1 Introduction

With advances in Cancer Genomics, Mutation Annotation Format (MAF) is being widely accepted and used to store somatic variants detected. The Cancer Genome Atlas Project has sequenced over 30 different cancers with sample size of each cancer type being over 200. Resulting data consisting of somatic variants are stored in the form of Mutation Annotation Format. This package attempts to summarize, analyze, annotate and visualize MAF files in an efficient manner from either TCGA sources or any in-house studies as long as the data is in MAF format.

1.1 Citation

If you find this tool useful, please cite:


Mayakonda A, Lin DC, Assenov Y, Plass C, Koeffler HP. 2018. Maftools: efficient and comprehensive analysis of somatic variants in cancer. Genome Resarch. PMID: 30341162


2 Generating MAF files

  • For VCF files or simple tabular files, easy option is to use vcf2maf utility which will annotate VCFs, prioritize transcripts, and generates an MAF. Recent updates to gatk has also enabled funcotator to genrate MAF files.

  • If you’re using ANNOVAR for variant annotations, maftools has a handy function annovarToMaf for converting tabular annovar outputs to MAF.

3 MAF field requirements

MAF files contain many fields ranging from chromosome names to cosmic annotations. However most of the analysis in maftools uses following fields.

  • Mandatory fields: Hugo_Symbol, Chromosome, Start_Position, End_Position, Reference_Allele, Tumor_Seq_Allele2, Variant_Classification, Variant_Type and Tumor_Sample_Barcode.

  • Recommended optional fields: non MAF specific fields containing VAF (Variant Allele Frequecy) and amino acid change information.

Complete specification of MAF files can be found on NCI GDC documentation page.

This vignette demonstrates the usage and application of maftools on an example MAF file from TCGA LAML cohort 1.

5 Overview of the package

maftools functions can be categorized into mainly Visualization and Analysis modules. Each of these functions and a short description is summarized as shown below. Usage is simple, just read your MAF file with read.maf (along with copy-number data if available) and pass the resulting MAF object to the desired function for plotting or analysis.

6 Reading and summarizing maf files

6.1 Required input files

  • an MAF file - can be gz compressed. Required.
  • an optional but recommended clinical data associated with each sample/Tumor_Sample_Barcode in MAF.
  • an optional copy number data if available. Can be GISTIC output or a custom table containing sample names, gene names and copy-number status (Amp or Del).

6.2 Reading MAF files.

read.maf function reads MAF files, summarizes it in various ways and stores it as an MAF object. Even though MAF file is alone enough, it is recommended to provide annotations associated with samples in MAF. One can also integrate copy number data if available.

Note that by default, Variants with High/Moderate consequences are considered as non-synonymous. You change this behavior with the argument vc_nonSyn in read.maf.

## -Reading
## -Validating
## -Silent variants: 475 
## -Summarizing
## -Processing clinical data
## -Finished in 0.379s elapsed (0.417s cpu)

6.3 MAF object

Summarized MAF file is stored as an MAF object. MAF object contains main maf file, summarized data and any associated sample annotations.

There are accessor methods to access the useful slots from MAF object.

## An object of class  MAF 
##                    ID          summary  Mean Median
##  1:        NCBI_Build               37    NA     NA
##  2:            Center genome.wustl.edu    NA     NA
##  3:           Samples              193    NA     NA
##  4:            nGenes             1241    NA     NA
##  5:   Frame_Shift_Del               52 0.269      0
##  6:   Frame_Shift_Ins               91 0.472      0
##  7:      In_Frame_Del               10 0.052      0
##  8:      In_Frame_Ins               42 0.218      0
##  9: Missense_Mutation             1342 6.953      7
## 10: Nonsense_Mutation              103 0.534      0
## 11:       Splice_Site               92 0.477      0
## 12:             total             1732 8.974      9

7 Visualization

7.1 Plotting MAF summary.

We can use plotmafSummary to plot the summary of the maf file, which displays number of variants in each sample as a stacked barplot and variant types as a boxplot summarized by Variant_Classification.

Use mafbarplot for a minimal barplot of mutated genes.

7.2 Oncoplots

7.2.1 Drawing oncoplots

Better representation of maf file can be shown as oncoplots, also known as waterfall plots.

NOTE: Variants annotated as Multi_Hit are those genes which are mutated more than once in the same sample.

For more details on customisation see the Customizing oncoplots vignette.

7.3 Transition and Transversions.

titv function classifies SNPs into Transitions and Transversions and returns a list of summarized tables in various ways. Summarized data can also be visualized as a boxplot showing overall distribution of six different conversions and as a stacked barplot showing fraction of conversions in each sample.

7.4 Lollipop plots for amino acid changes

lollipopPlot function requires us to have amino acid changes information in the maf file. However MAF files have no clear guidelines on naming the field for amino acid changes, with different studies having different field (or column) names for amino acid changes. By default, lollipopPlot looks for column AAChange, and if its not found in the MAF file, it prints all available fields with a warning message. For below example, MAF file contains amino acid changes under a field/column name ‘Protein_Change’. We will manually specify this using argument AACol.

By default lollipopPlot uses the longest isoform of the gene.

## 3 transcripts available. Use arguments refSeqID or proteinID to manually specify tx name.
##      HGNC refseq.ID protein.ID aa.length
## 1: DNMT3A NM_022552  NP_072046       912
## 2: DNMT3A NM_153759  NP_715640       723
## 3: DNMT3A NM_175629  NP_783328       912
## Using longer transcript NM_022552 for now.
## Removed 3 mutations for which AA position was not available

General protein domains can be drawn with the function plotProtein

7.5 Rainfall plots

Cancer genomes, especially solid tumors are characterized by genomic loci with localized hyper-mutations 5. Such hyper mutated genomic regions can be visualized by plotting inter variant distance on a linear genomic scale. These plots generally called rainfall plots and we can draw such plots using rainfallPlot. If detectChangePoints is set to TRUE, rainfall plot also highlights regions where potential changes in inter-event distances are located.

## Processing TCGA-A8-A08B..
## Kataegis detected at:
##    Chromosome Start_Position End_Position nMuts Avg_intermutation_dist Size
## 1:          8       98129348     98133560     7               702.0000 4212
## 2:          8       98398549     98403536     9               623.3750 4987
## 3:          8       98453076     98456466     9               423.7500 3390
## 4:          8      124090377    124096810    22               306.3333 6433
## 5:         12       97436055     97439705     7               608.3333 3650
## 6:         17       29332072     29336153     8               583.0000 4081
##    Tumor_Sample_Barcode C>G C>T
## 1:         TCGA-A8-A08B   4   3
## 2:         TCGA-A8-A08B   1   8
## 3:         TCGA-A8-A08B   1   8
## 4:         TCGA-A8-A08B   1  21
## 5:         TCGA-A8-A08B   4   3
## 6:         TCGA-A8-A08B   4   4

“Kataegis” are defined as those genomic segments containing six or more consecutive mutations with an average inter-mutation distance of less than or equal to 1,00 bp 5.

