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Nextflow resequencing pipeline with bwa-mem and freebayes

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Resequencing Nextflow Pipeline

GitHub Actions CI Status GitHub Actions Linting Status nf-test

Nextflow run with docker run with singularity

Overview

This pipeline will execute a resequencing analysis by calling freebayes on reads aligned to genome using bwa mem. Genotypes will be called from all samples, and the resulting VCF file will be normalized using bcftools, which is the final output of this pipeline.

Setting up

In order to execute this pipeline, you will need nextflow installed and one of this different executors: conda, singularity and docker. You can choose to clone this repository if you plan to change this pipeline according your needs:

git clone https://github.com/cnr-ibba/nf-resequencing-mem

The other way to running this pipeline is described in pipeline sharing nextflow manual, and lets nextflow to download and execute the pipeline, for example:

nextflow pull cnr-ibba/nf-resequencing-mem

Customize configuration

When running Nextflow, Nextflow looks for a file named nextflow.config in the current directory and in the script base directory (if it is not the same as the current directory). Finally it checks for the file $HOME/.nextflow/config. Additionally, you can provide a custom config file using the -config option, which has an higher priority respect to the other configuration files. There are tree different scopes, which can be used to customize this pipeline according your needs:

  • The params scope defines variables which applies to the whole pipeline: those params could be the input samplesheet or the genome to be used
  • The profiles scope defines variables which apply to the particular profile invoked with the -profile Nextflow parameter
  • The process scope can define parameters applied to a single process (for example the number of CPUs used or the required RAM)

All this configuration scopes can be customized in each configuration file, and configuring a value in an higher priority file will override values defined in lower priority configuration files. There are also configuration files in the conf folder of this repository, for example the conf/modules.config file keeps the configuration for each module used within this pipeline: you can affect a module behavior without modifying the proper module simply changing the proper process configuration section.

Params scope

The params scope let you to define pipeline parameters. You can set those params directly in config file or pass those from command line (which have the highest priority and override each parameter defined in other configuration files). These are pipeline parameters which are mandatory:

  • --input: (required) specify the samplesheet CSV/TSV file where sample,fastq_1,fastq_2 columns are described (see assets/samplesheet.csv for an example). In the fastq_1 and fastq_2 columns you need to specify the path fore R1 and R2 files respectively. If you have single paired reads, leave fastq_2 column empty. if you have more file for the same sample, specify all the single/pair files using the same sample name: this pipeline will append all reads belonging to the same sample before calling trimgalore in the CAT_FASTQ process.
  • --genome_fasta: (required) path to genome (FASTA) file. If file is compressed, index calculation will be forced even if provided by CLI

There are also additional pipeline parameters that can be provided and can be used to save intermediate results or to skip a particular step:

  • --genome_fasta_fai: path to fasta index file (skip fasta index step)
  • --genome_bwa_index: path to genome bwa index directory (skip bwa index step)
  • --save_cram: (bool, def. false) save markduplicated cram files with their indexes in results folder
  • --save_trimmed: (bool, def. false) save trimmed reads in results folder
  • --save_fasta_index: (bool, def. false) save fasta index (for reusing with this pipeline)
  • --save_bwa_index: (bool, def. false) save bwa index (for reuse with this pipeline)
  • --save_freebayes: (bool, def. false) save freebayes output file (not normalized!)
  • --remove_fastq_duplicates: (bool, def. false) remove FASTQ duplicates by IDs
  • --save_unique_fastq: (bool, def. false) write de-duplicated FASTQ files (require --remove_fastq_duplicates option)
  • --snpeff_database: annotate the VCF file with SnpEff by providing a pre-built database that can be found using the java -jar snpEff.jar databases command. If the database is known to SnpEff will be downloaded and managed by the pipeline itself
  • --snpeff_cachedir: SnpEff cache directory. It must contain a subdirectory with the same name of --snpeff_database, with a valid SnpEff database as a content. Is required when annotating with SnpEff with a custom database
  • --snpeff_config: SnpEff custom config file. Is required only with a custom database. Needs to have the same custom database defined by --snpeff_database option (see: Building databases of SnpEff documentation)

You can have a list of available parameters by calling:

nextflow run cnr-ibba/nf-resequencing-mem --help

In addition, instead of passing parameters using CLI, you can create a custom configuration file and define each params in the params scope. According nextflow best practices, parameters defined in params scope should be placed in a json file, for example params.json:

{
  "input": "<samplesheet.csv>",
  "genome_fasta": "<genome_fasta>",
  "outdir": "<results dir>",
  "save_fasta_index": true
}

Parameters have the same name used within the CLI, but without the -- prefix. Nextflow can be called like this:

nextflow run cnr-ibba/nf-resequencing-mem -resume -profile <your profile> \
  -params-file params.json

In alternative, you can create custom.config file like this:

params {
  input = "<samplesheet.csv>"
  genome_fasta = "<genome_fasta>"
  outdir = "<results dir>"
  save_fasta_index = true
}

Then you can call nextflow providing such configuration file:

nextflow run cnr-ibba/nf-resequencing-mem -resume -profile <your profile> \
  -config custom.config

However, the custom configuration file should be used to specify all the parameters that can't be specified using the command line, for example custom arguments to be passed to a certain module using ext.args option. See Nextflow Configuration documentation for more information.

