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SCISSORS builds upon the Louvain graph-based clustering in Seurat by optimizing parameter selection when reclustering cell groups, with an eye towards identifying rare cell types.

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SCISSORS

This package enables researchers to efficiently, accurately, and reproducibly uncover rare celltypes and other small subgroups using an iterative reclustering optimization routine built as an extension to a typical Seurat workflow. Tools are included to preprocess data, identify potential targets for subgroup analysis, optimize reclustering, and annotate results. A preprint detailing the method & some biological results is available on BioRxiv.

Installation

You can install the most recent version of SCISSORS with:

remotes::install_github("jr-leary7/SCISSORS")

Usage

Libraries

First we’ll need to load our package as well as a couple dependencies.

library(dplyr)
library(Seurat)
library(ggplot2)
library(SCISSORS)

Preprocessing

Following scRNA-seq tool development tradition, we’ll use the 10X Genomics 3,000 PBMCs dataset as an example of our workflow. The raw reads can be downloaded from 10X’s site, and processed counts are available in the SeuratData package.

seu_pbmc <- SeuratData::LoadData("pbmc3k") %>% 
            PrepareData(n.HVG = 4000, 
                        n.PC = 15, 
                        which.dim.reduc = "umap", 
                        initial.resolution = 0.4, 
                        use.parallel = FALSE, 
                        random.seed = 629)
#> [1] "Running UMAP on 15 principal components"
#> [1] "Found 6 unique clusters"

Visualizing the broad clusters on our UMAP embedding, we can see a few clusters that seem heterogeneous enough to be reclustered.

DimPlot(seu_pbmc) + 
  labs(x = "UMAP 1", 
       y = "UMAP 2", 
       color = "Louvain\nCluster") + 
  theme_classic(base_size = 14) + 
  theme(axis.text = element_blank(), 
        axis.ticks = element_blank())

We estimate silhouette scores for each cell, then visualize the distribution for each broad cluster. Clusters 0, 1, & 3 have decently lower median scores than the other clusters.

sil_score_df <- ComputeSilhouetteScores(seu_pbmc, avg = FALSE)
ggplot(sil_score_df, aes(x = Cluster, y = Score, fill = Cluster)) + 
  geom_violin(draw_quantiles = 0.5, 
              scale = "width", 
              size = 1, 
              show.legend = FALSE) + 
  labs(x = "Louvain Cluster", 
       y = "Silhouette Score") + 
  theme_classic(base_size = 14) +
  theme(panel.grid.major.y = element_line(color = "grey80"))

Looking at the expression of canonical marker genes allows us to assign a most-likely celltype identity to each broad cluster. This biological knowledge aids in the reclustering process i.e., we know that it’s probably best to recluster clusters 0 & 3 simultaneously, as they’re both composed of T cells. It also gives us some idea of which / how many cell subtypes to expect in each cluster, which can improve our confidence in the final results. For example, if we saw 10 subclusters in the T cell group it wouldn’t make much sense, as it’s not likely that so many T cell subtypes exist in such a small dataset.

markers <- c("CD3G", "IL7R",    # CD4+ T
             "LYZ", "CD14",     # CD14+ monocyte
             "MS4A1", "CD79A",  # B 
             "CD8A",            # CD8+ T
             "RHOC",            # CD16+ monocyte
             "NKG7")            # NK
VlnPlot(seu_pbmc, 
        features = markers, 
        stack = TRUE, 
        flip = TRUE, 
        fill.by = "ident") + 
  labs(y = "Expression", 
       fill = "Louvain\nCluster") + 
  theme(axis.title.x = element_blank())

We add the broad celltype labels to our clusters, then visualize the results.

seu_pbmc@meta.data <- mutate(seu_pbmc@meta.data, 
                             broad_celltype = case_when(seurat_clusters == "0" ~ "CD4+ T", 
                                                        seurat_clusters == "1" ~ "CD14+ Monocyte", 
                                                        seurat_clusters == "2" ~ "B", 
                                                        seurat_clusters == "3" ~ "CD8+ T", 
                                                        seurat_clusters == "4" ~ "CD16+ Monocyte", 
                                                        seurat_clusters == "5" ~ "NK", 
                                                        TRUE ~ NA_character_), 
                             broad_celltype = factor(broad_celltype, levels = c("CD4+ T", 
                                                                                "CD8+ T", 
                                                                                "NK", "B", 
                                                                                "CD14+ Monocyte", 
                                                                                "CD16+ Monocyte")))
DimPlot(seu_pbmc, group.by = "broad_celltype") + 
  labs(x = "UMAP 1", 
       y = "UMAP 2", 
       color = "Broad Celltype") + 
  theme_classic(base_size = 14) + 
  theme(axis.text = element_blank(), 
        axis.ticks = element_blank(), 
        plot.title = element_blank())

Reclustering

Now that we have an idea of which clusters are poorly fit, as well as a general idea of which celltypes are which, we’re ready to do some subclustering. We’ll start with the T cells; since we know that CD4+ and CD8+ T cells are fairly similar, we’ll recluster them together.

t_reclust <- ReclusterCells(seu_pbmc, 
                            which.clust = c(0, 3), 
                            merge.clusters = TRUE, 
                            k.vals = c(30, 40, 50), 
                            resolution.vals = c(.2, .3, .4), 
                            n.HVG = 4000, 
                            n.PC = 15, 
                            use.parallel = FALSE, 
                            redo.embedding = TRUE, 
                            random.seed = 312)
#> [1] "Reclustering cells in clusters 0, 3 using k = 50 & resolution = 0.3; S = 0.263"
DimPlot(t_reclust) + 
  labs(x = "UMAP 1", 
       y = "UMAP 2", 
       color = "Louvain\nSubcluster") + 
  theme_classic(base_size = 14) + 
  theme(axis.text = element_blank(), 
        axis.ticks = element_blank())