7.6 Compare mutation load against TCGA cohorts

tcgaCompare uses mutation load from TCGA MC3 for comparing muttaion burden against 33 TCGA cohorts. Plot generated is similar to the one described in Alexandrov et al 5.

## Warning in FUN(X[[i]], ...): Removed 1 samples with zero mutations.

7.7 Plotting VAF

This function plots Variant Allele Frequencies as a boxplot which quickly helps to estimate clonal status of top mutated genes (clonal genes usually have mean allele frequency around ~50% assuming pure sample)

8 Processing copy-number data

8.1 Reading and summarizing gistic output files.

We can summarize output files generated by GISTIC programme. As mentioned earlier, we need four files that are generated by GISTIC, i.e, all_lesions.conf_XX.txt, amp_genes.conf_XX.txt, del_genes.conf_XX.txt and scores.gistic, where XX is the confidence level. See GISTIC documentation for details.

## -Processing Gistic files..
## --Processing amp_genes.conf_99.txt
## --Processing del_genes.conf_99.txt
## --Processing scores.gistic
## --Summarizing by samples
## An object of class  GISTIC 
##           ID summary
## 1:   Samples     191
## 2:    nGenes    2622
## 3: cytoBands      16
## 4:       Amp     388
## 5:       Del   26481
## 6:     total   26869

Similar to MAF objects, there are methods available to access slots of GISTIC object - getSampleSummary, getGeneSummary and getCytoBandSummary. Summarized results can be written to output files using function write.GisticSummary.

8.2 Visualizing gistic results.

There are three types of plots available to visualize gistic results.

8.2.3 oncoplot

This is similar to oncoplots except for copy number data. One can again sort the matrix according to annotations, if any. Below plot is the gistic results for LAML, sorted according to FAB classification. Plot shows that 7q deletions are virtually absent in M4 subtype where as it is widespread in other subtypes.

8.2.4 Visualizing CBS segments

## No 'tsb' specified, plot head 1 sample. Set tsb='ALL' to plot all samples.
## NULL

9 Analysis

9.1 Somatic Interactions

Mutually exclusive or co-occurring set of genes can be detected using somaticInteractions function, which performs pair-wise Fisher’s Exact test to detect such significant pair of genes.

##      gene1  gene2       pValue oddsRatio  00 11 01 10              Event
##   1: ASXL1  RUNX1 0.0001541586 55.215541 176  4 12  1       Co_Occurence
##   2:  IDH2  RUNX1 0.0002809928  9.590877 164  7  9 13       Co_Occurence
##   3:  IDH2  ASXL1 0.0004030636 41.077327 172  4  1 16       Co_Occurence
##   4:  FLT3   NPM1 0.0009929836  3.763161 125 17 16 35       Co_Occurence
##   5:  SMC3 DNMT3A 0.0010451985 20.177713 144  6 42  1       Co_Occurence
##  ---                                                                    
## 296: PLCE1  ASXL1 1.0000000000  0.000000 184  0  5  4 Mutually_Exclusive
## 297: RAD21  FAM5C 1.0000000000  0.000000 183  0  5  5 Mutually_Exclusive
## 298: PLCE1  FAM5C 1.0000000000  0.000000 184  0  5  4 Mutually_Exclusive
## 299: PLCE1  RAD21 1.0000000000  0.000000 184  0  5  4 Mutually_Exclusive
## 300:  EZH2  PLCE1 1.0000000000  0.000000 186  0  4  3 Mutually_Exclusive
##              pair event_ratio
##   1: ASXL1, RUNX1        4/13
##   2:  IDH2, RUNX1        7/22
##   3:  ASXL1, IDH2        4/17
##   4:   FLT3, NPM1       17/51
##   5: DNMT3A, SMC3        6/43
##  ---                         
## 296: ASXL1, PLCE1         0/9
## 297: FAM5C, RAD21        0/10
## 298: FAM5C, PLCE1         0/9
## 299: PLCE1, RAD21         0/9
## 300:  EZH2, PLCE1         0/7

9.2 Detecting cancer driver genes based on positional clustering

maftools has a function oncodrive which identifies cancer genes (driver) from a given MAF. oncodrive is a based on algorithm oncodriveCLUST which was originally implemented in Python. Concept is based on the fact that most of the variants in cancer causing genes are enriched at few specific loci (aka hot-spots). This method takes advantage of such positions to identify cancer genes. If you use this function, please cite OncodriveCLUST article 7.

## Warning in oncodrive(maf = laml, AACol = "Protein_Change", minMut = 5,
## pvalMethod = "zscore"): Oncodrive has been superseeded by OncodriveCLUSTL. See
## http://bg.upf.edu/group/projects/oncodrive-clust.php
##    Hugo_Symbol Frame_Shift_Del Frame_Shift_Ins In_Frame_Del In_Frame_Ins
## 1:        IDH1               0               0            0            0
## 2:        IDH2               0               0            0            0
## 3:        NPM1               0              33            0            0
## 4:        NRAS               0               0            0            0
## 5:       U2AF1               0               0            0            0
## 6:         KIT               1               1            0            1
##    Missense_Mutation Nonsense_Mutation Splice_Site total MutatedSamples
## 1:                18                 0           0    18             18
## 2:                20                 0           0    20             20
## 3:                 1                 0           0    34             33
## 4:                15                 0           0    15             15
## 5:                 8                 0           0     8              8
## 6:                 7                 0           0    10              8
##    AlteredSamples clusters muts_in_clusters clusterScores protLen   zscore
## 1:             18        1               18     1.0000000     414 5.546154
## 2:             20        2               20     1.0000000     452 5.546154
## 3:             33        2               32     0.9411765     294 5.093665
## 4:             15        2               15     0.9218951     189 4.945347
## 5:              8        1                7     0.8750000     240 4.584615
## 6:              8        2                9     0.8500000     976 4.392308
##            pval          fdr fract_muts_in_clusters
## 1: 1.460110e-08 1.022077e-07              1.0000000
## 2: 1.460110e-08 1.022077e-07              1.0000000
## 3: 1.756034e-07 8.194826e-07              0.9411765
## 4: 3.800413e-07 1.330144e-06              1.0000000
## 5: 2.274114e-06 6.367520e-06              0.8750000
## 6: 5.607691e-06 1.308461e-05              0.9000000

We can plot the results using plotOncodrive.

plotOncodrive plots the results as scatter plot with size of the points proportional to the number of clusters found in the gene. X-axis shows number of mutations (or fraction of mutations) observed in these clusters. In the above example, IDH1 has a single cluster and all of the 18 mutations are accumulated within that cluster, giving it a cluster score of one. For details on oncodrive algorithm, please refer to OncodriveCLUST article 7.

9.3 Adding and summarizing pfam domains

maftools comes with the function pfamDomains, which adds pfam domain information to the amino acid changes. pfamDomain also summarizes amino acid changes according to the domains that are affected. This serves the purpose of knowing what domain in given cancer cohort, is most frequently affected. This function is inspired from Pfam annotation module from MuSic tool 8.

