RAINBOWR

Reliable Association INference By Optimizing Weights with R

Author : Kosuke Hamazaki (hamazaki@ut-biomet.org)

Date : 2019/03/25 (Last update: 2022/01/31)

NOTE!!!!

The paper for RAINBOWR has been published in PLOS Computational Biology (https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007663). If you use this RAINBOWR in your paper, please cite RAINBOWR as follows:

Hamazaki, K. and Iwata, H. (2020) RAINBOW: Haplotype-based genome-wide association study using a novel SNP-set method. PLOS Computational Biology, 16(2): e1007663.

The stable version for RAINBOWR package is now available at the CRAN (Comprehensive R Archive Network).

Please check the change in RAINBOWR with the version update from NEWS.md.

The older version of RAINBOWR is RAINBOW, which is available at https://github.com/KosukeHamazaki/RAINBOW.

We changed the package name from RAINBOW to RAINBOWR because the original package name RAINBOW conflicted with the package rainbow (https://cran.r-project.org/package=rainbow) when we submitted our package to CRAN (https://cran.r-project.org/).

In this repository, the R package RAINBOWR is available. Here, we describe how to install and how to use RAINBOWR.


What is RAINBOWR

RAINBOWR(Reliable Association INference By Optimizing Weights with R) is a package to perform several types of GWAS as follows.

RAINBOWR also offers some functions to solve the linear mixed effects model.

By utilizing these functions, you can estimate the genomic heritability and perform genomic prediction (GP).

Finally, RAINBOWR offers other useful functions.

Installation

The stable version of RAINBOWR is now available at the CRAN (Comprehensive R Archive Network). The latest version of RAINBOWR is also available at the KosukeHamazaki/RAINBOWR repository in the GitHub, so please run the following code in the R console.

#### Stable version of RAINBOWR ####
install.packages("RAINBOWR")  


#### Latest version of RAINBOWR ####
### If you have not installed yet, ...
install.packages("devtools")  

### Install RAINBOWR from GitHub
devtools::install_github("KosukeHamazaki/RAINBOWR")

If you get some errors via installation, please check if the following packages are correctly installed. (We removed a dependency on rgl package!)

Rcpp,      # also install `Rtools` for Windows user
plotly,    # Suggests
Matrix,
cluster,
MASS,
pbmcapply,
optimx,
methods,
ape,
stringr,
pegas,
ggplot2,     # Suggests
ggtree,      # Suggests, install from Bioconducter with `BiocManager::install("ggtree")`
scatterpie,  # Suggests
phylobase,   # Suggests
haplotypes,  # Suggests
rrBLUP,
expm,
here,        # Suggests
htmlwidgets,
Rfast,
adegenet,    # Suggests
gaston,
MM4LMM,
furrr,       # Suggests
future,      # Suggests
progressr,   # Suggests
foreach,     # Suggests, but stongly recommend the installation for Windows user to parallel computation
doParallel,  # Suggests
data.table   # Suggests

In RAINBOWR, since part of the code is written in Rcpp (C++ in R), please check if you can use C++ in R. For Windows users, you should install Rtools.

If you have some questions about installation, please contact us by e-mail (hamazaki@ut-biomet.org).

Usage

First, import RAINBOWR package and load example datasets. These example datasets consist of marker genotype (scored with {-1, 0, 1}, 1,536 SNP chip (Zhao et al., 2010; PLoS One 5(5): e10780)), map with physical position, and phenotypic data (Zhao et al., 2011; Nature Communications 2:467). Both datasets can be downloaded from Rice Diversity homepage (http://www.ricediversity.org/data/). Also, the dataset includes a list of haplotype blocks from the version 0.1.30. This list was estimated by the PLINK 1.9 (Taliun et al., 2014; BMC Bioinformatics, 15).

### Import RAINBOWR
require(RAINBOWR)

### Load example datasets
data("Rice_Zhao_etal")
Rice_geno_score <- Rice_Zhao_etal$genoScore
Rice_geno_map <- Rice_Zhao_etal$genoMap
Rice_pheno <- Rice_Zhao_etal$pheno
Rice_haplo_block <- Rice_Zhao_etal$haploBlock

### View each dataset
See(Rice_geno_score)
See(Rice_geno_map)
See(Rice_pheno)
See(Rice_haplo_block)

You can check the original data format by See function. Then, select one trait (here, Flowering.time.at.Arkansas) for example.

### Select one trait for example
trait.name <- "Flowering.time.at.Arkansas"
y <- Rice_pheno[, trait.name, drop = FALSE]

For GWAS, first you can remove SNPs whose MAF <= 0.05 by MAF.cut function.

### Remove SNPs whose MAF <= 0.05
x.0 <- t(Rice_geno_score)
MAF.cut.res <- MAF.cut(x.0 = x.0, map.0 = Rice_geno_map)
x <- MAF.cut.res$x
map <- MAF.cut.res$map

Next, we estimate additive genomic relationship matrix (GRM) by using calcGRM function.

### Estimate genomic relationship matrix (GRM) 
K.A <- calcGRM(genoMat = x)

Next, we modify these data into the GWAS format of RAINBOWR by modify.data function.

