Automating a Variant Calling Workflow

Last updated on 2024-11-17 | Edit this page

Estimated time: 45 minutes

Overview

Questions

  • How can I make my workflow more efficient and less error-prone?

Objectives

  • Write a shell script with multiple variables.
  • Incorporate a for loop into a shell script.

This lesson has been adapted from the original Data Carpentry - Wrangling Genomics to be run using the NeSI infrastructure as part of the Otago Bioinformatics Spring School instead of AWS.

What is a shell script?


You wrote a simple shell script in a previous lesson that we used to extract bad reads from our FASTQ files and put them into a new file.

Here is the script you wrote:

BASH

grep -B1 -A2 NNNNNNNNNN *.fastq > scripted_bad_reads.txt

echo "Script finished!"

That script was only two lines long, but shell scripts can be much more complicated than that and can be used to perform a large number of operations on one or many files. This saves you the effort of having to type each of those commands over for each of your data files and makes your work less error-prone and more reproducible. For example, the variant calling workflow we just carried out had about eight steps where we had to type a command into our terminal. Most of these commands were pretty long. If we wanted to do this for all six of our data files, that would be forty-eight steps. If we had 50 samples (a more realistic number), it would be 400 steps! You can see why we want to automate this.

We have also used for loops in previous lessons to iterate one or two commands over multiple input files. In these for loops, the filename was defined as a variable in the for statement, which enabled you to run the loop on multiple files. We will be using variable assignments like this in our new shell scripts.

Here is the for loop you wrote for unzipping .zip files:

BASH

$ for filename in *.zip
> do
> unzip $filename
> done

And here is the one you wrote for running Trimmomatic on all of our .fastq sample files:

BASH

$ for infile in *_1.fastq.gz
> do
>   base=$(basename ${infile} _1.fastq.gz)
>   trimmomatic PE ${infile} ${base}_2.fastq.gz \
>                ${base}_1.trim.fastq.gz ${base}_1un.trim.fastq.gz \
>                ${base}_2.trim.fastq.gz ${base}_2un.trim.fastq.gz \
>                SLIDINGWINDOW:4:20 MINLEN:25 ILLUMINACLIP:NexteraPE-PE.fa:2:40:15
> done

Notice that in this for loop, we used two variables, infile, which was defined in the for statement, and base, which was created from the filename during each iteration of the loop.

Creating variables

Within the Bash shell you can create variables at any time (as we did above, and during the ‘for’ loop lesson). Assign any name and the value using the assignment operator: ‘=’. You can check the current definition of your variable by typing into your script: echo $variable_name.

In this lesson, we will use two shell scripts to automate the variant calling analysis: one for FastQC analysis (including creating our summary file), and a second for the remaining variant calling. To write a script to run our FastQC analysis, we will take each of the commands we entered to run FastQC and process the output files and put them into a single file with a .sh extension. The .sh is not essential, but serves as a reminder to ourselves and to the computer that this is a shell script.

Analyzing quality with FastQC


We will use the command touch to create a new file where we will write our shell script. We will create this script in a new directory called scripts/. Previously, we used nano to create and open a new file. The command touch allows us to create a new file without opening that file.

BASH

$ mkdir -p ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/scripts
$ cd ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/scripts
$ touch read_qc.sh
$ ls

OUTPUT

read_qc.sh

We now have an empty file called read_qc.sh in our scripts/ directory. We will now open this file in nano and start building our script.

BASH

$ nano read_qc.sh

Enter the following pieces of code into your shell script (not into your terminal prompt).

Our first line will ensure that our script will exit if an error occurs, and is a good idea to include at the beginning of your scripts. The second line will move us into the untrimmed_fastq/ directory when we run our script.

OUTPUT

set -e
# load the needed modules
source ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/modload.sh

cd ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/untrimmed_fastq/

These next two lines will give us a status message to tell us that we are currently running FastQC, then will run FastQC on all of the files in our current directory with a .fastq extension.

OUTPUT

echo "Running FastQC ..."
fastqc *.fastq*

Our next line will create a new directory to hold our FastQC output files. Here we are using the -p option for mkdir again. It is a good idea to use this option in your shell scripts to avoid running into errors if you do not have the directory structure you think you do.

OUTPUT

mkdir -p ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/fastqc_untrimmed_reads

Our next three lines first give us a status message to tell us we are saving the results from FastQC, then moves all of the files with a .zip or a .html extension to the directory we just created for storing our FastQC results.

OUTPUT

echo "Saving FastQC results..."
mv *.zip ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/fastqc_untrimmed_reads/
mv *.html ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/fastqc_untrimmed_reads/

The next line moves us to the results directory where we have stored our output.