## Warning in pfamDomains(maf = laml, AACol = "Protein_Change", top = 10): Removed
## 50 mutations for which AA position was not available

##         HGNC AAPos Variant_Classification  N total  fraction   DomainLabel
##    1: DNMT3A   882      Missense_Mutation 27    54 0.5000000 AdoMet_MTases
##    2:   IDH1   132      Missense_Mutation 18    18 1.0000000      PTZ00435
##    3:   IDH2   140      Missense_Mutation 17    20 0.8500000      PTZ00435
##    4:   FLT3   835      Missense_Mutation 14    52 0.2692308      PKc_like
##    5:   FLT3   599           In_Frame_Ins 10    52 0.1923077      PKc_like
##   ---                                                                     
## 1512: ZNF646   875      Missense_Mutation  1     1 1.0000000          <NA>
## 1513: ZNF687   554      Missense_Mutation  1     2 0.5000000          <NA>
## 1514: ZNF687   363      Missense_Mutation  1     2 0.5000000          <NA>
## 1515: ZNF75D     5      Missense_Mutation  1     1 1.0000000          <NA>
## 1516: ZNF827   427        Frame_Shift_Del  1     1 1.0000000          <NA>
##        DomainLabel nMuts nGenes
##   1:      PKc_like    55      5
##   2:      PTZ00435    38      2
##   3: AdoMet_MTases    33      1
##   4:         7tm_1    24     24
##   5:       COG5048    17     17
##  ---                           
## 499:    ribokinase     1      1
## 500:   rim_protein     1      1
## 501: sigpep_I_bact     1      1
## 502:           trp     1      1
## 503:        zf-BED     1      1

9.4 Survival analysis

Survival analysis is an essential part of cohort based sequencing projects. Function mafSurvive performs survival analysis and draws kaplan meier curve by grouping samples based on mutation status of user defined gene(s) or manually provided samples those make up a group. This function requires input data to contain Tumor_Sample_Barcode (make sure they match to those in MAF file), binary event (1/0) and time to event.

Our annotation data already contains survival information and in case you have survival data stored in a separate table provide them via argument clinicalData

9.4.1 Mutation in any given genes

## Looking for clinical data in annoatation slot of MAF..
## Number of mutated samples for given genes:
## DNMT3A 
##     48
## Removed 11 samples with NA's
## Median survival..
##     Group medianTime   N
## 1: Mutant        245  45
## 2:     WT        396 137

9.4.2 Predict genesets associated with survival

Identify set of genes which results in poor survival

## Removed 11 samples with NA's
##     Gene_combination P_value    hr  WT Mutant
##  1:      FLT3_DNMT3A 0.00104 2.510 164     18
##  2:      DNMT3A_SMC3 0.04880 2.220 176      6
##  3:      DNMT3A_NPM1 0.07190 1.720 166     16
##  4:      DNMT3A_TET2 0.19600 1.780 176      6
##  5:        FLT3_TET2 0.20700 1.860 177      5
##  6:        NPM1_IDH1 0.21900 0.495 176      6
##  7:      DNMT3A_IDH1 0.29300 1.500 173      9
##  8:       IDH2_RUNX1 0.31800 1.580 176      6
##  9:        FLT3_NPM1 0.53600 1.210 165     17
## 10:      DNMT3A_IDH2 0.68000 0.747 178      4
## 11:      DNMT3A_NRAS 0.99200 0.986 178      4

Above results show a combination (N = 2) of genes which are associated with poor survival (P < 0.05). We can draw KM curve for above results with the function mafSurvGroup

## Looking for clinical data in annoatation slot of MAF..
## Removed 11 samples with NA's
## Median survival..
##     Group medianTime   N
## 1: Mutant      242.5  18
## 2:     WT      379.5 164

9.5 Comparing two cohorts (MAFs)

Cancers differ from each other in terms of their mutation pattern. We can compare two different cohorts to detect such differentially mutated genes. For example, recent article by Madan et. al 9, have shown that patients with relapsed APL (Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia) tends to have mutations in PML and RARA genes, which were absent during primary stage of the disease. This difference between two cohorts (in this case primary and relapse APL) can be detected using function mafComapre, which performs fisher test on all genes between two cohorts to detect differentially mutated genes.

## $results
##    Hugo_Symbol Primary Relapse         pval         or       ci.up      ci.low
## 1:         PML       1      11 1.529935e-05 0.03537381   0.2552937 0.000806034
## 2:        RARA       0       7 2.574810e-04 0.00000000   0.3006159 0.000000000
## 3:       RUNX1       1       5 1.310500e-02 0.08740567   0.8076265 0.001813280
## 4:        FLT3      26       4 1.812779e-02 3.56086275  14.7701728 1.149009169
## 5:      ARID1B       5       8 2.758396e-02 0.26480490   0.9698686 0.064804160
## 6:         WT1      20      14 2.229087e-01 0.60619329   1.4223101 0.263440988
## 7:        KRAS       6       1 4.334067e-01 2.88486293 135.5393108 0.337679367
## 8:        NRAS      15       4 4.353567e-01 1.85209500   8.0373994 0.553883512
## 9:      ARID1A       7       4 7.457274e-01 0.80869223   3.9297309 0.195710173
##         adjPval
## 1: 0.0001376942
## 2: 0.0011586643
## 3: 0.0393149868
## 4: 0.0407875250
## 5: 0.0496511201
## 6: 0.3343630535
## 7: 0.4897762916
## 8: 0.4897762916
## 9: 0.7457273717
## 
## $SampleSummary
##     Cohort SampleSize
## 1: Primary        124
## 2: Relapse         58

9.5.1 Forest plots

Above results show two genes PML and RARA which are highly mutated in Relapse APL compared to Primary APL. We can visualize these results as a forestplot.

9.5.2 Co-onco plots

Another alternative way of displaying above results is by plotting two oncoplots side by side. coOncoplot function takes two maf objects and plots them side by side for better comparison.

9.5.4 Lollipop plot-2

Along with plots showing cohort wise differences, its also possible to show gene wise differences with lollipopPlot2 function.

9.6 Clinical enrichment analysis

clinicalEnrichment is another function which takes any clinical feature associated with the samples and performs enrichment analysis. It performs various groupwise and pairwise comparisions to identify enriched mutations for every category within a clincila feature. Below is an example to identify mutations associated with FAB_classification.

