GPU-accelerated QTL mapper
Project description
tensorQTL
tensorQTL is a GPU-enabled QTL mapper, achieving ~200-300 fold faster cis- and trans-QTL mapping compared to CPU-based implementations.
If you use tensorQTL in your research, please cite the following paper: Taylor-Weiner, Aguet, et al., Genome Biol. 20:228, 2019.
Empirical beta-approximated p-values are computed as described in FastQTL (Ongen et al., 2016).
Install
You can install tensorQTL using pip:
pip3 install tensorqtl
or directly from this repository:
$ git clone git@github.com:broadinstitute/tensorqtl.git
$ cd tensorqtl
# set up virtual environment and install
$ virtualenv venv
$ source venv/bin/activate
(venv)$ pip install -r install/requirements.txt .
Requirements
tensorQTL requires an environment configured with a GPU for optimal performance, but can also be run on a CPU. Instructions for setting up a virtual machine on Google Cloud Platform are provided here.
Input formats
Three inputs are required for QTL analyses with tensorQTL: genotypes, phenotypes, and covariates.
-
Phenotypes must be provided in BED format, with a single header line starting with
#
and the first four columns corresponding to:chr
,start
,end
,phenotype_id
, with the remaining columns corresponding to samples (the identifiers must match those in the genotype input). The BED file should specify the center of the cis-window (usually the TSS), withstart == end-1
. A function for generating a BED template from a gene annotation in GTF format is available in pyqtl (io.gtf_to_tss_bed
). -
Covariates can be provided as a tab-delimited text file (covariates x samples) or dataframe (samples x covariates), with row and column headers.
-
Genotypes must be in PLINK format, which can be generated from a VCF as follows:
plink2 --make-bed \ --output-chr chrM \ --vcf ${plink_prefix_path}.vcf.gz \ --out ${plink_prefix_path}
If using PLINK 1.9 or earlier, add the
--keep-allele-order
flag.Alternatively, the genotypes can be provided as a dataframe (genotypes x samples).
The examples notebook below contains examples of all input files. The input formats for phenotypes and covariates are identical to those used by FastQTL.
Examples
For examples illustrating cis- and trans-QTL mapping, please see tensorqtl_examples.ipynb.
Running tensorQTL
This section describes how to run the different modes of tensorQTL, both from the command line and within Python. For a full list of options, run
python3 -m tensorqtl --help
Loading input files
This section is only relevant when running tensorQTL in Python. The following imports are required:
import pandas as pd
import tensorqtl
from tensorqtl import genotypeio, cis, trans
Phenotypes and covariates can be loaded as follows:
phenotype_df, phenotype_pos_df = tensorqtl.read_phenotype_bed(phenotype_bed_file)
covariates_df = pd.read_csv(covariates_file, sep='\t', index_col=0).T # samples x covariates
Genotypes can be loaded as follows, where plink_prefix_path
is the path to the VCF in PLINK format (excluding .bed
/.bim
/.fam
extensions):
pr = genotypeio.PlinkReader(plink_prefix_path)
# load genotypes and variants into data frames
genotype_df = pr.load_genotypes()
variant_df = pr.bim.set_index('snp')[['chrom', 'pos']]
To save memory when using genotypes for a subset of samples, a subset of samples can be loaded (this is not strictly necessary, since tensorQTL will select the relevant samples from genotype_df
otherwise):
pr = genotypeio.PlinkReader(plink_prefix_path, select_samples=phenotype_df.columns)
cis-QTL mapping: permutations
This is the main mode for cis-QTL mapping. It generates phenotype-level summary statistics with empirical p-values, enabling calculation of genome-wide FDR. In Python:
cis_df = cis.map_cis(genotype_df, variant_df, phenotype_df, phenotype_pos_df, covariates_df)
tensorqtl.calculate_qvalues(cis_df, qvalue_lambda=0.85)
Shell command:
python3 -m tensorqtl ${plink_prefix_path} ${expression_bed} ${prefix} \
--covariates ${covariates_file} \
--mode cis
${prefix}
specifies the output file name.
cis-QTL mapping: summary statistics for all variant-phenotype pairs
In Python:
cis.map_nominal(genotype_df, variant_df, phenotype_df, phenotype_pos_df,
prefix, covariates_df, output_dir='.')
