prior.prob has opposite effects in goana and kegga?
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Entering edit mode
Jenny Drnevich ★ 2.0k
@jenny-drnevich-2812
Last seen 5 months ago
United States

Hi all,

I've come across some unexpected results when trying to go over-representation testing on array methylation data, which I've traced to the underlying goana() and kegga() functions from limma. Genes can have different numbers of CpGs, and so the gometh() function from missMethyl will by default calculate the probability of a gene being called significant based on the number of CpGs for that gene and then pass this as the prior.prob argument for goana or kegga. For GO testing, adjusting for this prior.prob decreases the number of significant GO terms as I would have expected. However, for KEGG pathways, adjusting for the prior.prob greatly increases the number of significant pathways. Even randomly selected sets of CpGs have over half of the 319 KEGG pathways with raw p < 0.001 when adjusting for prior.prob, but only a dozen pathways when not adjusted. How is this possible? Reproducible example below.

Thanks,

Jenny

 

# codes for creating the necessary objects from the missMethyl vignette:

## ----load-libs, message=FALSE--------------------------------------------
library(missMethyl)
library(limma)
library(minfi)

## ----reading-data, message=FALSE-----------------------------------------
library(minfiData)
baseDir <- system.file("extdata", package = "minfiData")
targets <- read.metharray.sheet(baseDir)
rgSet <- read.metharray.exp(targets = targets)

## ----ppraw---------------------------------------------------------------
mSet <- preprocessRaw(rgSet)

## ----diffmeth2-----------------------------------------------------------
# get M-values for ALL probes
meth <- getMeth(mSet)
unmeth <- getUnmeth(mSet)
M <- log2((meth + 100)/(unmeth + 100))
grp <- factor(targets$status,levels=c("normal","cancer"))
des <- model.matrix(~grp)
INCs <- getINCs(rgSet)
Mc <- rbind(M,INCs)
ctl <- rownames(Mc) %in% rownames(INCs)
rfit1 <- RUVfit(data=Mc, design=des, coef=2, ctl=ctl) # Stage 1 analysis
rfit2 <- RUVadj(rfit1)

## ----ruv1----------------------------------------------------------------
top1 <- topRUV(rfit2, num=Inf)
ctl <- rownames(M) %in% rownames(top1[top1$p.ebayes.BH > 0.5,])

## ----ruv2----------------------------------------------------------------
# Perform RUV adjustment and fit
rfit1 <- RUVfit(data=M, design=des, coef=2, ctl=ctl) # Stage 2 analysis
rfit2 <- RUVadj(rfit1)

## ----gometh3-------------------------------------------------------------
topCpGs<-topRUV(rfit2,number=10000)
sigCpGs <- rownames(topCpGs)

## ----gometh4-------------------------------------------------------------
library(IlluminaHumanMethylation450kanno.ilmn12.hg19)

# end missMethyl vignette

# check how many GO and KEGG have raw p < 0.001 for the selected CpG set

gst <- gometh(sig.cpg=sigCpGs, all.cpg=rownames(rfit2), collection="GO")
sum(gst$P.DE < 0.001)

# [1] 628 - with bias correction

gst.nobias <- gometh(sig.cpg=sigCpGs, all.cpg=rownames(rfit2), collection="GO", prior.prob = FALSE)
sum(gst.nobias$P.DE < 0.001)

#[1] 1126 - without bias correction

kst <- gometh(sig.cpg=sigCpGs, all.cpg=rownames(rfit2), collection="KEGG")
sum(kst$P.DE < 0.001)

# [1] 160 - with bias correction, out of 319 pathways total

kst.nobias <- gometh(sig.cpg=sigCpGs, all.cpg=rownames(rfit2), collection="KEGG", prior.prob = FALSE)
sum(kst.nobias$P.DE < 0.001)

#  [1] 38 - without bias correction

# Pull 10 random subset of CpGs of same size

rand.001 <- matrix(NA, 10, 4)
colnames(rand.001) <- c("gst","gst.nobias","kst","kst.nobias")

#This takes a few minutes:

for(i in 1:10) {
  temp <- sample(rownames(rfit2), size = length(sigCpGs))
  gst.rand <- gometh(sig.cpg=temp, all.cpg=rownames(rfit2), collection="GO")
  rand.001[i,1] <- sum(gst.rand$P.DE < 0.001)
  gst.nobias.rand <- gometh(sig.cpg=temp, all.cpg=rownames(rfit2), collection="GO", prior.prob = FALSE)
  rand.001[i,2] <- sum(gst.nobias.rand$P.DE < 0.001)
  kst.rand <- gometh(sig.cpg=temp, all.cpg=rownames(rfit2), collection="KEGG")
  rand.001[i,3] <- sum(kst.rand$P.DE < 0.001)
  kst.nobias.rand <- gometh(sig.cpg=temp, all.cpg=rownames(rfit2), collection="KEGG", prior.prob = FALSE)
  rand.001[i,4] <- sum(kst.nobias.rand$P.DE < 0.001)
  print(i)
}

colMeans(rand.001)

#       gst gst.nobias        kst kst.nobias 
#      24.1      556.6      258.9       12.6

sessionInfo()

R version 3.4.0 (2017-04-21)
Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit)
Running under: Windows >= 8 x64 (build 9200)

Matrix products: default

locale:
[1] LC_COLLATE=English_United States.1252  LC_CTYPE=English_United States.1252   
[3] LC_MONETARY=English_United States.1252 LC_NUMERIC=C                          
[5] LC_TIME=English_United States.1252    

attached base packages:
[1] stats4    parallel  stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets  methods   base     

other attached packages:
 [1] minfiData_0.22.0                                   IlluminaHumanMethylation450kanno.ilmn12.hg19_0.6.0
 [3] IlluminaHumanMethylation450kmanifest_0.4.0         minfi_1.22.1                                      
 [5] bumphunter_1.16.0                                  locfit_1.5-9.1                                    
 [7] iterators_1.0.8                                    foreach_1.4.3                                     
 [9] Biostrings_2.44.0                                  XVector_0.16.0                                    
[11] SummarizedExperiment_1.6.1                         DelayedArray_0.2.2                                
[13] matrixStats_0.52.2                                 Biobase_2.36.2                                    
[15] GenomicRanges_1.28.1                               GenomeInfoDb_1.12.0                               
[17] IRanges_2.10.1                                     S4Vectors_0.14.1                                  
[19] BiocGenerics_0.22.0                                limma_3.32.2                                      
[21] missMethyl_1.10.0                                 

#the rest deleted because I was over the character limit
limma missMethyl gometh goana kegga • 1.6k views
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Entering edit mode
@gordon-smyth
Last seen 2 hours ago
WEHI, Melbourne, Australia

Thanks for bringing this to my attention and thanks for the reproducible example.

You are right, there was a serious bug in the limma kegga() function when the trend correction was requested, specifically in the calculation of weights for the Wallenius probability calculation. The bug resulted in p-values that were in too small. In reality, the effect of trend adjustment should be relatively subtle.

Trend correction is not the default when kegga() is called directly but it is the default in missMethyl's gometh() function, which means that results from the latter are likely to have been affected by the bug.

To fix this, I have rewritten the default kegga() function and have committed the changes as limma 3.32.3. This should fix the problem in missMethyl as well as in limma and edgeR.

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Entering edit mode

Thanks, Gordon! I've downloaded the new version and it's working as expected.

Cheers, Jenny

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