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A set of BASH scripts for annotating and filtering Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) data using Ensembl's offline VEP runner GEMINI.

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Introduction

'hetero_annotate' is a set of BASH scripts that do batch variant annotation and filtering using the offline Ensembl VEP runner, and GEMINI genome mining scripts.

Setting up hetero_annotate

The first step to setting up hetero_annotate is to ensure your system has bash installed. For users on Linux and OSX, this will most likely already be the case. For users on Microsoft Windows, there are a number of option available, most notably the Windows Subsystem for Linux offered by Windows 10.

DISCLAIMER: While all three tools hetero_annotate relies on (bash, VEP, and GEMINI) can be installed on Windows, their installation is more difficult. These scripts have also not been extensively tested in the Windows environment, so your results may vary.

The second step is to install VEP and GEMINI, the two tools hetero_annotate uses.

VEP installation

To install VEP, follow the instructions on their installation page: https://www.ensembl.org/info/docs/tools/vep/script/vep_download.html

NOTE: As a prerequisite, VEP needs a number of PERL libraries to be installed. Details on which libraries are required, and how they might be installed, can be found in the above-linked installation documentation.

To install only the relevant files for the human genome, pass --SPECIES homo_sapien to VEP's INSTALL.pl installer. To use VEP offline effectively, you'll need to install (at least) the human cache file. This can most likely best be done by also passing --AUTO ac. To additionally install the human reference sequence (for HGVS names), pass --AUTO acf instead. Plugins can also be installed (e.g., the CADD score plugin); check VEP's documentation for details on adding this to your installation.

NOTE: GEMINI's documentation actually has a section devoted to the installation and use of the VEP script which you might find useful: https://gemini.readthedocs.io/en/latest/content/functional_annotation.html#stepwise-installation-and-usage-of-vep

Once VEP has been successfully installed, update the entry in src/vep_scripts/vep_single.sh containing the VEP installation directory (vep_dir) with the directory where you installed it. This can be done with any simple text editor (although not something like MS Word).

GEMINI installation

To install GEMINI, follow the instructions from their documentation: https://gemini.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

More detailed instructions can also be found at: https://gemini.readthedocs.io/en/latest/content/installation.html

The former source seems to be more frequently updated, however, so we suggest that it override the latter source where appropriate (e.g., the 'New Installation' entry under 'Latest News').

NB: Make sure not to skip the step where your system's PATH environment variable is updated to include the GEMINI executable. If you're unsure whether you've done this, consult GEMINI's detailed installation instructions again (the second source listed above).

NOTE: GEMINI officially only supports loading of variants mapped to GRCh37 (therefore also only variants for homo_sapiens). While it is possible to process GRCh38 mapped variants (and variants for other species) such that GEMINI can be used to mine them (http://quinlanlab.org/blog/2016/05/02/gemini-2-progress.html), hetero_annotate will remain limited to GRCh37. This may change once GRCh38 support has been officially added to GEMINI.

Testing the pipeline

The Ensembl VEP installation comes with a number of example VCF files, one of which is mapped using GRCh37. This file can be used to check whether or not hetero_annotate runs properly. To perform this test you can run:

bash hetero_annotate.sh <path_to_vep_sample_file> tmp_testRun/

You can then inspect the tmp_testRun directory to see whether output was generated or not. Remember to delete this directory when you're done.

Using hetero_annotate

hetero_annotate is meant to operate in a batch fashion. Generally these batches are the results from a single sequencing run from, say, an Ion Torrent S5 sequencer, or something similar. Before files are fed into hetero_annotate the following steps should have already occured:

  • Signal calling
  • Base calling
  • Sequence alignment
  • Variant calling

These steps often form part of the on-board analysis modern NGS platforms perform, but we suggest making sure.

Calling hetero_annotate

hetero_annotate takes 2 arguments: in_dir and out_dir. The former is the path to the directory containing the input .vcf.qz files (the files produced by the sequencer). The latter is the path to the directory inside which the GEMINI output should be written. As a precautionary measure, hetero_annotate won't do anything unless out_dir is empty. This ensures that no previous results can be accidentally overwritten. It means, however, that you need to create a seperate directory for each batch you analyse with hetero_annotate.

Example call: bash hetero_annotate.sh ~/data/my_sample_set/ ~/results/my_sample_set/

For each .vcf.gz file in in_dir, hetero_annotate will create a directory with the same name in out_dir. Inside this directory you'll find a queries directory, containing a .txt file for each query specified in the queries_spec.txt file.

Adding and removing queries

Each line in queries_spec.txt corresponds to a single query to the SQLite database GEMINI loads the annotated .vcf files into. Each line has two parts, seperated by a comma: the query's name, and the query snippet to use when constructing the query. The former simply determines the filename of the queries corresponding .txt file (in out_dir), while the latter should be such that it can be added into a SQLite query as follows: select <cols> from variants where <query_snippet>. An example query snippet would be something like is_coding = 1 and impact LIKE 'frame_shift', which would have GEMINI return all the frame shift variants that were found in coding regions. For a detailed introduction to what queries are possible, see GEMINI's documentation: https://gemini.readthedocs.io/en/latest/content/querying.html

The queries_spec.txt file included in this repository contains a set of example queries. You can add or remove queries to this file, and can even specify a different (similarly formatted) file in src/gemini_scripts/gemini_single.sh (by setting the qfile variable). Having different files available for different kinds of analyses might be convenient for you.

NOTE: Comments aren't parsed in these files, so commenting out a query won't have the desired effect. This feature might be added later.

Specifying the columns returned by GEMINI

The information contained in the annotated VCF files is loaded into corresponding database columns by GEMINI. The cols variable in the src/gemini_scripts/gemini_single.sh script allows one to specify which of these columns GEMINI should include in its query results. A full list of the columns available can be found at: https://gemini.readthedocs.io/en/latest/content/database_schema.html#the-variants-table

Extra columns can be added to the list in groups (or individually) as demonstrated in the src/gemini_scripts/gemini_single.sh script. Since this specification is done in a bash script, lines can be commented out, and hence groups of columns can be exluded or included for different analysis runs. We suspect, however, that the columns include won't need to be changed often, and have therefore opted for this hardcoding style of specification over more flexible (but more opaque) solutions.

Specifying VEP fields and arguments

The VEP runner allows fine control over which annotations are made and which fields are added to the VCF files it produces. To interface with these fine controls the src/vep_scripts/vep_single.sh script opts for a similar 'add-in-groups' solution to the one discussed for GEMINI's columns. Similar to GEMINI's columns, we suspect these won't change too often for your runs, and have implemented the same hardcoding solution for their modification.

A full list of the available command-line arguments is available at: https://www.ensembl.org/info/docs/tools/vep/script/vep_options.html

For information on the available fields, see: https://www.ensembl.org/info/docs/tools/vep/vep_formats.html#vcfout

Specifying the number of cores

Both VEP and GEMINI are capable of parallel processing. For both, hetero_annotate assumes 4 cores to be the appropriate number. However, many desktop machines are now equipped with considerably more cores. Should you wish to increase (or decrease) the number of cores the pipeline assumes, modify the num_forks and num_cores variables in src/vep_scripts/vep_single.sh and src/gemini_scripts/gemini_single.sh respectively.

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A set of BASH scripts for annotating and filtering Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) data using Ensembl's offline VEP runner GEMINI.

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