I have now implemented VCF tracks for IGV, supporting both a local VCF object read and filtered by the VariantAnnotation package, and a remote webserver-hosted vcf file.
In normal use I expect (and recommend) that the local VCF object will be relatively small (< 1Mb, < 50 samples - or some tradeoff of those approximate numbers), and that the genome scale vcf file is accompanied by an index. I am now turning to annotation tracks: bed, bed9, gff, gff3, gtf. rtracklayer provides a good set of importers for these formats, and S4 classes to represent them (apparently all are subclasses of GenomicRanges): BEDFile (3 required fields, up to 9 optional fields - https://genome.ucsc.edu/FAQ/FAQformat.html#format1) GFFFile (includes gff, gff3, gtf) I propose to support four different representations of these data in R: data.frame the two rtracklayer classes a url pointing to a web-hosted and indexed annotation The AnnotationTrack constructor accepts all three in the “annotation” parameter, a simple version of which (with many parameters defaulted) is: track <- AnnotationTrack(trackName, annotation, color, displayMode) The annotation parameter will be inspected by the constructor: is it a data.frame? a BEDFile? a GFFFile? a url? The local data is reformatted as needed into a file with a format igv.js understands - native bed and gff text files - then passed to igv as a local url. Remote urls are transmitted without change. Does this sound right? If you have a minute to comment, now is a good time to offer critique and suggestions on annotation tracks. Next up after the AnnotationTrack class will be alignment (bam) tracks and, if I get to it before package submission data, a “seg” track for segmented copy number data. Last week Gabe asked: > If myigv represents the IGV session/state, then add_track(myigv, vcfobj) > could call down to add_track(myigv,VariantTrack(vcf)) so you'd get the > default behaviors. you could also support add_track(myigv, vcf, title = > "bla", homVarColor = "whateverman") which would call down to add_track(myigv, > VariantTrack(vcf, title = "bla", homVarColor = "whateverman”)) > > This is easy to do (I'm assume the IGVSession class name but replace it with > whatever class add_track is endomorphic in...): > setMethod("add_track", signature = c("IGVSession", "VCF"), function(igv, > track, ...) add_track(igv, VariantTrack(track, ...))) > setMethod("add_track", signature = c("IGVSession", "BAM", function(igv, > track, ...) add_track(igv, AlignmentTrack(track, ...))) > > This would, as Michael points out, give you the default values of the > parameter when you just call add_track(myigv, vcfobj) I hope I don’t sound disrespectful by describing these shorter methods as only syntactic simplifications with a little S4 dispatch thrown in. They have value, for sure, but are they not just a relatively thin layer on top of the classes I am writing now? *If* that description is accurate, then I’d rather consider adding them later, after the nuts and bolts and basic operations are all written, tested, and subjected to a few months of user QC. I admit that I also prefer the greater operational clarity which for me, with my plodding brain, comes from using by explicit data types and explicit constructors.) - Paul > On Mar 14, 2018, at 1:05 PM, Michael Lawrence <lawrence.mich...@gene.com> > wrote: > > Agreed about encapsulating plot parameters. I was thinking in terms of user > convenience, relying on defaults. > > On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 12:40 PM, Paul Shannon > <paul.thurmond.shan...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Michael, > > Set me straight if I got this wrong. You suggest: > > > There should be no need to explicitly construct a track; just rely on > > dispatch and class semantics, i.e., passing a VCF object to add_track() > > would create a variant track automatically. > > But wouldn’t > > displayTrack(vcf) > > preclude any easy specification of options - which vary across track types - > which are straightforward, easily managed and checked, by a set of track > constructors? > > Two examples: > > displayTrack(VariantTrack(vcf, title=“mef2c eqtl”, height=“300”, > homrefColor=“lightGray”, > homVarColor=“darkRed”, hetVarColor=“lightRed”)) > > displayTrack(AlignmentTrack(x, title=“bam 32”, viewAsPairs=TRUE, > insertionColor=“black”)) > > > So I suggest that the visualization of tracks has lots of track-type-specific > settings which the user will want to control, and which would be messy to > handle with an open-ended set of optional “…” args to a dispatch-capable > single “displayTrack” method. > > - Paul > _______________________________________________ Bioc-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioc-devel