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BASEcalling and DeMUltipleXing for ONT sequencing data

A Snakemake workflow for basecalling and gathering ONT reads originating from disparate runs and barcodes

Basecalling by GUPPY + Demultiplexing by GUPPY and/or DEEPBINNER + MinIONQC/Multiqc + QC reports + reads aggregation into bins + fastq reads trimming + filtering

Requirements

  • singularity >= 2.5
  • conda >=4.3 + Mamba

Implemented tools

  • Snakemake
  • Guppy
  • Deepbinner
  • MinIONQC
  • Multiqc
  • Porechop
  • Filtlong

We try to update the tools regularly. See versions in the folders containning conda environment and singularity container recipie files.

More details about individual snakemake Rules

  • Guppy basecalling
    Run guppy_basecaller with filtering reads, then subset fast5 reads from passed reads list (passed_sequencing_summary.txt).

  • Guppy demultiplexing
    Run guppy_barcoder with passed fastq, then subset fastq to classified barcode folders based on barcoding_summary.txt.

  • Multi to single fast5
    Convert passed multi-read fast5 files to single-read fast5 file, preparing for deepbinner.

  • Deepbinner classification
    Run deepbinner classify with pass single-read fast5, output classification file.

  • Deepbinner bin
    Classify passed fastq based on classification file, then subset fastq to barcode folders.

  • Get sequencing summary per barcode
    Subset passed_sequencing_summary.txt according to barcode ids, preparing for minionqc/multiqc of each barcode and subseting fast5 reads per barcode (get multi fast5 per barcode).

  • MinIONQC and Multiqc
    After basecalling, MinIONQC is performed for each run, and Multiqc reports all run collectively. On the other hand, after demultiplexing, MinIONQC runs for each barcode separately then Multiqc aggregates MinIONQC results of all barcodes.

  • Demultiplex report (optional)
    Compare demultiplexing results from different runs, and from different demultiplexers (guppy and/or deepbinner) by analyzing information of multiqc_minionqc.txt. It is only available when demultiplexing rules are executed.

  • Get reads per genome (optional)
    Combine and concatenate fast5 and fastq barcodes for genomes individually based on the demultiplexer program, preparing for further genome assembly , following the information in the barcodeByGenome_sample.tsv tabulated file (column names of this table should not be modified).
    Caution: if guppy or deepbinner is on Demultiplexer of the barcodeByGenome table, it will be executed even it is not specified in config['DEMULTIPLEXER'].

  • Porechop (optional)
    Find and remove adapters from reads. See here for more information.

  • Filtlong (optional)
    Filter reads by length and by quality. More details is here. Several filtlong runs at the same time are enabled.

Singularity containers

Workflow jobs run inside Singularity images (see our Singularity Recipe files).

The latest containers will be automatically downloaded and intalled in the baseDmux environement installation directory. They can anyhow be manually downloaded from IRD Drive.

Custom Singularity images can be specified by editing the ./baseDmux/data/singularity.yaml file right after clonning the github repository or directly in your baseDmux installation (see below) location.

Conda environments

Inside of the Singularity images, individual Snakemake rules use dedicated conda environments yaml files that are located there.

  • minionqc
  • multiqc
  • rmarkdown
  • porechop
  • filtlong

Installation

Download the package:

git clone https://github.com/vibaotram/baseDmux.git
cd ./baseDmux

And then, install in a virtualenv...

make install
source venv/bin/activate

... or install in a conda environment

conda env create -n baseDmux -f environment.yaml
conda activate baseDmux
pip install .

It is recommended to first run the local test below with the toy dataset to make sure everything works well. On the first invokation, this will download and install the Singularity images and setup the Conda environment. This process takes time, so be patient. Note also that in the end, this setup amounts to a total of about 12GB of files , so you need some room on the installation disk.

Usage

Run baseDmux version 1.1.0 ... See https://github.com/vibaotram/baseDmux/blob/master/README.md for more
details

positional arguments:
  {configure,run,dryrun,version_tools}
    configure           edit config file and profile
    run                 run baseDmux
    dryrun              dryrun baseDmux
    version_tools       check version for the tools of baseDmux

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --version         show program's version number and exit

baseDmux configuration

Because configuring snakemake workflows can be a bit intimidating, we try to clarify below the main principles of baseDmux configuration.