Profiles scope

The profile scope is used to define configuration attributes that can be activated in different environment or context when providing the profile name using the -profile option. For example, pipeline dependencies are managed using nextflow by defining three different profiles:

  • conda: every pipeline step will manage its requirements using conda in a specific environment. Conda environments are created inside work directory (but you can change this behavior using cacheDir option within the conda scope).
  • docker: manage requirements using docker images. You will need to be part of the docker group in order to use this profile
  • singularity: manage requirements using singularity images. You can execute this profile without any permissions. singularity software need to be installed and available in your $PATH bash environment variable

Then there are also profiles which define the executor used to submit/collect a job, that can be customized in order to affect the pipeline in a particular environment. Profiles can be combined when calling nextflow, for example:

nextflow run -profile singularity,slurm ...

will enable all the configuration to be applied on slurm executor using singularity

Process scope

The process configuration scope allows you to provide a specific configuration for a specific process. You can specify here any property described in the process directive and the executor sections and override them. With the withLabel selector, you can configure of all processes annotated with such label selector. For example:

process {
  // only processes with this label have those parameters
  withLabel: process_high {
    cpus = 4
    memory = 4.GB
  }
}

will affect all the processes annotated with process_high label. Similarly, you can provide additional parameters to a certain step. For example, supposing to change the freebayes ploidy since you are dealing with a non-diploid sample (default): you can provide a custom.config file in which pass extra parameters to freebayes:

process {
    withName: FREEBAYES_CHUNK {
        ext.args = '--ploidy 4'
    }
}

Nextflow specific parameters

There are parameters which are nextflow specific. They start all with a single - before the parameter name and need to be provided using the nextflow CLI. Here are the most used parameters:

  • -resume: recover previous attempt
  • -profile: specify one of docker, singularity and conda profiles. singularity is the recommended profile in a HPC environment
  • -work-dir: save temporary files in a default temporary directory (def. $projectDir/work)

Calling this pipeline with local executor

The local executor is the default executor used when calling pipeline. It spawns pipeline processes using fork and threads using all your local CPUs and memory available. If you need to set a limit to the resources used, enable this configuration for local executor:

executor {
  // for the local executor, I will set the maximum values of CPU and MEMORY
  $local {
    cpus = 8
    memory = '16 GB'
  }
}

Using the $ symbol before the executor name, let you to specify different configuration in the same executor scope. See scope executor documentation page for more information.

Calling this pipeline using pbs executor

You can change the default executor by specifying the pbs profile. Simply add such profile to your command line, for example:

nextflow run cnr-ibba/nf-resequencing-mem -resume -profile pbs,singularity \
  --input <samplesheet.csv> --genome_fasta <genome.fasta> --outdir <results dir>

In alternative, you can export this environment variable:

export NXF_EXECUTOR=pbs

Calling this pipeline using slurm executor

Like pbs executor, simply add such profile to your command line, for example:

nextflow run cnr-ibba/nf-resequencing-mem -resume -profile slurm,singularity \
  --input <samplesheet.csv> --genome_fasta <genome.fasta> --outdir <results dir>

In alternative, you can export this environment variable:

export NXF_EXECUTOR=slurm

Calling this pipeline using AWS batch

This pipeline could run using the AWS batch queue system. In order to do so, you need to configure your credentials with aws cli: you require to configure a IAM account with permission to run batch, EC2 and S3. You require also a s3 bucket in which nextflow could store and retrieve data (nextflow will make a copy of the input data and will retrieve the results from here) and a AWS batch queue with EC2 spot instances as recommended compute environment. After that, you could launch this pipeline by providing only awsbatch as profile and the queue name and the AWS region with the --awsqueue and --awsregion parameters:

nextflow run cnr-ibba/nf-resequencing-mem -resume -profile awsbatch \
  -bucket-dir s3://<s3 bucket name>/<subfolder> \
  --input '<samplesheet.csv>' --genome_fasta <genome_fasta> \
  --awsqueue <aws batch queue name> --awsregion <aws region>

Please see the Amazon Cloud section of nextflow documentation to get other information on nextflow and AWS usage.

