, width=1e6))
x <- GRanges("chr1", IRanges(10e6 + 0:9 * 1e5 + 1, width=1e4))
y <- dhs %>% filter_by_overlaps(region) %>% select(NULL)
x %>% mutate(num_overlaps = count_overlaps(., y))
## GRanges object with 10 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##        seqnames            ranges strand | num_overlaps
##           <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> |    <integer>
##    [1]     chr1 10000001-10010000      * |            0
##    [2]     chr1 10100001-10110000      * |            2
##    [3]     chr1 10200001-10210000      * |            1
##    [4]     chr1 10300001-10310000      * |            0
##    [5]     chr1 10400001-10410000      * |            5
##    [6]     chr1 10500001-10510000      * |            2
##    [7]     chr1 10600001-10610000      * |            0
##    [8]     chr1 10700001-10710000      * |            0
##    [9]     chr1 10800001-10810000      * |            1
##   [10]     chr1 10900001-10910000      * |            1
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths

We can easily bootstrap data just in this region using the following code:

seg <- oneRegionSegment(region, seqlength=248956422)
y <- keepSeqlevels(y, "chr1")
set.seed(1)
boot <- bootRanges(y, blockLength=1e5, R=1, seg=seg,
                   proportionLength=FALSE)
boot
## BootRanges object with 83 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##        seqnames            ranges strand |  iter
##           <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> | <Rle>
##    [1]     chr1 10001821-10001970      * |     1
##    [2]     chr1 10002381-10002530      * |     1
##    [3]     chr1 10003041-10003190      * |     1
##    [4]     chr1 10003536-10003685      * |     1
##    [5]     chr1 10004001-10004150      * |     1
##    ...      ...               ...    ... .   ...
##   [79]     chr1 10918882-10919031      * |     1
##   [80]     chr1 10953082-10953231      * |     1
##   [81]     chr1 10961702-10961851      * |     1
##   [82]     chr1 10993742-10993891      * |     1
##   [83]     chr1 10995862-10996011      * |     1
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from hg38 genome
x %>% mutate(num_overlaps = count_overlaps(., boot))
## GRanges object with 10 ranges and 1 metadata column:
##        seqnames            ranges strand | num_overlaps
##           <Rle>         <IRanges>  <Rle> |    <integer>
##    [1]     chr1 10000001-10010000      * |            5
##    [2]     chr1 10100001-10110000      * |            0
##    [3]     chr1 10200001-10210000      * |            1
##    [4]     chr1 10300001-10310000      * |            5
##    [5]     chr1 10400001-10410000      * |            1
##    [6]     chr1 10500001-10510000      * |            0
##    [7]     chr1 10600001-10610000      * |            5
##    [8]     chr1 10700001-10710000      * |            0
##    [9]     chr1 10800001-10810000      * |            5
##   [10]     chr1 10900001-10910000      * |            0
##   -------
##   seqinfo: 1 sequence from an unspecified genome; no seqlengths

Here it is important to use proportionLength=FALSE so that the blocks will be of the size specified and not smaller (they would otherwise be scaled down proportional to the fraction of region compared to the chromosome).

Visualizing bootstrap types

Below we present a toy example for visualizing the segmented block bootstrap. First, we define a helper function for plotting GRanges using plotgardener (Kramer et al. 2022). A key aspect here is that we color the original and bootstrapped ranges by the genomic state (the state of the segmentation that the original ranges fall in).

suppressPackageStartupMessages(library(plotgardener))
my_palette <- function(n) {
  head(c("red","green3","red3","dodgerblue",
         "blue2","green4","darkred"), n)
}
plotGRanges <- function(gr) {
  pageCreate(width = 5, height = 5, xgrid = 0,
                ygrid = 0, showGuides = TRUE)
  for (i in seq_along(seqlevels(gr))) {
    chrom <- seqlevels(gr)[i]
    chromend <- seqlengths(gr)[[chrom]]
    suppressMessages({
      p <- pgParams(chromstart = 0, chromend = chromend,
                    x = 0.5, width = 4*chromend/500, height = 2,
                    at = seq(0, chromend, 50),
                    fill = colorby("state_col", palette=my_palette))
      prngs <- plotRanges(data = gr, params = p,
                          chrom = chrom,
                          y = 2 * i,
                          just = c("left", "bottom"))
      annoGenomeLabel(plot = prngs, params = p, y = 0.1 + 2 * i)
    })
  }
}