## Sample size per factor in FAB_classification:
## 
## M0 M1 M2 M3 M4 M5 M6 M7 
## 19 44 44 21 39 19  3  3
##    Hugo_Symbol Group1 Group2 n_mutated_group1 n_mutated_group2      p_value
## 1:        IDH1     M1   Rest         11 of 44         7 of 149 0.0002597371
## 2:        TP53     M7   Rest           3 of 3        12 of 190 0.0003857187
## 3:      DNMT3A     M5   Rest         10 of 19        38 of 174 0.0089427384
## 4:       CEBPA     M2   Rest          7 of 44         6 of 149 0.0117352110
## 5:       RUNX1     M0   Rest          5 of 19        11 of 174 0.0117436825
## 6:        NPM1     M5   Rest          7 of 19        26 of 174 0.0248582372
## 7:        NPM1     M3   Rest          0 of 21        33 of 172 0.0278630823
## 8:      DNMT3A     M3   Rest          1 of 21        47 of 172 0.0294005111
##          OR      OR_low    OR_high       fdr
## 1: 6.670592 2.173829026 21.9607250 0.0308575
## 2:      Inf 5.355415451        Inf 0.0308575
## 3: 3.941207 1.333635173 11.8455979 0.3757978
## 4: 4.463237 1.204699322 17.1341278 0.3757978
## 5: 5.216902 1.243812880 19.4051505 0.3757978
## 6: 3.293201 1.001404899 10.1210509 0.5880102
## 7: 0.000000 0.000000000  0.8651972 0.5880102
## 8: 0.133827 0.003146708  0.8848897 0.5880102

Above results shows IDH1 mutations are enriched in M1 subtype of leukemia compared to rest of the cohort. Similarly DNMT3A is in M5, RUNX1 is in M0, and so on. These are well known results and this function effectively recaptures them. One can use any sort of clincial feature to perform such an analysis. There is also a small function - plotEnrichmentResults which can be used to plot these results.

9.7 Drug-Gene Interactions

drugInteractions function checks for drug–gene interactions and gene druggability information compiled from Drug Gene Interaction database.

Above plot shows potential druggable gene categories along with upto top 5 genes involved in them. One can also extract information on drug-gene interactions. For example below is the results for known/reported drugs to interact with DNMT3A.

## Number of claimed drugs for given genes:
##      Gene N
## 1: DNMT3A 7
##      Gene interaction_types    drug_name drug_claim_name
## 1: DNMT3A                                            N/A
## 2: DNMT3A                   DAUNORUBICIN    Daunorubicin
## 3: DNMT3A                     DECITABINE      Decitabine
## 4: DNMT3A                     IDARUBICIN      IDARUBICIN
## 5: DNMT3A                     DECITABINE      DECITABINE
## 6: DNMT3A         inhibitor   DECITABINE   CHEMBL1201129
## 7: DNMT3A         inhibitor  AZACITIDINE      CHEMBL1489

Please cite DGIdb article if you find this function useful 10.

Disclaimer: Resources used in this function are intended for purely research purposes. It should not be used for emergencies or medical or professional advice.

9.8 Oncogenic Signaling Pathways

OncogenicPathways function checks for enrichment of known Oncogenic Signaling Pathways in TCGA cohorts 11.

##    Pathway  N n_affected_genes fraction_affected Mutated_samples
## 1:    PI3K 29                1        0.03448276               1
## 2:    NRF2  3                1        0.33333333               1
## 3:    TP53  6                2        0.33333333              15
## 4:     WNT 68                3        0.04411765               4
## 5:     MYC 13                3        0.23076923               3
## 6:   NOTCH 71                6        0.08450704               8
## 7:   Hippo 38                7        0.18421053               7
## 8: RTK-RAS 85               18        0.21176471              97
##    Fraction_mutated_samples
## 1:              0.005181347
## 2:              0.005181347
## 3:              0.077720207
## 4:              0.020725389
## 5:              0.015544041
## 6:              0.041450777
## 7:              0.036269430
## 8:              0.502590674

Its also possible to visualize complete pathway.

Tumor suppressor genes are in red, and oncogenes are in blue font.

9.9 Tumor heterogeneity and MATH scores

9.9.1 Heterogeneity in tumor samples

Tumors are generally heterogeneous i.e, consist of multiple clones. This heterogeneity can be inferred by clustering variant allele frequencies. inferHeterogeneity function uses vaf information to cluster variants (using mclust), to infer clonality. By default, inferHeterogeneity function looks for column t_vaf containing vaf information. However, if the field name is different from t_vaf, we can manually specify it using argument vafCol. For example, in this case study vaf is stored under the field name i_TumorVAF_WU.

## Package 'mclust' version 5.4.9
## Type 'citation("mclust")' for citing this R package in publications.
## Processing TCGA-AB-2972..

##    Tumor_Sample_Barcode cluster   meanVaf
## 1:         TCGA-AB-2972       2 0.4496571
## 2:         TCGA-AB-2972       1 0.2454750
## 3:         TCGA-AB-2972 outlier 0.3695000

Above figure shows clear separation of two clones clustered at mean variant allele frequencies of ~45% (major clone) and another minor clone at variant allele frequency of ~25%.

Although clustering of variant allele frequencies gives us a fair idea on heterogeneity, it is also possible to measure the extent of heterogeneity in terms of a numerical value. MATH score (mentioned as a subtitle in above plot) is a simple quantitative measure of intra-tumor heterogeneity, which calculates the width of the vaf distribution. Higher MATH scores are found to be associated with poor outcome. MATH score can also be used a proxy variable for survival analysis 11.

9.9.2 Ignoring variants in copy number altered regions

We can use copy number information to ignore variants located on copy-number altered regions. Copy number alterations results in abnormally high/low variant allele frequencies, which tends to affect clustering. Removing such variants improves clustering and density estimation while retaining biologically meaningful results. Copy number information can be provided as a segmented file generated from segmentation programmes, such as Circular Binary Segmentation from “DNACopy” Bioconductor package 6.

## Processing TCGA-AB-3009..
## Removed 1 variants with no copy number data.
##    Hugo_Symbol Chromosome Start_Position End_Position Tumor_Sample_Barcode
## 1:        PHF6         23      133551224    133551224         TCGA-AB-3009
##        t_vaf Segment_Start Segment_End Segment_Mean CN
## 1: 0.9349112            NA          NA           NA NA
## Copy number altered variants:
##    Hugo_Symbol Chromosome Start_Position End_Position Tumor_Sample_Barcode
## 1:     NFKBIL2          8      145668658    145668658         TCGA-AB-3009
## 2:         NF1         17       29562981     29562981         TCGA-AB-3009
## 3:       SUZ12         17       30293198     30293198         TCGA-AB-3009
##        t_vaf Segment_Start Segment_End Segment_Mean       CN    cluster
## 1: 0.4415584     145232496   145760746       0.3976 2.634629 CN_altered
## 2: 0.8419000      29054355    30363868      -0.9157 1.060173 CN_altered
## 3: 0.8958333      29054355    30363868      -0.9157 1.060173 CN_altered

Above figure shows two genes NF1 and SUZ12 with high VAF’s, which is due to copy number alterations (deletion). Those two genes are ignored from analysis.

9.10 Mutational Signatures

Every cancer, as it progresses leaves a signature characterized by specific pattern of nucleotide substitutions. Alexandrov et.al have shown such mutational signatures, derived from over 7000 cancer samples 5. Such signatures can be extracted by decomposing matrix of nucleotide substitutions, classified into 96 substitution classes based on immediate bases surrounding the mutated base. Extracted signatures can also be compared to those validated signatures.

