Package: Spectra
Authors: RforMassSpectrometry Package Maintainer [cre],
Laurent Gatto [aut] (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1520-2268), Johannes Rainer
[aut] (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6977-7147), Sebastian Gibb
[aut] (https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7406-4443), Philippine
Louail [aut] (https://orcid.org/0009-0007-5429-6846), Jan Stanstrup
[ctb] (https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0541-7369), Nir Shahaf
[ctb], Mar Garcia-Aloy [ctb] (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1330-6610)
Last modified: 2024-11-21 07:21:44.269732
Compiled: Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024
The Spectra
package provides a scalable and flexible infrastructure to represent,
retrieve and handle mass spectrometry (MS) data. The
Spectra
object provides the user with a single standardized
interface to access and manipulate MS data while supporting, through the
concept of exchangeable backends, a large variety of different
ways to store and retrieve mass spectrometry data. Such backends range
from mzML/mzXML/CDF files, simple flat files, or database systems.
This vignette provides general examples and descriptions for the Spectra package. Additional information and tutorials are available, such as SpectraTutorials, MetaboAnnotationTutorials, or also in (Rainer et al. 2022). For information on how to handle and (parallel) process large-scale data sets see the Large-scale data handling and processing with Spectra vignette.
The package can be installed with the BiocManager package.
To install BiocManager use
install.packages("BiocManager")
and, after that,
BiocManager::install("Spectra")
to install
Spectra.
Mass spectrometry data in Spectra
objects can be thought
of as a list of individual spectra, with each spectrum having a set of
variables associated with it. Besides core spectra variables
(such as MS level or retention time) an arbitrary number of optional
variables can be assigned to a spectrum. The core spectra variables all
have their own accessor method and it is guaranteed that a value is
returned by it (or NA
if the information is not available).
The core variables and their data type are (alphabetically ordered):
integer(1)
: the index of
acquisition of a spectrum during a MS run.logical(1)
: whether the spectrum is
in profile or centroid mode.numeric(1)
: collision energy
used to create an MSn spectrum.character(1)
: the origin
of the spectrum’s data, e.g. the mzML file from which it was read.character(1)
: the (current)
storage location of the spectrum data. This value depends on the backend
used to handle and provide the data. For an in-memory backend
like the MsBackendDataFrame
this will be
"<memory>"
, for an on-disk backend such as the
MsBackendHdf5Peaks
it will be the name of the HDF5 file
where the spectrum’s peak data is stored.numeric
: intensity values for the
spectrum’s peaks.numeric(1)
: lower m/z
for the isolation window in which the (MSn) spectrum was measured.numeric(1)
: the target
m/z for the isolation window in which the (MSn) spectrum was
measured.numeric(1)
: upper m/z
for the isolation window in which the (MSn) spectrum was measured.integer(1)
: the MS level of the
spectrum.numeric
: the m/z values for the spectrum’s
peaks.integer(1)
: the polarity of the
spectrum (0
and 1
representing negative and
positive polarity, respectively).integer(1)
: the scan (acquisition)
number of the precursor for an MSn spectrum.integer(1)
: the charge of the
precursor of an MSn spectrum.numeric(1)
: the intensity
of the precursor of an MSn spectrum.numeric(1)
: the m/z of the
precursor of an MSn spectrum.numeric(1)
: the retention time of a
spectrum.integer(1)
: the index of a spectrum
within a (raw) file.logical(1)
: whether the spectrum was
smoothed.For details on the individual variables and their getter/setter
function see the help for Spectra
(?Spectra
).
Also note that these variables are suggested, but not required to
characterize a spectrum. Also, some only make sense for MSn, but not for
MS1 spectra.
Spectra
objectsThe simplest way to create a Spectra
object is by
defining a DataFrame
with the corresponding spectra data
(using the corresponding spectra variable names as column names) and
passing that to the Spectra
constructor function. Below we
create such an object for a set of 3 spectra providing their MS level,
olarity but also additional annotations such as their ID in HMDB (human metabolome database) and their
name. The m/z and intensity values for each spectrum have to be provided
as a list
of numeric
values.
library(Spectra)
spd <- DataFrame(
msLevel = c(2L, 2L, 2L),
polarity = c(1L, 1L, 1L),
id = c("HMDB0000001", "HMDB0000001", "HMDB0001847"),
name = c("1-Methylhistidine", "1-Methylhistidine", "Caffeine"))
## Assign m/z and intensity values.
spd$mz <- list(
c(109.2, 124.2, 124.5, 170.16, 170.52),
c(83.1, 96.12, 97.14, 109.14, 124.08, 125.1, 170.16),
c(56.0494, 69.0447, 83.0603, 109.0395, 110.0712,
111.0551, 123.0429, 138.0662, 195.0876))
spd$intensity <- list(
c(3.407, 47.494, 3.094, 100.0, 13.240),
c(6.685, 4.381, 3.022, 16.708, 100.0, 4.565, 40.643),
c(0.459, 2.585, 2.446, 0.508, 8.968, 0.524, 0.974, 100.0, 40.994))
sps <- Spectra(spd)
sps
## MSn data (Spectra) with 3 spectra in a MsBackendMemory backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 2 NA NA