Create a toy genome segmentation:

library(GenomicRanges)
seq_nms <- rep(c("chr1","chr2"), c(4,3))
seg <- GRanges(
  seqnames = seq_nms,
  IRanges(start = c(1, 101, 201, 401, 1, 201, 301),
          width = c(100, 100, 200, 100, 200, 100, 100)),
  seqlengths=c(chr1=500,chr2=400),
  state = c(1,2,1,3,3,2,1),
  state_col = factor(1:7)
)

We can visualize with our helper function:

plotGRanges(seg)

Now create small ranges distributed uniformly across the toy genome:

set.seed(1)
n <- 200
gr <- GRanges(
  seqnames=sort(sample(c("chr1","chr2"), n, TRUE)),
  IRanges(start=round(runif(n, 1, 500-10+1)), width=10)
)
suppressWarnings({
  seqlengths(gr) <- seqlengths(seg)
})
gr <- gr[!(seqnames(gr) == "chr2" & end(gr) > 400)]
gr <- sort(gr)
idx <- findOverlaps(gr, seg, type="within", select="first")
gr <- gr[!is.na(idx)]
idx <- idx[!is.na(idx)]
gr$state <- seg$state[idx]
gr$state_col <- factor(seg$state_col[idx])
plotGRanges(gr)

Scaling vs. not scaling by segment length

We can visualize block bootstrapped ranges when the blocks do not scale to segment state length:

set.seed(1)
gr_prime <- bootRanges(gr, blockLength = 25, seg = seg,
                       proportionLength = FALSE)
plotGRanges(gr_prime)

This time the blocks scale to the segment state length. Note that in this case blockLength is the maximal block length possible, but the actual block lengths per segment will be smaller (proportional to the fraction of basepairs covered by that state in the genome segmentation).

set.seed(1)
gr_prime <- bootRanges(gr, blockLength = 50, seg = seg,
                       proportionLength = TRUE)
plotGRanges(gr_prime)

Note that some ranges from adjacent states are allowed to be placed within different states in the bootstrap sample. This is because, during the random sampling of blocks of original data, a block is allowed to extend beyond the segmentation region of the state being sampled, and features from adjacent states are not excluded from the sampled block.

Session information

sessionInfo()
## R version 4.4.1 (2024-06-14)
## Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
## Running under: Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS
## 
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS:   /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.20-bioc/R/lib/libRblas.so 
## LAPACK: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/lapack/liblapack.so.3.12.0
## 
## 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] plotgardener_1.12.0         ggplot2_3.5.1              
##  [3] purrr_1.0.2                 ggridges_0.5.6             
##  [5] tidyr_1.3.1                 patchwork_1.3.0            
##  [7] plyranges_1.26.0            nullranges_1.12.0          
##  [9] EnsDb.Hsapiens.v86_2.99.0   ensembldb_2.30.0           
## [11] AnnotationFilter_1.30.0     GenomicFeatures_1.58.0     
## [13] AnnotationDbi_1.68.0        nullrangesData_1.11.0      
## [15] InteractionSet_1.34.0       SummarizedExperiment_1.36.0
## [17] Biobase_2.66.0              MatrixGenerics_1.18.0      
## [19] matrixStats_1.4.1           ExperimentHub_2.14.0       
## [21] GenomicRanges_1.58.0        GenomeInfoDb_1.42.0        
## [23] IRanges_2.40.0              S4Vectors_0.44.0           
## [25] AnnotationHub_3.14.0        BiocFileCache_2.14.0       
## [27] dbplyr_2.5.0                BiocGenerics_0.52.0        
## 
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
##  [1] DBI_1.2.3                bitops_1.0-9             rlang_1.1.4             
##  [4] magrittr_2.0.3           compiler_4.4.1           RSQLite_2.3.7           
##  [7] png_0.1-8                vctrs_0.6.5              ProtGenerics_1.38.0     
## [10] pkgconfig_2.0.3          crayon_1.5.3             fastmap_1.2.0           
## [13] XVector_0.46.0           labeling_0.4.3           utf8_1.2.4              
## [16] Rsamtools_2.22.0         rmarkdown_2.28           UCSC.utils_1.2.0        
## [19] strawr_0.0.92            bit_4.5.0                RcppHMM_1.2.2           
## [22] xfun_0.48                zlibbioc_1.52.0          cachem_1.1.0            
## [25] jsonlite_1.8.9           blob_1.2.4               highr_0.11              
## [28] rhdf5filters_1.18.0      DelayedArray_0.32.0      Rhdf5lib_1.28.0         
## [31] BiocParallel_1.40.0      jpeg_0.1-10              parallel_4.4.1          
## [34] R6_2.5.1                 RColorBrewer_1.1-3       bslib_0.8.0             
## [37] rtracklayer_1.66.0       DNAcopy_1.80.0           jquerylib_0.1.4         
## [40] Rcpp_1.0.13              knitr_1.48               Matrix_1.7-1            
## [43] tidyselect_1.2.1         abind_1.4-8              yaml_2.3.10             
## [46] codetools_0.2-20         curl_5.2.3               lattice_0.22-6          
## [49] tibble_3.2.1             withr_3.0.2              KEGGREST_1.46.0         
## [52] evaluate_1.0.1           gridGraphics_0.5-1       Biostrings_2.74.0       
## [55] pillar_1.9.0             BiocManager_1.30.25      filelock_1.0.3          
## [58] generics_0.1.3           RCurl_1.98-1.16          BiocVersion_3.20.0      
## [61] munsell_0.5.1            scales_1.3.0             glue_1.8.0              
## [64] lazyeval_0.2.2           tools_4.4.1              BiocIO_1.16.0           
## [67] data.table_1.16.2        GenomicAlignments_1.42.0 fs_1.6.4                
## [70] XML_3.99-0.17            rhdf5_2.50.0             grid_4.4.1              
## [73] colorspace_2.1-1         GenomeInfoDbData_1.2.13  restfulr_0.0.15         
## [76] cli_3.6.3                rappdirs_0.3.3           fansi_1.0.6             
## [79] S4Arrays_1.6.0           dplyr_1.1.4              gtable_0.3.6            
## [82] yulab.utils_0.1.7        sass_0.4.9               digest_0.6.37           
## [85] ggplotify_0.1.2          SparseArray_1.6.0        farver_2.1.2            
## [88] rjson_0.2.23             memoise_2.0.1            htmltools_0.5.8.1       
## [91] lifecycle_1.0.4          httr_1.4.7               mime_0.12               
## [94] bit64_4.5.2