First step in signature analysis is to obtain the adjacent bases surrounding the mutated base and form a mutation matrix. NOTE: Earlier versions of maftools required a fasta file as an input. But starting from 1.8.0, BSgenome objects are used for faster sequence extraction.

## 
## Attaching package: 'BiocGenerics'
## The following objects are masked from 'package:stats':
## 
##     IQR, mad, sd, var, xtabs
## The following objects are masked from 'package:base':
## 
##     Filter, Find, Map, Position, Reduce, anyDuplicated, append,
##     as.data.frame, basename, cbind, colnames, dirname, do.call,
##     duplicated, eval, evalq, get, grep, grepl, intersect, is.unsorted,
##     lapply, mapply, match, mget, order, paste, pmax, pmax.int, pmin,
##     pmin.int, rank, rbind, rownames, sapply, setdiff, sort, table,
##     tapply, union, unique, unsplit, which.max, which.min
## 
## Attaching package: 'S4Vectors'
## The following objects are masked from 'package:base':
## 
##     I, expand.grid, unname
## 
## Attaching package: 'Biostrings'
## The following object is masked from 'package:base':
## 
##     strsplit
## Warning in trinucleotideMatrix(maf = laml, prefix = "chr", add = TRUE, ref_genome = "BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19"): Chromosome names in MAF must match chromosome names in reference genome.
## Ignorinig 101 single nucleotide variants from missing chromosomes chr23
## -Extracting 5' and 3' adjacent bases
## -Extracting +/- 20bp around mutated bases for background C>T estimation
## -Estimating APOBEC enrichment scores
## --Performing one-way Fisher's test for APOBEC enrichment
## ---APOBEC related mutations are enriched in  3.315 % of samples (APOBEC enrichment score > 2 ;  6  of  181  samples)
## -Creating mutation matrix
## --matrix of dimension 188x96

Above function performs two steps:

  • Estimates APOBEC enrichment scores
  • Prepares a mutational matrix for signature analysis.

9.10.1 APOBEC Enrichment estimation.

APOBEC induced mutations are more frequent in solid tumors and are mainly associated with C>T transition events occurring in TCW motif. APOBEC enrichment scores in the above command are estimated using the method described by Roberts et al 13. Briefly, enrichment of C>T mutations occurring within TCW motif over all of the C>T mutations in a given sample is compared to background Cytosines and TCWs occurring within 20bp of mutated bases.

\[\frac{n_{tCw} * background_C}{n_C * background_{TCW}}\]

One-sided fishers exact test is also performed to statistically evaluate the enrichment score, as described in original study by Roberts et al.

9.10.2 Differences between APOBEC enriched and non-enriched samples

We can also analyze the differences in mutational patterns between APOBEC enriched and non-APOBEC enriched samples. plotApobecDiff is a function which takes APOBEC enrichment scores estimated by trinucleotideMatrix and classifies samples into APOBEC enriched and non-APOBEC enriched. Once stratified, it compares these two groups to identify differentially altered genes.

Note that, LAML with no APOBEC enrichments, is not an ideal cohort for this sort of analysis and hence below plot is only for demonstration purpose.

## -Processing clinical data
## -Processing clinical data

## $results
##      Hugo_Symbol Enriched nonEnriched       pval        or      ci.up
##   1:        TP53        2          13 0.08175632 5.9976455  46.608861
##   2:        TET2        1          16 0.45739351 1.9407002  18.983979
##   3:        FLT3        2          45 0.65523131 1.4081851  10.211621
##   4:      DNMT3A        1          47 1.00000000 0.5335362   4.949499
##   5:      ADAM11        0           2 1.00000000 0.0000000 164.191472
##  ---                                                                 
## 132:         WAC        0           2 1.00000000 0.0000000 164.191472
## 133:         WT1        0          12 1.00000000 0.0000000  12.690862
## 134:      ZBTB33        0           2 1.00000000 0.0000000 164.191472
## 135:      ZC3H18        0           2 1.00000000 0.0000000 164.191472
## 136:      ZNF687        0           2 1.00000000 0.0000000 164.191472
##          ci.low adjPval
##   1: 0.49875432       1
##   2: 0.03882963       1
##   3: 0.12341748       1
##   4: 0.01101929       1
##   5: 0.00000000       1
##  ---                   
## 132: 0.00000000       1
## 133: 0.00000000       1
## 134: 0.00000000       1
## 135: 0.00000000       1
## 136: 0.00000000       1
## 
## $SampleSummary
##         Cohort SampleSize  Mean Median
## 1:    Enriched          6 7.167    6.5
## 2: nonEnriched        172 9.715    9.0

9.10.3 Signature analysis

Signature analysis includes following steps.

  1. estimateSignatures - which runs NMF on a range of values and measures the goodness of fit - in terms of Cophenetic correlation.
  2. plotCophenetic - which draws an elblow plot and helps you to decide optimal number of signatures. Best possible signature is the value at which Cophenetic correlation drops significantly.
  3. extractSignatures - uses non-negative matrix factorization to decompose the matrix into n signatures. n is chosen based on the above two steps. In case if you already have a good estimate of n, you can skip above two steps.
  4. compareSignatures - extracted signatures from above step can be compared to known signatures11 from COSMIC database, and cosine similarity is calculated to identify best match.
  5. plotSignatures - plots signatures

Note: In previous versions, extractSignatures used to take care of above steps automatically. After versions 2.2.0, main function is split inot above 5 stpes for user flexibility.

Draw elbow plot to visualize and decide optimal number of signatures from above results.

Best possible value is the one at which the correlation value on the y-axis drops significantly. In this case it appears to be at n = 3. LAML is not an ideal example for signature analysis with its low mutation rate, but for solid tumors with higher mutation burden one could expect more signatures, provided sufficient number of samples.

Once n is estimated, we can run the main function.

## -Running NMF for factorization rank: 3
## -Finished in2.706s elapsed (2.369s cpu)

Compare detected signatures to COSMIC Legacy or SBS signature database.

## -Comparing against COSMIC signatures
## ------------------------------------
## --Found Signature_1 most similar to COSMIC_1
##    Aetiology: spontaneous deamination of 5-methylcytosine [cosine-similarity: 0.84]
## --Found Signature_2 most similar to COSMIC_1
##    Aetiology: spontaneous deamination of 5-methylcytosine [cosine-similarity: 0.577]
## --Found Signature_3 most similar to COSMIC_5
##    Aetiology: Unknown [cosine-similarity: 0.851]
## ------------------------------------
## -Comparing against COSMIC signatures
## ------------------------------------
## --Found Signature_1 most similar to SBS1
##    Aetiology: spontaneous or enzymatic deamination of 5-methylcytosine [cosine-similarity: 0.858]
## --Found Signature_2 most similar to SBS6
##    Aetiology: defective DNA mismatch repair [cosine-similarity: 0.538]
## --Found Signature_3 most similar to SBS3
##    Aetiology: Defects in DNA-DSB repair by HR [cosine-similarity: 0.836]
## ------------------------------------

compareSignatures returns full table of cosine similarities against COSMIC signatures, which can be further analysed. Below plot shows comparison of similarities of detected signatures against validated signatures.