Shell command:
python3 -m tensorqtl ${plink_prefix_path} ${expression_bed} ${prefix} \
--covariates ${covariates_file} \
--mode cis_nominal
The results are written to a parquet file for each chromosome. These files can be read using pandas
:
df = pd.read_parquet(file_name)
cis-QTL mapping: conditionally independent QTLs
This mode maps conditionally independent cis-QTLs using the stepwise regression procedure described in GTEx Consortium, 2017. The output from the permutation step (see map_cis
above) is required.
In Python:
indep_df = cis.map_independent(genotype_df, variant_df, cis_df,
phenotype_df, phenotype_pos_df, covariates_df)
Shell command:
python3 -m tensorqtl ${plink_prefix_path} ${expression_bed} ${prefix} \
--covariates ${covariates_file} \
--cis_output ${prefix}.cis_qtl.txt.gz \
--mode cis_independent
cis-QTL mapping: interactions
Instead of mapping the standard linear model (p ~ g), this mode includes an interaction term (p ~ g + i + gi) and returns full summary statistics for the model. The interaction term is a tab-delimited text file or pd.Series
mapping sample ID to interaction value. With the run_eigenmt=True
option, eigenMT-adjusted p-values are computed.
In Python:
cis.map_nominal(genotype_df, variant_df, phenotype_df, phenotype_pos_df, prefix,
covariates_df=covariates_df,
interaction_s=interaction_s, maf_threshold_interaction=0.05,
run_eigenmt=True, output_dir='.', write_top=True, write_stats=True)
The input options write_top
and write_stats
control whether the top association per phenotype and full summary statistics, respectively, are written to file.
Shell command:
python3 -m tensorqtl ${plink_prefix_path} ${expression_bed} ${prefix} \
--covariates ${covariates_file} \
--interaction ${interactions_file} \
--best_only \
--mode cis_nominal
The option --best_only
disables output of full summary statistics.
Full summary statistics are saved as parquet files for each chromosome, in ${output_dir}/${prefix}.cis_qtl_pairs.${chr}.parquet
, and the top association for each phenotype is saved to ${output_dir}/${prefix}.cis_qtl_top_assoc.txt.gz
. In these files, the columns b_g
, b_g_se
, pval_g
are the effect size, standard error, and p-value of g in the model, with matching columns for i and gi. In the *.cis_qtl_top_assoc.txt.gz
file, tests_emt
is the effective number of independent variants in the cis-window estimated with eigenMT, i.e., based on the eigenvalue decomposition of the regularized genotype correlation matrix (Davis et al., AJHG, 2016). pval_emt = pval_gi * tests_emt
, and pval_adj_bh
are the Benjamini-Hochberg adjusted p-values corresponding to pval_emt
.
trans-QTL mapping
This mode computes nominal associations between all phenotypes and genotypes. tensorQTL generates sparse output by default (associations with p-value < 1e-5). cis-associations are filtered out. The output is in parquet format, with four columns: phenotype_id, variant_id, pval, maf. In Python:
trans_df = trans.map_trans(genotype_df, phenotype_df, covariates_df,
return_sparse=True, pval_threshold=1e-5, maf_threshold=0.05,
batch_size=20000)
# remove cis-associations
trans_df = trans.filter_cis(trans_df, phenotype_pos_df.T.to_dict(), variant_df, window=5000000)
Shell command:
python3 -m tensorqtl ${plink_prefix_path} ${expression_bed} ${prefix} \
--covariates ${covariates_file} \
--mode trans
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
File details
Details for the file tensorqtl-1.0.7.tar.gz
.
File metadata
- Download URL: tensorqtl-1.0.7.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 73.7 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: twine/4.0.1 CPython/3.9.13
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | 0623d7b99f62542616587402261798472120ff69cdb44f8e07dd415e54aea2fa |
|
MD5 | f10e76e669f6627dbd220ffa9da65f17 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | aeb8f5b00e292035b60234bbb441a989fa3098cce4dd9829df2c38f9bdc66917 |
File details
Details for the file tensorqtl-1.0.7-py3-none-any.whl
.
File metadata
- Download URL: tensorqtl-1.0.7-py3-none-any.whl
- Upload date:
- Size: 82.8 kB
- Tags: Python 3
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: twine/4.0.1 CPython/3.9.13
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | 0b29daa97cc6f9d3d4339a742c268dcc386f05f58a074ac6d0e5d3029e0021e1 |
|
MD5 | b4af2bc0ab074c47a54384d952827881 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | d9729cb2a1cf57dd59683a1634960cb7861e97159907e5a4d70a7986984966e7 |