OUTPUT

cd ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/fastqc_untrimmed_reads/

The next five lines should look very familiar. First we give ourselves a status message to tell us that we are unzipping our ZIP files. Then we run our for loop to unzip all of the .zip files in this directory.

OUTPUT

echo "Unzipping..."
for filename in *.zip
    do
    unzip $filename
    done

Next we concatenate all of our summary files into a single output file, with a status message to remind ourselves that this is what we are doing.

OUTPUT

echo "Saving summary..."
cat */summary.txt > ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/docs/fastqc_summaries.txt

Using echo statements

We have used echo statements to add progress statements to our script. Our script will print these statements as it is running and therefore we will be able to see how far our script has progressed.

Your full shell script should now look like this:

OUTPUT

set -e

# load the needed modules
source ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/modload.sh

cd ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/untrimmed_fastq/

echo "Running FastQC ..."
fastqc *.fastq*

mkdir -p ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/fastqc_untrimmed_reads

echo "Saving FastQC results..."
mv *.zip ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/fastqc_untrimmed_reads/
mv *.html ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/fastqc_untrimmed_reads/

cd ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/fastqc_untrimmed_reads/

echo "Unzipping..."
for filename in *.zip
    do
    unzip $filename
    done

echo "Saving summary..."
cat */summary.txt > ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/docs/fastqc_summaries.txt

Save your file and exit nano. We can now run our script:

BASH

$ bash read_qc.sh

OUTPUT

Running FastQC ...
Started analysis of SRR2584866.fastq
Approx 5% complete for SRR2584866.fastq
Approx 10% complete for SRR2584866.fastq
Approx 15% complete for SRR2584866.fastq
Approx 20% complete for SRR2584866.fastq
Approx 25% complete for SRR2584866.fastq
.
.
.

For each of your sample files, FastQC will ask if you want to replace the existing version with a new version. This is because we have already run FastQC on this samples files and generated all of the outputs. We are now doing this again using our scripts. Go ahead and select A each time this message appears. It will appear once per sample file (six times total).

OUTPUT

replace SRR2584866_fastqc/Icons/fastqc_icon.png? [y]es, [n]o, [A]ll, [N]one, [r]ename:

Automating the rest of our variant calling workflow


We can extend these principles to the entire variant calling workflow. To do this, we will take all of the individual commands that we wrote before, put them into a single file, add variables so that the script knows to iterate through our input files and write to the appropriate output files. This is very similar to what we did with our read_qc.sh script, but will be a bit more complex.

Download the script from here. Download to ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/scripts.

BASH

curl -O https://otagobioinformaticsspringschool.github.io/wrangling-genomics-nesi/files/run_variant_calling_nesi.sh

Our variant calling workflow has the following steps:

  1. Index the reference genome for use by bwa and samtools.
  2. Align reads to reference genome.
  3. Convert the format of the alignment to sorted BAM, with some intermediate steps.
  4. Calculate the read coverage of positions in the genome.
  5. Detect the single nucleotide variants (SNVs).
  6. Filter and report the SNVs in VCF (variant calling format).

Let’s go through this script together:

BASH

$ cd ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/scripts
$ less run_variant_calling_nesi.sh

The script should look like this:

OUTPUT

set -e

# load the needed modules
source ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/modload.sh

cd ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results

genome=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/ref_genome/ecoli_rel606.fasta

bwa index $genome

mkdir -p sam bam bcf vcf

for fq1 in ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/trimmed_fastq_small/*_1.trim.sub.fastq
    do
    echo "working with file $fq1"

    base=$(basename $fq1 _1.trim.sub.fastq)
    echo "base name is $base"

    fq1=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/trimmed_fastq_small/${base}_1.trim.sub.fastq
    fq2=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/trimmed_fastq_small/${base}_2.trim.sub.fastq
    sam=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/sam/${base}.aligned.sam
    bam=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/bam/${base}.aligned.bam
    sorted_bam=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/bam/${base}.aligned.sorted.bam
    raw_bcf=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/bcf/${base}_raw.bcf
    variants=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/bcf/${base}_variants.vcf
    final_variants=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/vcf/${base}_final_variants.vcf

    bwa mem $genome $fq1 $fq2 > $sam
    samtools view -S -b $sam > $bam
    samtools sort -o $sorted_bam $bam
    samtools index $sorted_bam
    bcftools mpileup -O b -o $raw_bcf -f $genome $sorted_bam
    bcftools call --ploidy 1 -m -v -o $variants $raw_bcf
    vcfutils.pl varFilter $variants > $final_variants
done

Now, we will go through each line in the script before running it.

First, notice that we change our working directory so that we can create new results subdirectories in the right location.