Finally plot signatures

If you fancy 3D barpots, you can install barplot3d package and visualize the results with legoplot3d function.

NOTE:

  1. Should you receive an error while running extractSignatures complaining none of the packages are loaded, please manually load the NMF library and re-run.

  2. If either extractSignatures or estimateSignatures stops in between, its possibly due to low mutation counts in the matrix. In that case rerun the functions with pConstant argument set to small positive value (e.g, 0.1).

10 Variant Annotations

10.1 Converting annovar output to MAF

Annovar is one of the most widely used Variant Annotation tool in Genomics 17. Annovar output is generally in a tabular format with various annotation columns. This function converts such annovar output files into MAF. This function requires that annovar was run with gene based annotation as a first operation, before including any filter or region based annotations.

e.g,

annovarToMaf mainly uses gene based annotations for processing, rest of the annotation columns from input file will be attached to the end of the resulting MAF.

As an example we will annotate the same file which was used above to run oncotate function. We will annotate it using annovar with the following command. For simplicity, here we are including only gene based annotations but one can include as many annotations as they wish. But make sure the fist operation is always gene based annotation.

Output generated is stored as a part of this package. We can convert this annovar output into MAF using annovarToMaf.

## -Reading annovar files
## -Processing Exonic variants
## --Adding Variant_Classification
## --Parsing aa-change
## -Processing Non-exonic variants
## --Adding Variant_Classification
## -Adding Variant_Type
## -Converting Ensemble Gene IDs into HGNC gene symbols
## --Done. Original ensemble gene IDs are preserved under field name ens_id
## Finished in 0.158s elapsed (0.179s cpu)

Annovar, when used with Ensemble as a gene annotation source, uses ensemble gene IDs as Gene names. In that case, use annovarToMaf with argument table set to ensGene which converts ensemble gene IDs into HGNC symbols.

10.2 Converting ICGC Simple Somatic Mutation Format to MAF

Just like TCGA, International Cancer Genome Consortium ICGC also makes its data publicly available. But the data are stored in Simpale Somatic Mutation Format, which is similar to MAF format in its structure. However field names and classification of variants is different from that of MAF. icgcSimpleMutationToMAF is a function which reads ICGC data and converts them to MAF.

## Converting Ensemble Gene IDs into HGNC gene symbols.
## Done! Original ensemble gene IDs are preserved under field name ens_id
## --Removed 427 duplicated variants
##    Hugo_Symbol Entrez_Gene_Id Center NCBI_Build Chromosome Start_Position
## 1:  AC005237.4             NA     NA     GRCh37          2      241987787
## 2:  AC061992.1            786     NA     GRCh37         17       76425382
## 3:  AC097467.2             NA     NA     GRCh37          4      156294567
## 4:    ADAMTS12             NA     NA     GRCh37          5       33684019
## 5:  AL589642.1          54801     NA     GRCh37          9       32630154
##    End_Position Strand Variant_Classification Variant_Type Reference_Allele
## 1:    241987787      +                 Intron          SNP                C
## 2:     76425382      +                3'Flank          SNP                C
## 3:    156294567      +                 Intron          SNP                A
## 4:     33684019      +      Missense_Mutation          SNP                A
## 5:     32630154      +                    RNA          SNP                T
##    Tumor_Seq_Allele1 Tumor_Seq_Allele2 dbSNP_RS dbSNP_Val_Status
## 1:                 C                 T       NA               NA
## 2:                 C                 T       NA               NA
## 3:                 A                 G       NA               NA
## 4:                 A                 C       NA               NA
## 5:                 T                 C       NA               NA
##    Tumor_Sample_Barcode
## 1:             SA514619
## 2:             SA514619
## 3:             SA514619
## 4:             SA514619
## 5:             SA514619

Note that by default Simple Somatic Mutation format contains all affected transcripts of a variant resulting in multiple entries of the same variant in same sample. It is hard to choose a single affected transcript based on annotations alone and by default this program removes repeated variants as duplicated entries. If you wish to keep all of them, set removeDuplicatedVariants to FALSE. Another option is to convert input file to MAF by removing duplicates and then use scripts like vcf2maf to re-annotate and prioritize affected transcripts.

10.3 Prepare MAF file for MutSigCV analysis

MutSig/MutSigCV is most widely used program for detecting driver genes 18. However, we have observed that covariates files (gene.covariates.txt and exome_full192.coverage.txt) which are bundled with MutSig have non-standard gene names (non Hugo_Symbols). This discrepancy between Hugo_Symbols in MAF and non-Hugo_symbols in covariates file causes MutSig program to ignore such genes. For example, KMT2D - a well known driver gene in Esophageal Carcinoma is represented as MLL2 in MutSig covariates. This causes KMT2D to be ignored from analysis and is represented as an insignificant gene in MutSig results. This function attempts to correct such gene symbols with a manually curated list of gene names compatible with MutSig covariates list.

11 Set operations

11.1 Subsetting MAF

We can also subset MAF using function subsetMaf

##    Hugo_Symbol Entrez_Gene_Id           Center NCBI_Build Chromosome
## 1:      ABCB11           8647 genome.wustl.edu         37          2
## 2:       ACSS3          79611 genome.wustl.edu         37         12
## 3:        ANK3            288 genome.wustl.edu         37         10
## 4:       AP1G2           8906 genome.wustl.edu         37         14
## 5:         ARC          23237 genome.wustl.edu         37          8
##    Start_Position End_Position Strand Variant_Classification Variant_Type
## 1:      169780250    169780250      +      Missense_Mutation          SNP
## 2:       81536902     81536902      +      Missense_Mutation          SNP
## 3:       61926581     61926581      +            Splice_Site          SNP
## 4:       24033309     24033309      +      Missense_Mutation          SNP
## 5:      143694874    143694874      +      Missense_Mutation          SNP
##    Reference_Allele Tumor_Seq_Allele1 Tumor_Seq_Allele2 Tumor_Sample_Barcode
## 1:                G                 G                 A         TCGA-AB-3009
## 2:                C                 C                 T         TCGA-AB-3009
## 3:                C                 C                 A         TCGA-AB-3009
## 4:                C                 C                 T         TCGA-AB-3009
## 5:                C                 C                 G         TCGA-AB-3009
##    Protein_Change i_TumorVAF_WU i_transcript_name
## 1:       p.A1283V      46.97218       NM_003742.2
## 2:        p.A266V      47.32510       NM_024560.2
## 3:                     43.99478       NM_020987.2
## 4:        p.R346Q      47.08000       NM_003917.2
## 5:        p.W253C      42.96435       NM_015193.3
## -Processing clinical data
## An object of class  MAF 
##                    ID          summary Mean Median
##  1:        NCBI_Build               37   NA     NA
##  2:            Center genome.wustl.edu   NA     NA
##  3:           Samples                2   NA     NA
##  4:            nGenes               34   NA     NA
##  5:   Frame_Shift_Ins                5  2.5    2.5
##  6:      In_Frame_Ins                1  0.5    0.5
##  7: Missense_Mutation               26 13.0   13.0
##  8: Nonsense_Mutation                2  1.0    1.0
##  9:       Splice_Site                1  0.5    0.5
## 10:             total               35 17.5   17.5