Known issues

Ignore sample sheet check

Rarely this pipeline could fail at INPUT_CHECK:SAMPLESHEET_CHECK claiming that given sample sheet does not appear to contain a header, even if your sample sheet starts with sample,fastq_1,fastq_2 header section. This behavior is very uncommon and described in nf-core/tools issue #1539. There's a way to overcome this issue by providing --has_header parameter to bin/check_samplesheet.py which let to skip the header check sections. However, you have to ensure your samplesheet have the required sample,fastq_1,fastq_2 header section, otherwise this pipeline will not work as intended. You can do it by customizing the SAMPLESHEET_CHECK step in the process scope, for example:

process {
    withName: SAMPLESHEET_CHECK {
        ext.args = '--has_header'
    }
}

Tuning freebayes resources usage

The freebayes step can take a lot of time when calculating SNPs with a lot of data. This process is calculated using multiple processes by splitting the whole genome in regions (relying on CRAM alignment sizes), and then by calling SNPs on each region on a single process. In the last step, all results are collected and sorted to produce the final VCF file (see subworkflows/local/cram_freebayes_parallel subworkflow for more information). You can customize the region splitting, for example by using a greater cumulative coverage (def. is 500_000_000) or the minimum fragment length (def. is 10_000) in the split process like this:

process {
    withName: FREEBAYES_SPLITCRAM {
        ext.args = '--max_coverage 100_000_000 --min_length 20_000'
    }
}

however, having a lot of smaller regions could be problematic if the overlapping region shared by segments become larger than the unique region.

There are some freebayes processes that can fail by reaching time or memory limits. According to freebayes creators (see issues #465 and #626) this is unpredictable and may depends on coverage, allelic complexity and sample or ploidy number. Nextflow can resubmit such process increasing the required resources at each step until maxRetries attempts are reached: you could increase the retry attempts like this:

process {
    withName: FREEBAYES_CHUNK {
        maxRetries = 10
    }
}

If this is not sufficient and jobs continue to fail for memory and time requirements, you could think to skip regions with a very high coverage (-g option) or try to sub-sample regions with high coverage with the --limit-coverage option, like this:

process {
    withName: FREEBAYES_CHUNK {
        ext.args = '--limit-coverage 25'
    }
}

This pipeline compute a coverage step before calling freebayes, so you could try to determine which value make sense to be used for filtering.

N.B. Even with downsampling this step could require a lot of time, and time required for each step will be unpredictable. Using a very low coverage limit could affect the SNP calling process. Use this option with caution.

FASTQ has duplicated IDs

When a FASTQ file have duplicated IDs, the MarkDuplicates fails with an error message like this:

Exception in thread "main" htsjdk.samtools.SAMException: Value was put into PairInfoMap more than once.  11: RGE200002173L1C027R02800999933
  at htsjdk.samtools.CoordinateSortedPairInfoMap.ensureSequenceLoaded(CoordinateSortedPairInfoMap.java:133)
  at htsjdk.samtools.CoordinateSortedPairInfoMap.remove(CoordinateSortedPairInfoMap.java:86)
  at picard.sam.markduplicates.util.DiskBasedReadEndsForMarkDuplicatesMap.remove(DiskBasedReadEndsForMarkDuplicatesMap.java:61)
  at picard.sam.markduplicates.MarkDuplicates.buildSortedReadEndLists(MarkDuplicates.java:571)
  at picard.sam.markduplicates.MarkDuplicates.doWork(MarkDuplicates.java:270)
  at picard.cmdline.CommandLineProgram.instanceMain(CommandLineProgram.java:308)
  at picard.cmdline.PicardCommandLine.instanceMain(PicardCommandLine.java:103)
  at picard.cmdline.PicardCommandLine.main(PicardCommandLine.java:113)

This is a not an issue with MarkDuplicates (as discussed here) but an issue at demultiplexing step: the only way to deal with this problem is to make rid of duplicated IDs using seqkit/rmdup by providing the --remove_fastq_duplicates option.

MarkDuplicates temporary files

Markduplicates writes temporary files into /tmp partition by default. If your organization have a different location where temporary files should be stored (ex /scratch or any other $TMP position) and your jobs are running out of spaces, you should provide a different temporary location to MarkDuplicates steps, for example:

process {
    withName: PICARD_MARKDUPLICATES {
        ext.args = '--TMP_DIR $TMPDIR'
    }
}

Acknowledgments

This pipeline uses code and infrastructure developed and maintained by the nf-core community, reused here under the MIT license.

The nf-core framework for community-curated bioinformatics pipelines.

Philip Ewels, Alexander Peltzer, Sven Fillinger, Harshil Patel, Johannes Alneberg, Andreas Wilm, Maxime Ulysse Garcia, Paolo Di Tommaso & Sven Nahnsen.

Nat Biotechnol. 2020 Feb 13. doi: 10.1038/s41587-020-0439-x.

An extensive list of references for the tools used by the pipeline can be found in the CITATIONS.md file.