Some canonical T-cell subtype markers help us to differentiate between the subclusters. Cluster 0 houses Naive CD4+ T-cells, and Memory CD4+ T-cells are located in cluster 1. The CD8+ T-cells are split into effector & memory subpopulations in clusters 2 and 3, respectively.

tcell_markers <- c("CCR7", "S100A4", "IL7R", "CD44",  # CD4+ T
                   "CD8B", "GZMB", "FGFBP2", "CD8A",  # effector CD8+ T
                   "GZMK", "NCR3", "KLRB1", "AQP3")   # memory CD8+ T
VlnPlot(t_reclust, 
        features = tcell_markers, 
        stack = TRUE, 
        fill.by = "ident", 
        flip = TRUE) + 
  labs(y = "Expression", 
       fill = "Louvain\nSubcluster") + 
  theme(axis.title.x = element_blank())

After integrating the subcluster labels back into the full dataset with IntegrateSubclusters(), we add new finer-resolution celltype labels to the cells & visualize the results on the original UMAP embedding.

seu_pbmc <- IntegrateSubclusters(seu_pbmc, reclust.results = t_reclust)
seu_pbmc@meta.data <- mutate(seu_pbmc@meta.data, 
                             fine_celltype = case_when(seurat_clusters == "1" ~ "CD14+ Monocyte", 
                                                       seurat_clusters == "2" ~ "B", 
                                                       seurat_clusters == "3" ~ "Memory CD8+ T", 
                                                       seurat_clusters == "4" ~ "CD16+ Monocyte", 
                                                       seurat_clusters == "5" ~ "NK", 
                                                       seurat_clusters == "6" ~ "Naive CD4+ T", 
                                                       seurat_clusters == "7" ~ "Memory CD4+ T", 
                                                       seurat_clusters == "8" ~ "Effector CD8+ T", 
                                                       TRUE ~ NA_character_))
DimPlot(seu_pbmc, group.by = "fine_celltype") + 
  labs(x = "UMAP 1", 
       y = "UMAP 2", 
       color = "Fine Celltype") + 
  theme_classic(base_size = 14) + 
  theme(axis.text = element_blank(), 
        axis.ticks = element_blank(), 
        plot.title = element_blank())

Lastly, we can use the FindSpecificMarkers() function to identify potential marker genes that are specific (in the statistical sense) to each cluster, which we accomplish by filtering the set of all DE genes against a list of genes that are highly expressed in other clusters. This can be helpful in putting together gene sets for pathway analyses, celltype classifiers, etc., though it does have the drawback of filtering out some canonical markers that are highly expressed in more than one celltype - for example FCGR3A, which is highly expressed in both CD16+ monocytes and NK cells, is removed in these DE results. We pull the top 3 marker genes by mean log2FC for each celltype, then plot their expression. Note: the results from this function are pre-filtered to only include genes with adjusted p-values lower than some target threshold; the default is 0.05.

de_specific <- FindSpecificMarkers(seu_pbmc, 
                                   ident.use = "fine_celltype", 
                                   perc.cutoff = 0.95)
de_specific_top3 <- de_specific %>% 
                    mutate(cluster = as.character(cluster)) %>% 
                    arrange(cluster, desc(avg_log2FC)) %>% 
                    with_groups(cluster, 
                                slice_head, 
                                n = 3)
DotPlot(seu_pbmc, 
        assay = "RNA", 
        features = unique(de_specific_top3$gene), 
        dot.scale = 8, 
        group.by = "fine_celltype") + 
  coord_flip() + 
  theme_classic(base_size = 14) + 
  theme(axis.text.x = element_text(angle = 45, hjust = 0.95, vjust = 0.95), 
        axis.title = element_blank())

Conclusions & Best Practices

There’s certainly more that can be done with this dataset - the monocyte clusters have subgroups as well (DCs, intermediate monocytes, even some platelets). A further tutorial exploring those cells can be found here. This introduction should provide a solid start though, and has hopefully shown that reclustering analysis can be efficient and easy, while still providing results we can be confident in. In general, it’s best if reclustering analyses are semi-supervised; you want to have some idea of what’s going on / what could be possible biologically, but it’s important to not have a predefined conclusion that you’re looking for as well. Using biological background information as well as cluster fit heuristics to choose reclustering targets is, empirically, a good way to avoid false positives and ensure that your reclustering results are biologically meaningful & reproducible. For more complex analyses using SCISSORS see our manuscript, and don’t hesitate to reach out if you’d like help with using the package.

Contact Information

This package is developed and maintained by Jack Leary. Feel free to ask for help via opening an issue or via email (jrleary@live.unc.edu) if more detailed assistance is needed.

References

  1. Leary, J. et al. Sub-cluster identification through semi-supervised optimization of rare cell silhouettes (SCISSORS) in single-cell sequencing. BioRxiv (2021).

  2. 10X Genomics. 3k PBMCs from a healthy donor: single cell gene expression dataset by Cell Ranger v1.1.0. 10X Genomics Documentation (2016).

  3. Rousseeuw, P. Silhouettes: A graphical aid to the interpretation and validation of cluster analysis. Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics (1987).

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SCISSORS builds upon the Louvain graph-based clustering in Seurat by optimizing parameter selection when reclustering cell groups, with an eye towards identifying rare cell types.

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