11.1.1 Specifying queries and controlling output fields.

##    Hugo_Symbol Entrez_Gene_Id           Center NCBI_Build Chromosome
## 1:      DNMT3A           1788 genome.wustl.edu         37          2
## 2:      DNMT3A           1788 genome.wustl.edu         37          2
## 3:      DNMT3A           1788 genome.wustl.edu         37          2
## 4:      DNMT3A           1788 genome.wustl.edu         37          2
## 5:      DNMT3A           1788 genome.wustl.edu         37          2
## 6:      DNMT3A           1788 genome.wustl.edu         37          2
##    Start_Position End_Position Strand Variant_Classification Variant_Type
## 1:       25459874     25459874      +            Splice_Site          SNP
## 2:       25467208     25467208      +            Splice_Site          SNP
## 3:       25467022     25467022      +            Splice_Site          SNP
## 4:       25459803     25459803      +            Splice_Site          SNP
## 5:       25464576     25464576      +            Splice_Site          SNP
## 6:       25469029     25469029      +            Splice_Site          SNP
##    Reference_Allele Tumor_Seq_Allele1 Tumor_Seq_Allele2 Tumor_Sample_Barcode
## 1:                C                 C                 G         TCGA-AB-2818
## 2:                C                 C                 T         TCGA-AB-2822
## 3:                A                 A                 G         TCGA-AB-2891
## 4:                A                 A                 C         TCGA-AB-2898
## 5:                C                 C                 A         TCGA-AB-2934
## 6:                C                 C                 A         TCGA-AB-2968
##    Protein_Change i_TumorVAF_WU i_transcript_name
## 1:        p.R803S         36.84       NM_022552.3
## 2:                        62.96       NM_022552.3
## 3:                        34.78       NM_022552.3
## 4:                        46.43       NM_022552.3
## 5:        p.G646V         37.50       NM_022552.3
## 6:        p.E477*         40.00       NM_022552.3
##    Hugo_Symbol Chromosome Start_Position End_Position Reference_Allele
## 1:      DNMT3A          2       25459874     25459874                C
## 2:      DNMT3A          2       25467208     25467208                C
## 3:      DNMT3A          2       25467022     25467022                A
## 4:      DNMT3A          2       25459803     25459803                A
## 5:      DNMT3A          2       25464576     25464576                C
## 6:      DNMT3A          2       25469029     25469029                C
##    Tumor_Seq_Allele2 Variant_Classification Variant_Type Tumor_Sample_Barcode
## 1:                 G            Splice_Site          SNP         TCGA-AB-2818
## 2:                 T            Splice_Site          SNP         TCGA-AB-2822
## 3:                 G            Splice_Site          SNP         TCGA-AB-2891
## 4:                 C            Splice_Site          SNP         TCGA-AB-2898
## 5:                 A            Splice_Site          SNP         TCGA-AB-2934
## 6:                 A            Splice_Site          SNP         TCGA-AB-2968
##    i_transcript_name
## 1:       NM_022552.3
## 2:       NM_022552.3
## 3:       NM_022552.3
## 4:       NM_022552.3
## 5:       NM_022552.3
## 6:       NM_022552.3

11.1.2 Subsetting by clinical data

Use clinQuery argument in subsetMaf to select samples of interest based on their clinical features.

## -subsetting by clinical data..
## --39 samples meet the clinical query
## -Processing clinical data

12 Sample swap identification

Human errors such as sample mislabeling are common among large cancer studies. This leads to sample pair mismatches which further causes erroneous results. sampleSwaps() function tries to identify such sample mismatches and relatedness by genotyping single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and measuring concordance among samples.

Below demonstration uses the dataset from Hao et. al. who performed multi-region whole exome sequencing from several individuals including a matched normal.

The returned results is a list containing:

  • a matrix of allele frequency table for every genotyped SNP
  • a data.frame of readcounts for ref and alt allele for every genotyped SNP
  • a table with pair-wise concordance among samples
  • a list with potentially matched samples

Results can be visualized with the correlation plot.

Above results indicate that sample DBW-43-N possibly matches with DBW-40-1T, DBW-40-2T, DBW-40-3T whereas, DBW-40-N is in-fact a normal for the sample DBW-43-1T suggesting a sample mislabeling.

The list of 6059 SNPs used for genotyping are carefully compiled by Westphal et. al. and are located in the exonic regions and hence can be used for WGS, as well as WXS BAM files. Please cite Westphal et. al. if you find this function useful.

13 TCGA cohorts

Analysis of TCGA cohorts with maftools is as easy as it can get. This is made possible by processing TCGA MAF files from Broad firehose and TCGA MC3 project. Every cohort is stored as an MAF object containing somatic mutations (no CNVs) along with the relevant clinical information. There are two functions

  • tcgaAvailable() will display available cohorts
  • tcgaLoad() will load the desired cohort

13.1 Available cohorts

##    Study_Abbreviation                   Study_Name  MC3
## 1:                ACC     Adrenocortical_carcinoma   92
## 2:               BLCA Bladder_Urothelial_Carcinoma  411
## 3:               BRCA    Breast_invasive_carcinoma 1020
##                             Firehose
## 1:  62 [dx.doi.org/10.7908/C1610ZNC]
## 2: 395 [dx.doi.org/10.7908/C1MW2GGF]
## 3: 978 [dx.doi.org/10.7908/C1TB167Z]

13.2 Loading a TCGA cohort

## Loading LAML. Please cite: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cels.2018.03.002 for reference
## An object of class  MAF 
##                         ID summary   Mean Median
##  1:             NCBI_Build      NA     NA     NA
##  2:                 Center      NA     NA     NA
##  3:                Samples     140     NA     NA
##  4:                 nGenes    4142     NA     NA
##  5:        Frame_Shift_Del     131  0.936    0.0
##  6:        Frame_Shift_Ins     377  2.693    0.0
##  7:           In_Frame_Del       9  0.064    0.0
##  8:           In_Frame_Ins       3  0.021    0.0
##  9:      Missense_Mutation    4137 29.550    7.5
## 10:      Nonsense_Mutation     264  1.886    0.0
## 11:       Nonstop_Mutation      18  0.129    0.0
## 12:            Splice_Site     780  5.571    1.0
## 13: Translation_Start_Site       4  0.029    0.0
## 14:                  total    5723 40.879   13.0
## Loading LAML. Please cite: dx.doi.org/10.7908/C1D21X2X for reference
## An object of class  MAF 
##                    ID          summary  Mean Median
##  1:        NCBI_Build               37    NA     NA
##  2:            Center genome.wustl.edu    NA     NA
##  3:           Samples              192    NA     NA
##  4:            nGenes             1241    NA     NA
##  5:   Frame_Shift_Del               52 0.271      0
##  6:   Frame_Shift_Ins               91 0.474      0
##  7:      In_Frame_Del               10 0.052      0
##  8:      In_Frame_Ins               42 0.219      0
##  9: Missense_Mutation             1342 6.990      7
## 10: Nonsense_Mutation              103 0.536      0
## 11:       Splice_Site               92 0.479      0
## 12:             total             1732 9.021      9

There is also an R data package containing the same pre-compiled TCGA MAF objects. Due to Bioconductor package size limits and other difficulties, this was not submitted to Bioconductor. However, you can still download TCGAmutations package from GitHub.