References

Amemiya, Haley M, Anshul Kundaje, and Alan P Boyle. 2019. “The ENCODE Blacklist: Identification of Problematic Regions of the Genome.” Scientific Reports 9 (1): 9354. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-45839-z.

Bickel, Peter J., Nathan Boley, James B. Brown, Haiyan Huang, and Nancy R. Zhang. 2010. “Subsampling Methods for Genomic Inference.” The Annals of Applied Statistics 4 (4): 1660–97. https://doi.org/10.1214/10-{AOAS363}.

ENCODE. 2012. “An integrated encyclopedia of DNA elements in the human genome.” Nature 489 (7414): 57–74. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11247.

Howe, Kevin L, Premanand Achuthan, James Allen, Jamie Allen, Jorge Alvarez-Jarreta, M Ridwan Amode, Irina M Armean, et al. 2020. “Ensembl 2021.” Nucleic Acids Research 49 (D1): D884–D891. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkaa942.

Kramer, Nicole E, Eric S Davis, Craig D Wenger, Erika M Deoudes, Sarah M Parker, Michael I Love, and Douglas H Phanstiel. 2022. “Plotgardener: cultivating precise multi-panel figures in R.” Bioinformatics 38 (7): 2042–5. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btac057.

Lee, Stuart, Dianne Cook, and Michael Lawrence. 2019. “Plyranges: A Grammar of Genomic Data Transformation.” Genome Biology 20 (1): 4. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-018-1597-8.

Mu, Wancen, Eric S. Davis, Stuart Lee, Mikhail G. Dozmorov, Douglas H. Phanstiel, and Michael I. Love. 2023. “BootRanges: Flexible Generation of Null Sets of Genomic Ranges for Hypothesis Testing.” Bioinformatics. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btad190.

Ogata, Jonathan D., Wancen Mu, Eric S. Davis, Bingjie Xue, J. Chuck Harrell, Nathan C. Sheffield, Douglas H. Phanstiel, Michael I. Love, and Mikhail G. Dozmorov. 2023. “Excluderanges: Exclusion Sets for T2t-Chm13, Grcm39, and Other Genome Assemblies.” Bioinformatics. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btad198.

Olshen, A. B., E. S. Venkatraman, R. Lucito, and M. Wigler. 2004. “Circular binary segmentation for the analysis of array-based DNA copy number data.” Biostatistics 5 (4): 557–72.

Rainer, Johannes, Laurent Gatto, and Christian X Weichenberger. 2019. “ensembldb: an R package to create and use Ensembl-based annotation resources.” Bioinformatics 35 (17): 3151–3. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btz031.