OUTPUT

cd ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results

Next we tell our script where to find the reference genome by assigning the genome variable to the path to our reference genome:

OUTPUT

genome=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/ref_genome/ecoli_rel606.fasta

Next we index our reference genome for BWA:

OUTPUT

bwa index $genome

And create the directory structure to store our results in:

OUTPUT

mkdir -p sam bam bcf vcf

Then, we use a loop to run the variant calling workflow on each of our FASTQ files. The full list of commands within the loop will be executed once for each of the FASTQ files in the data/trimmed_fastq_small/ directory. We will include a few echo statements to give us status updates on our progress.

The first thing we do is assign the name of the FASTQ file we are currently working with to a variable called fq1 and tell the script to echo the filename back to us so we can check which file we are on.

BASH

for fq1 in ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/trimmed_fastq_small/*_1.trim.sub.fastq
    do
    echo "working with file $fq1"

We then extract the base name of the file (excluding the path and .fastq extension) and assign it to a new variable called base.

BASH

    base=$(basename $fq1 _1.trim.sub.fastq)
    echo "base name is $base"

We can use the base variable to access both the base_1.fastq and base_2.fastq input files, and create variables to store the names of our output files. This makes the script easier to read because we do not need to type out the full name of each of the files: instead, we use the base variable, but add a different extension (e.g. .sam, .bam) for each file produced by our workflow.

BASH

    #input fastq files
    fq1=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/trimmed_fastq_small/${base}_1.trim.sub.fastq
    fq2=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/trimmed_fastq_small/${base}_2.trim.sub.fastq

    # output files
    sam=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/sam/${base}.aligned.sam
    bam=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/bam/${base}.aligned.bam
    sorted_bam=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/bam/${base}.aligned.sorted.bam
    raw_bcf=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/bcf/${base}_raw.bcf
    variants=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/bcf/${base}_variants.vcf
    final_variants=~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/vcf/${base}_final_variants.vcf

And finally, the actual workflow steps:

  1. align the reads to the reference genome and output a .sam file:

OUTPUT

    bwa mem $genome $fq1 $fq2 > $sam
  1. convert the SAM file to BAM format:

OUTPUT

    samtools view -S -b $sam > $bam
  1. sort the BAM file:

OUTPUT

    samtools sort -o $sorted_bam $bam
  1. index the BAM file for display purposes:

OUTPUT

    samtools index $sorted_bam
  1. calculate the read coverage of positions in the genome:

OUTPUT

    bcftools mpileup -O b -o $raw_bcf -f $genome $sorted_bam
  1. call SNVs with bcftools:

OUTPUT

    bcftools call --ploidy 1 -m -v -o $variants $raw_bcf
  1. filter and report the SNVs in variant calling format (VCF):

OUTPUT

    vcfutils.pl varFilter $variants  > $final_variants

Exercise

It is a good idea to add comments to your code so that you (or a collaborator) can make sense of what you did later. Look through your existing script. Discuss with a neighbor where you should add comments. Add comments (anything following a # character will be interpreted as a comment, bash will not try to run these comments as code).

Now we can run our script:

BASH

$ bash run_variant_calling_nesi.sh

Exercise

The samples we just performed variant calling on are part of the long-term evolution experiment introduced at the beginning of our variant calling workflow. From the metadata table, we know that SRR2589044 was from generation 5000, SRR2584863 was from generation 15000, and SRR2584866 was from generation 50000. How did the number of mutations per sample change over time? Examine the metadata table. What is one reason the number of mutations may have changed the way they did?

Hint: You can find a copy of the output files for the subsampled trimmed FASTQ file variant calling in the ~/.solutions/wrangling-solutions/variant_calling_auto/ directory.

BASH

$ for infile in ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/results/vcf/*_final_variants.vcf
> do
>     echo ${infile}
>     grep -v "#" ${infile} | wc -l
> done

For SRR2589044 from generation 5000 there were 10 mutations, for SRR2584863 from generation 15000 there were 25 mutations, and SRR2584866 from generation 766 mutations. In the last generation, a hypermutable phenotype had evolved, causing this strain to have more mutations.

Bonus exercise

If you have time after completing the previous exercise, use run_variant_calling_nesi.sh to run the variant calling pipeline on the full-sized trimmed FASTQ files. You should have a copy of these already in ~/obss_2024/genomic_dna/data/trimmed_fastq, but if you do not, there is a copy in ~/.solutions/wrangling-solutions/trimmed_fastq. Does the number of variants change per sample?

Key Points

  • We can combine multiple commands into a shell script to automate a workflow.
  • Use echo statements within your scripts to get an automated progress update.