### Modify data
modify.data.res <- modify.data(pheno.mat = y, geno.mat = x, map = map,
                               return.ZETA = TRUE, return.GWAS.format = TRUE)
pheno.GWAS <- modify.data.res$pheno.GWAS
geno.GWAS <- modify.data.res$geno.GWAS
ZETA <- modify.data.res$ZETA

### View each data for RAINBOWR
See(pheno.GWAS)
See(geno.GWAS)
str(ZETA)

ZETA is a list of genomic relationship matrix (GRM) and its design matrix.

Finally, we can perform GWAS using these data. First, we perform single-SNP GWAS by RGWAS.normal function as follows.

### Perform single-SNP GWAS
normal.res <- RGWAS.normal(pheno = pheno.GWAS, geno = geno.GWAS,
                           ZETA = ZETA, n.PC = 4, skip.check = TRUE, P3D = TRUE)
See(normal.res$D)  ### Column 4 contains -log10(p) values for markers
### Automatically draw Q-Q plot and Manhattan by default.

Next, we perform SNP-set GWAS by RGWAS.multisnp function.

### Perform SNP-set GWAS (by regarding 11 SNPs as one SNP-set)
SNP_set.res <- RGWAS.multisnp(pheno = pheno.GWAS, geno = geno.GWAS, ZETA = ZETA, 
                              n.PC = 4, test.method = "LR", kernel.method = "linear", 
                              gene.set = NULL, skip.check = TRUE, 
                              test.effect = "additive", window.size.half = 5, window.slide = 11)

See(SNP_set.res$D)  ### Column 4 contains -log10(p) values for markers

You can perform SNP-set GWAS with sliding window by setting window.slide = 1. And you can also perform gene-set (or haplotype-block based) GWAS by assigning the following data set to gene.set argument. (You can check the example also by See(Rice_haplo_block) in R.)

ex.)

gene (or haplotype block) marker
haploblock_1 id1005261
haploblock_1 id1005263
haploblock_2 id1009557
haploblock_2 id1009616
haploblock_3 id1020154

For example, when using the list of haplotype blocks estimated by PLINK,

### Perform haplotype-block based GWAS (by using hapltype blocks estimated by PLINK)
haplo_block.res <- RGWAS.multisnp(pheno = pheno.GWAS, geno = geno.GWAS, ZETA = ZETA, 
                              n.PC = 4, test.method = "LR", kernel.method = "linear", 
                              gene.set = Rice_haplo_block, skip.check = TRUE, 
                              test.effect = "additive")

See(haplo_block.res$D)  ### Column 4 contains -log10(p) values for markers

There is no significant block for this dataset because the number of markers and blocks is too small for this dataset. However, when whole-genome sequencing data is available, the impact of using SNP-set/gene-set/haplotype-block methods becomes larger and we strongly recommend you use these methods. Please see Hamazaki and Iwata (2020, PLOS Comp Biol) for more details of the features of these methods.

Help

If you want some help before performing GWAS with RAINBOWR, please see the help for each function by ?function_name.

References

Kennedy, B.W., Quinton, M. and van Arendonk, J.A. (1992) Estimation of effects of single genes on quantitative traits. J Anim Sci. 70(7): 2000-2012.

Storey, J.D. and Tibshirani, R. (2003) Statistical significance for genomewide studies. Proc Natl Acad Sci. 100(16): 9440-9445.

Yu, J. et al. (2006) A unified mixed-model method for association mapping that accounts for multiple levels of relatedness. Nat Genet. 38(2): 203-208.

Kang, H.M. et al. (2008) Efficient Control of Population Structure in Model Organism Association Mapping. Genetics. 178(3): 1709-1723.

Kang, H.M. et al. (2010) Variance component model to account for sample structure in genome-wide association studies. Nat Genet. 42(4): 348-354.

Zhang, Z. et al. (2010) Mixed linear model approach adapted for genome-wide association studies. Nat Genet. 42(4): 355-360.

Endelman, J.B. (2011) Ridge Regression and Other Kernels for Genomic Selection with R Package rrBLUP. Plant Genome J. 4(3): 250.

Endelman, J.B. and Jannink, J.L. (2012) Shrinkage Estimation of the Realized Relationship Matrix. G3 Genes, Genomes, Genet. 2(11): 1405-1413.

Su, G. et al. (2012) Estimating Additive and Non-Additive Genetic Variances and Predicting Genetic Merits Using Genome-Wide Dense Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Markers. PLoS One. 7(9): 1-7.

Zhou, X. and Stephens, M. (2012) Genome-wide efficient mixed-model analysis for association studies. Nat Genet. 44(7): 821-824.

Listgarten, J. et al. (2013) A powerful and efficient set test for genetic markers that handles confounders. Bioinformatics. 29(12): 1526-1533.

Lippert, C. et al. (2014) Greater power and computational efficiency for kernel-based association testing of sets of genetic variants. Bioinformatics. 30(22): 3206-3214.

Jiang, Y. and Reif, J.C. (2015) Modeling epistasis in genomic selection. Genetics. 201(2): 759-768.

Hamazaki, K. and Iwata, H. (2020) RAINBOW: Haplotype-based genome-wide association study using a novel SNP-set method. PLOS Computational Biology, 16(2): e1007663.