14 MultiAssayExperiment

MAF can be converted to an object of class MultiAssayExperiment which facilitates integration of MAF with distinct data types. More information on MultiAssayExperiment can be found on the corresponding Bioconductor landing page.

Note: Converting MAF to MAE object requires installation of MultiAssayExperiment and RaggedExperiment packages.

## Loading required namespace: RaggedExperiment
## Loading required namespace: MultiAssayExperiment
## A MultiAssayExperiment object of 2 listed
##  experiments with user-defined names and respective classes.
##  Containing an ExperimentList class object of length 2:
##  [1] maf_nonSyn: RaggedExperiment with 1732 rows and 193 columns
##  [2] maf_syn: RaggedExperiment with 475 rows and 193 columns
## Functionality:
##  experiments() - obtain the ExperimentList instance
##  colData() - the primary/phenotype DataFrame
##  sampleMap() - the sample coordination DataFrame
##  `$`, `[`, `[[` - extract colData columns, subset, or experiment
##  *Format() - convert into a long or wide DataFrame
##  assays() - convert ExperimentList to a SimpleList of matrices
##  exportClass() - save data to flat files

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  16. Wang, K., Li, M. & Hakonarson, H. ANNOVAR: functional annotation of genetic variants from high-throughput sequencing data. Nucleic Acids Res 38, e164 (2010).
  17. Lawrence MS, Stojanov P, Polak P, Kryukov GV, Cibulskis K, Sivachenko A, Carter SL, Stewart C, Mermel CH, Roberts SA, et al: Mutational heterogeneity in cancer and the search for new cancer-associated genes. Nature 2013, 499:214-218.
  18. Westphal, M., Frankhouser, D., Sonzone, C. et al. SMaSH: Sample matching using SNPs in humans. BMC Genomics 20, 1001 (2019)

17 Session Info

## R version 4.1.2 (2021-11-01)
## Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu (64-bit)
## Running under: Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS
## 
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS:   /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.14-bioc/R/lib/libRblas.so
## LAPACK: /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.14-bioc/R/lib/libRlapack.so
## 
## locale:
##  [1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8       LC_NUMERIC=C              
##  [3] LC_TIME=en_GB              LC_COLLATE=C              
##  [5] LC_MONETARY=en_US.UTF-8    LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8   
##  [7] LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8       LC_NAME=C                 
##  [9] LC_ADDRESS=C               LC_TELEPHONE=C            
## [11] LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8 LC_IDENTIFICATION=C       
## 
## attached base packages:
## [1] parallel  stats4    stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets 
## [8] methods   base     
## 
## other attached packages:
##  [1] pheatmap_1.0.12                   doParallel_1.0.17                
##  [3] iterators_1.0.14                  foreach_1.5.2                    
##  [5] NMF_0.23.0                        bigmemory_4.5.36                 
##  [7] Biobase_2.54.0                    cluster_2.1.2                    
##  [9] rngtools_1.5.2                    pkgmaker_0.32.2                  
## [11] registry_0.5-1                    BSgenome.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19_1.4.3
## [13] BSgenome_1.62.0                   rtracklayer_1.54.0               
## [15] Biostrings_2.62.0                 XVector_0.34.0                   
## [17] GenomicRanges_1.46.1              GenomeInfoDb_1.30.1              
## [19] IRanges_2.28.0                    S4Vectors_0.32.3                 
## [21] BiocGenerics_0.40.0               mclust_5.4.9                     
## [23] maftools_2.10.05                 
## 
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
##  [1] bitops_1.0-7                matrixStats_0.61.0         
##  [3] RColorBrewer_1.1-2          tools_4.1.2                
##  [5] bslib_0.3.1                 utf8_1.2.2                 
##  [7] R6_2.5.1                    DBI_1.1.2                  
##  [9] colorspace_2.0-3            withr_2.4.3                
## [11] tidyselect_1.1.2            curl_4.3.2                 
## [13] compiler_4.1.2              cli_3.2.0                  
## [15] DelayedArray_0.20.0         sass_0.4.0                 
## [17] scales_1.1.1                stringr_1.4.0              
## [19] digest_0.6.29               Rsamtools_2.10.0           
## [21] rmarkdown_2.11              R.utils_2.11.0             
## [23] pkgconfig_2.0.3             htmltools_0.5.2            
## [25] MatrixGenerics_1.6.0        fastmap_1.1.0              
## [27] highr_0.9                   rlang_1.0.1                
## [29] jquerylib_0.1.4             BiocIO_1.4.0               
## [31] generics_0.1.2              jsonlite_1.8.0             
## [33] BiocParallel_1.28.3         dplyr_1.0.8                
## [35] berryFunctions_1.21.0       R.oo_1.24.0                
## [37] RCurl_1.98-1.6              magrittr_2.0.2             
## [39] GenomeInfoDbData_1.2.7      Matrix_1.4-0               
## [41] Rcpp_1.0.8                  munsell_0.5.0              
## [43] fansi_1.0.2                 abind_1.4-5                
## [45] lifecycle_1.0.1             R.methodsS3_1.8.1          
## [47] stringi_1.7.6               yaml_2.3.5                 
## [49] RaggedExperiment_1.18.0     SummarizedExperiment_1.24.0
## [51] zlibbioc_1.40.0             plyr_1.8.6                 
## [53] grid_4.1.2                  bigmemory.sri_0.1.3        
## [55] crayon_1.5.0                lattice_0.20-45            
## [57] splines_4.1.2               knitr_1.37                 
## [59] pillar_1.7.0                rjson_0.2.21               
## [61] reshape2_1.4.4              codetools_0.2-18           
## [63] XML_3.99-0.9                glue_1.6.1                 
## [65] evaluate_0.15               data.table_1.14.2          
## [67] MultiAssayExperiment_1.20.0 vctrs_0.3.8                
## [69] gtable_0.3.0                purrr_0.3.4                
## [71] assertthat_0.2.1            ggplot2_3.3.5              
## [73] gridBase_0.4-7              xfun_0.29                  
## [75] xtable_1.8-4                restfulr_0.0.13            
## [77] survival_3.2-13             tibble_3.1.6               
## [79] GenomicAlignments_1.30.0    ellipsis_0.3.2

18 Support and acknowledgments

18.1 Github

If you have any issues, bug reports or feature requests please feel free to raise an issue on GitHub page.

18.2 Acknowledgements