This is done primarilly by adjusting the parameters listed in the workflow config file profile/workflow_parameters .yaml (generated by baseDmux configure - see below). It enables to setup input reads, output folder, parameters for the tools , reports generation, etc...
This actually corresponds to the typical Snakemake 'config.yaml' file. You can take a look at what serves as a template to create profile/workflow_parameters.yaml. It is suggested to refer to the comments in this file for further details on individual parameters.

baseDmux takes as input a folder with internal ONT 'run' folders that each contains a 'fast5' folder. This is the typical file hierarchy when sequencing with a MinION. baseDmux can therefore process a virtually unlimited number of (multiplexed) sequencing runs.

You can decide whether guppy and deepbinner should run on GPU or CPU by specifying 'RESOURCE' in the config.yaml file depending on the available computing hardware. Note that Deepbinner is not longer maintained and that Deepbinner models are limited to specific 'earlier' flow cells and barcoding kits. One should therefore ensure that that Deepbinner is a adequate for the data at hand.

A typical usage case for baseDmux is to prepare filtered sequencing reads in individual fastq files for genome assembly (or transcripts analysis) when users have a number of genomic DNA (or RNA) preparations sequenced with the same library preparation protocol and flowcell typoe but over several runs with various sets of multiplex barcodes . For this, it is necessary to run the complete workflow. Note that they however currently need to share, if not identical, at least 'compatible' (in the guppy sense), library construction kits and flow cell types.

Users need to prepare a Barcode by genome file. This is a roadmap table for subseting fastq and fast5 reads, demultiplexed with guppy and/or deepbinner, and coming from disparate runs and barcodes, in bins corresponding to individual 'genomes' (or samples). It must contain at least the follwing columns: Demultiplexer, Run_ID, ONT_Barcode, Genome_ID. Values in the Genome_ID correspond to the labels of the bin into which reads will eventually be grouped. Make sure that these labels do NOT contain spaces " " or other special characters like '|' '$' ':'. As separators, the safest options are to use "_" or "-".
Likewise, Run_ID values should not contain special characters. In addition, these values must match the names of the top folders in the input fast5 directory.
Importantly, the Barcode by genome file does not only enable to group reads, it is necessary to provide such a file for the porechop and filtlong rules to be executed. A template is provided (see the section below on configuration).

Appart from the workflow parameters, there are also additional parameter files that are required to specify Snakemake invocation arguments and, when baseDmux is run with a HPC scheduler, parameters regarding how specific jobs need to be submited. All these configuration files are gathered inside a "profile" directory that can be automatically prototyped with the commands below. This is in line with the recommended way for Snakemake pipelines configuration using profiles.

Generating template configuration files

To simplify configuration, the baseDmux configure command generates a 'template' configuration profile for general use cases. These files can subsequently be modified to fit specific situations.

usage: baseDmux configure [-h] --mode {local,slurm,cluster,iTrop} [--barcodes_by_genome]
                          [--edit [EDITOR]]
                          dir

positional arguments:
  dir                   path to the folder to contain config file and profile you want to create

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --mode {local,slurm,cluster,iTrop}
                        choose the mode of running Snakemake, local mode or cluster mode
  --barcodes_by_genome  optional, create a tabular file containing information of barcodes for each
                        genome)
  --edit [EDITOR]       optional, open files with editor (nano, vim, gedit, etc.)

These files will be created:

  | dir
          -| profile  
                  -| config.yaml  
                  -| workflow_parameter.yaml  
                  -| barcodesByGenome.tsv (if --barcodes_by_genome)
                  -| ... (if mode slurm)

A 'profile' folder will be created and populated in the specifid dir path. The files may be modified and the whole folder can be moved/copied/renamed anywhere as long as you use the correct path when you call baseDmux run and update the enclosed files, config.yaml and workflow_parameter.yaml for the new paths of workflow_parameter.yaml and barcodesByGenome.tsv, respectively.

With the --barcodes_by_genome option, a formatted file barcodesByGenome.tsv will be created (and its path appropriately specified in workflow_parameter.yaml). One can then modify the information on the table accordingly. It is important that this table contains at least the same columns as those in the provided example barcodeByGenome_sample.tsv file.

Once you have adapted the templates for your typical use cases, there is no need to rerun baseDmux configure again, just copy and adapt your existing templates.

Note: the 'iTRop' and 'cluster' modes are obsolete and will eventually be removed.

an exemple to prepare to run Snakemake locally (laptop, local node on a HPC)

Use this command:

baseDmux configure ./test_baseDmux --mode local --barcodes_by_genome

Then workflow_parameter.yaml and config.yaml will be created inside a profile folder within ./test_baseDmux. ./test_baseDmux/profile/config.yaml contains as a set of parameters for the Snakemake command-line.

an exemple to prepare a template to run Snakemake on a HPC with slurm.

