Investigating dendritic cell maturation in dendritic cell progenitors

Robrecht Cannoodt

2016-01-22

In this vignette, SCORPIUS is used to infer a trajectory through dendritic cell progenitors. The ginhoux dataset contains 248 dendritic cell progenitors in one of three cellular cellular states: MDP, CDP or PreDC.

library(SCORPIUS)
data(ginhoux)

The dataset is a list containing a matrix named expression and a data frame named sample_info.

expression was a 245-by-15752 matrix containing the expression values of all the cells and all the genes, but this dataset had to be reduced to 2000 genes in order to reduce the package size. See ?ginhoux for more info.

ginhoux$expression[1:6, 1:6]
##                   Mpo  DQ688647      Ly6d   Snora31    Prtn3  DQ567485
## SRR1558744  1.6168843  9.041883  1.616884 10.587718 8.342093  9.349044
## SRR1558745  8.6334859 11.435542  0.000000  7.931509 9.217237 10.047680
## SRR1558746  0.0000000 11.056615  0.000000  0.000000 9.495118  9.532252
## SRR1558747  0.9744123 11.962396 12.902384  0.000000 0.000000 10.954714
## SRR1558748 10.0596172 11.035344  0.000000  0.000000 9.371665 10.211225
## SRR1558749  8.7327325  7.612738  0.000000  7.986711 9.863754  8.009253

sample_info is a data frame with the metadata of the cells, containing cell types of the individual cells.

head(ginhoux$sample_info)
##            group_name
## SRR1558744        CDP
## SRR1558745        CDP
## SRR1558746        CDP
## SRR1558747        CDP
## SRR1558748        CDP
## SRR1558749        CDP

In order to infer a trajectory through this data, SCORPIUS first reduces the dimensionality of the dataset.

Reduce dimensionality of the dataset

SCORPIUS uses Torgerson multi-dimensional scaling to reduce the dataset to three dimensions. This technique attempts to place the cells in a space such that the distance between any two points in that space approximates the original distance between the two cells as well as possible.

The distance between any two samples is defined as their correlation distance, namely 1 - (cor(x, y)+1)/2. The reduced space is constructed as follows:

expression <- ginhoux$expression
group_name <- ginhoux$sample_info$group_name
space <- reduce_dimensionality(expression, "spearman", ndim = 3)

The new space is a 245-by-3 matrix, and can be visualised with or without colouring of the different cell types.

draw_trajectory_plot(space, progression_group = group_name, contour = TRUE)

Inferring a trajectory through the cells

The main goal of SCORPIUS is to infer a trajectory through the cells, and orden the cells according to the inferred timeline.

SCORPIUS infers a trajectory through several intermediate steps, which are all executed as follows:

traj <- infer_trajectory(space)

The result is a list containing the final trajectory path and the inferred timeline for each sample time.

The trajectory can be visualised with respect to the samples by passing it to draw_trajectory_plot:

draw_trajectory_plot(
  space, 
  progression_group = group_name,
  path = traj$path,
  contour = TRUE
)

Finding candidate marker genes

We search for genes whose expression is seems to be a function of the trajectory timeline that was inferred, as such genes might be good candidate marker genes for dendritic cell maturation.

gimp <- gene_importances(expression, traj$time, num_permutations = 0, num_threads = 8)
gene_sel <- gimp[1:50,]
expr_sel <- expression[,gene_sel$gene]

To visualise the expression of the selected genes, use the draw_trajectory_heatmap function.

draw_trajectory_heatmap(expr_sel, traj$time, group_name)

Finally, these genes can also be grouped into modules as follows:

modules <- extract_modules(scale_quantile(expr_sel), traj$time, verbose = FALSE)
draw_trajectory_heatmap(expr_sel, traj$time, group_name, modules)