trackplot is a tool for visualizing various next-generation sequencing (NGS) data, including DNA-seq, RNA-seq, single-cell RNA-seq and full-length sequencing datasets.
- Support various file formats as input
- Support strand-aware coverage plot
- Visualize coverage by heatmap, including HiC diagram
- Visualize protein domain based the given gene id
- Demultiplex the single-cell RNA/ATAC-seq which used cell barcode into cell population
- Support visualizing individual full-length reads in read-by-read style
- Support visualize circRNA sequencing data
trackplot supports almost NGS data format, including
- BAM
- Bed
- Depth file generated by
samtools depth
- bigBed [pyBigWig optional]
- bigWig [pyBigWig optional]
- naive Hi-C format [hicmatrix optional]
The output will be a pdf and other image file formats which satisfy the requirement of the major journals, and each track on output corresponds these datasets from config file.
Trackplot is based on Python3 (python_requires='>=3.8')
,
and we have simplified the installation process on the main page.
For a more comprehensive installation guide, please refer to this link.
pip install trackplot
trackplot --help
# or using trackplot by conda
conda create -n trackplot -c bioconda -c conda-forge trackplot
conda activate trackplot
trackplot --help
- For users on Microsoft Windows, Mac (Apple Silicon), and other ARM platforms, please note that Trackplot may not be installable via PyPI or Conda due to compatibility issues with pysam, pybigwig, and hicmatrix libraries on these platforms. As an alternative, we recommend using the Docker image for installation.
- If you encounter a
segment fault
error during multiple processing, you may want to consider using the Docker image or running the command with the-p 1
flag.
Using trackplot by a command line (click me)
- install from PyPi
Before running this command line, please check python (>=3.8) was installed.
pip install trackplot
# __Note:__ We noticed some pypi mirrors are not syncing some packages we depend on,
# therefore please try another pypi mirror once you encounter
# `No local packages or working download links found for xxx`
- AppImage (Linux/WSL x86_64 platform only)
For a binary version of the tool and more comprehensive information, please visit this link.
# example with version v0.3.5, please using your interested version according to your needs
export VERSION=0.3.5
chmod +x trackplot-${VERSION}-x86_64.AppImage
./trackplot-${VERSION}-x86_64.AppImage --help
- using docker image
docker pull ygidtu/trackplot
docker run --rm ygidtu/trackplot --help
- install from bioconda
# install trackplot into the default conda env
conda install -c bioconda -c conda-forge trackplot
# or install trackplot into an isolated environments
conda create -n trackplot -c bioconda -c conda-forge trackplot
# activate the trackplot environment and execute the command line tool
conda activate trackplot
trackplot --help
Using trackplot by a local webserver (click me)
- AppImage (Linux/WSL x86_64 only)
# example with version v0.3.3, please using your interested version according to your needs
export VERSION=0.3.3
gunzip trackplot-${VERSION}-x86_64.AppImage
chmod +x trackplot-${VERSION}-x86_64.AppImage
./trackplot-${VERSION}-x86_64.AppImage --help
# startup webserver
./trackplot-${VERSION}-x86_64.AppImage --start-server --host 0.0.0.0 --port 5000 --plots ./plots
Note: the --plots
were required while using appimages
- Running using command line
trackplot --start-server --host 0.0.0.0 --port 5000 --plots ./plots
- Running using docker image
docker pull ygidtu/trackplot
# Deploy the server
docker run --name trackplot \
--rm -v $PWD/example:/data -v $PWD/plots/:/plots -p 5000:5000 ygidtu/trackplot \
--start-server \
--host 0.0.0.0 \
--data /data \
--plots /plots
-p
: public and private port for the server, default:5000(public):5000(private)
-v
,--volume
: mount the working directory to docker container, for example, the$PWD/data
could replace by the path to your directory contains all necessary data--user
: prevent docker read and write file using root privileges
The example
folder is downloaded from here.
And a more detailed tutorial could be found at here.
# example of basic plot types
trackplot \
-e chr1:1270656-1284730:+ \
-r example/example.sorted.gtf.gz \
--interval example/interval_list.tsv \
--density example/density_list.tsv \
--show-junction-num \
--igv example/igv.tsv \
--heatmap example/heatmap_list.tsv \
--focus 1272656-1272656:1275656-1277656 \
--stroke 1275656-1277656:1277856-1278656@blue \
--sites 1271656,1271656,1272656 \
--line example/line_list.tsv \
-o example.png \
--dpi 300 \
--width 10 \
--height 1 \
--barcode example/barcode_list.tsv \
--domain --remove-duplicate-umi \
--normalize-format cpm \
--annotation-scale .3 \
-p 4
if trackplot was installed by docker, here is the cmd
## The absolute path is required in Docker env.
cat $PWD/example/interval_list.tsv |grep -v '^#' | while read line; do echo $PWD/${line}; done > $PWD/example/interval_list.abspath.tsv
cat $PWD/example/density_list.tsv |grep -v '^#' | while read line; do echo $PWD/${line}; done > $PWD/example/density_list.abspath.tsv
cat $PWD/example/igv.tsv |grep -v '^#' | while read line; do echo $PWD/${line}; done > $PWD/example/igv.abspath.tsv
cat $PWD/example/heatmap_list.tsv |grep -v '^#' | while read line; do echo $PWD/${line}; done > $PWD/example/heatmap_list.abspath.tsv
docker run -v $PWD:$PWD -w $PWD --rm ygidtu/trackplot \
-e chr1:1270656-1284730:+ \
-r $PWD/example/example.sorted.gtf.gz \
--interval $PWD/example/interval_list.tsv \
--density $PWD/example/density_list.tsv \
--show-junction-num \
--igv $PWD/example/igv.tsv \
--heatmap $PWD/example/heatmap_list.tsv \
--focus 1272656-1272656:1275656-1277656 \
--stroke 1275656-1277656:1277856-1278656@blue \
--sites 1271656,1271656,1272656 \
--line $PWD/example/line_list.tsv \
-o example.png \
--dpi 300 \
--width 10 \
--height 1 \
--barcode $PWD/example/barcode_list.tsv \
--domain --remove-duplicate-umi \
--normalize-format cpm \
--annotation-scale .3 \
-p 4
here is the output file.
Visit issues or contact Yiming Zhang or Ran Zhou
If you use the tool in your publication, please cite by