Similarly, run the command below:

baseDmux configure ./test_baseDmux --mode slurm --barcodes_by_genome

This will create a ./test_baseDmux/profile (see an example here)) folder with, in addition to the already mentionned files, the necessary file templates to run basDmux with slurm and the Snakemake profile for configuring Snakemake to run on the SLURM Workload Manager.

For other HPC job managment system (sge, ...), and more information on Snakemake profile and other utilities refer to the Snakemake documentation and [this gitHub repository](https://github.com /Snakemake-Profiles).

Ultimately, the required files for passing HPC scheduler parameters throught the dedicated Snakemake mecanism of 'profiles' need to be stored in the folder whose path is passed to the baseDmux profile_dir parameter and will most certainly need to be adapted to suit your specific needs.

Run the workflow with the created profile:

usage: baseDmux run [-h] [--snakemake_report] profile_dir

positional arguments:
  profile_dir         profile folder to run baseDmux

options:
  -h, --help          show this help message and exit
  --snakemake_report  optionally, create snakemake report

Example:
You can run baseDmux dryrun ./test_baseDmux/profile for dry-run to make sure that everything is OK, before actually executing the workflow.

baseDmux run ./test_baseDmux/profile

With the option --snakemake_report, a report file snakemake_report.html will be created in the report folder of pipeline output directory, when snakemake has successfully finished the workflow.


Get your hands dirty and run a local test

Assuming the environement for baseDmux has been created as specified in the dedicated section on Installation. First activate either the conda or venv environement.

You can use the reads fast5 files in sample/reads_intermediate folder for testing and generate a local profile directory.

## create configuration file for Snakemake and Snakemake profile,
## and (optional) a tsv file containing information about genomes corresponding to barcode IDs
mkdir ./test_baseDmux
baseDmux configure ./test_baseDmux --mode local --barcodes_by_genome

## copy sample reads to a test folder
cp -r ./baseDmux/sample/reads_intermediate/ ./test_baseDmux/reads

## check the workflow by dryrun, then run
baseDmux dryrun ./test_baseDmux/profile
baseDmux run ./test_baseDmux/profile

The output will be written in ./test_baseDmux/results by default The first run may take a long time for Singularity containers to be downloaded and the conda environments to be installed even if using Mamba.
On a personnal computer with only a few CPU, even with this very minimal dataset, guppy basecalling may also take several minutes... So be patient depending on your underlying computing infrastructure capacities.

Input and Output

Input directory must follow the structure as below. 'fast5' directory containing fast5 files in each run is MANDATORY for baseDmux to identifiy the various Run_ID(s).

indir/
├── run_id1
│   └── fast5
│       ├── file_1.fast5
│       ├── ...
│       └── file_n.fast5
├── ...
└── run_idx

Output directory will be:

outdir/
├── basecall
│   ├── run_id1
│   │   ├── sequencing_summary.txt
│   │   └── {MinIONQC results}
│   ├── ...
│   ├── run_idx
│   └── multiqc
│       ├── multiqc_data
│       └── multiqc_report.html
├── demultiplex
│   ├── deepbinner
│   │   ├── run_id1
│   │   │   ├── barcode01
│   │   │   │   ├── barcode01.fastq.gz
│   │   │   │   ├── fast5
│   │   │   │   ├── sequencing_summary.txt
│   │   │   │   └── {MinIONQC results}
│   │   │   ├── ...
│   │   │   ├── barcodexxx
│   │   |   ├── classification
│   │   |   ├── fast5_per_barcode.done
│   │   |   ├── multiqc
│   │   |   └── unclassified
│   │   ├── ...
│   │   └── run_idx
│   └── guppy
│       ├── run_id1
│       │   ├── barcode01
│       │   │   ├── barcode01.fastq.gz
│       │   │   ├── fast5
│       │   │   ├── sequencing_summary.txt
│       │   │   └── {MinIONQC results}
│       │   ├── ...
│       │   ├── barcodexxx
│       |   ├── barcoding_summary.txt
│       |   ├── fast5_per_barcode.done
│       |   ├── multiqc
│       |   └── unclassified
│       ├── ...
│       └── run_idx
├── reads_per_genome
│   ├── fast5
│   ├── fastq
│   └── reads_per_genome.csv
├── log
│   ├── slurm
│   └── snakemake
└── report
   ├── demultiplex_report.html
   ├── demultiplex_report.RData
   └── demultiplex_report.tsv