## 2 2 NA NA
## 3 2 NA NA
## ... 18 more variables/columns.
Alternatively, it is possible to import spectra data from mass
spectrometry raw files in mzML/mzXML or CDF format. Below we create a
Spectra
object from two mzML files and define to use a
MsBackendMzR
backend to store the data (note that
this requires the mzR package
to be installed). This backend, specifically designed for raw MS data,
keeps only a subset of spectra variables in memory while reading the m/z
and intensity values from the original data files only on demand. See
section Backends for more details on backends
and their properties.
fls <- dir(system.file("sciex", package = "msdata"), full.names = TRUE)
sps_sciex <- Spectra(fls, source = MsBackendMzR())
sps_sciex
## MSn data (Spectra) with 1862 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 1 0.280 1
## 2 1 0.559 2
## 3 1 0.838 3
## 4 1 1.117 4
## 5 1 1.396 5
## ... ... ... ...
## 1858 1 258.636 927
## 1859 1 258.915 928
## 1860 1 259.194 929
## 1861 1 259.473 930
## 1862 1 259.752 931
## ... 33 more variables/columns.
##
## file(s):
## 20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML
## 20171016_POOL_POS_3_105-134.mzML
The Spectra
object sps_sciex
allows now to
access spectra data from 1862 MS1 spectra and uses
MsBackendMzR
as backend (the Spectra
object
sps
created in the previous code block uses the default
MsBackendMemory
).
As detailed above Spectra
objects can contain an
arbitrary number of properties of a spectrum (so called spectra
variables). The available variables can be listed with the
spectraVariables()
method:
## [1] "msLevel" "rtime"
## [3] "acquisitionNum" "scanIndex"
## [5] "dataStorage" "dataOrigin"
## [7] "centroided" "smoothed"
## [9] "polarity" "precScanNum"
## [11] "precursorMz" "precursorIntensity"
## [13] "precursorCharge" "collisionEnergy"
## [15] "isolationWindowLowerMz" "isolationWindowTargetMz"
## [17] "isolationWindowUpperMz" "id"
## [19] "name"
## [1] "msLevel" "rtime"
## [3] "acquisitionNum" "scanIndex"
## [5] "dataStorage" "dataOrigin"
## [7] "centroided" "smoothed"
## [9] "polarity" "precScanNum"
## [11] "precursorMz" "precursorIntensity"
## [13] "precursorCharge" "collisionEnergy"
## [15] "isolationWindowLowerMz" "isolationWindowTargetMz"
## [17] "isolationWindowUpperMz" "peaksCount"
## [19] "totIonCurrent" "basePeakMZ"
## [21] "basePeakIntensity" "ionisationEnergy"
## [23] "lowMZ" "highMZ"
## [25] "mergedScan" "mergedResultScanNum"
## [27] "mergedResultStartScanNum" "mergedResultEndScanNum"
## [29] "injectionTime" "filterString"
## [31] "spectrumId" "ionMobilityDriftTime"
## [33] "scanWindowLowerLimit" "scanWindowUpperLimit"
The two Spectra
contain a different set of variables:
besides "msLevel"
, "polarity"
,
"id"
and "name"
, that were specified for the
Spectra
object sps
, it contains more variables
such as "rtime"
, "acquisitionNum"
and
"scanIndex"
. These are part of the core variables
defining a spectrum and for all of these accessor methods exist. Below
we use msLevel()
and rtime()
to access the MS
levels and retention times for the spectra in sps
.
## [1] 2 2 2
## [1] NA NA NA
We did not specify retention times for the spectra in
sps
thus NA
is returned for them. The
Spectra
object sps_sciex
contains many more
variables, all of which were extracted from the mzML files. Below we
extract the retention times for the first spectra in the object.
## [1] 0.280 0.559 0.838 1.117 1.396 1.675
Note that in addition to the accessor functions it is also possible
to use $
to extract a specific spectra variable. To extract
the name of the compounds in sps
we can use
sps$name
, or, to extract the MS levels
sps$msLevel
.
## [1] "1-Methylhistidine" "1-Methylhistidine" "Caffeine"
## [1] 2 2 2
We could also replace specific spectra variables using either the
dedicated method or $
. Below we specify that all spectra in
sps
represent centroided data.
## [1] TRUE TRUE TRUE
The $
operator can also be used to add arbitrary new
spectra variables to a Spectra
object. Below we add the
SPLASH key to each of the spectra.
sps$splash <- c(
"splash10-00di-0900000000-037d24a7d65676b7e356",
"splash10-00di-0900000000-03e99316bd6c098f5d11",
"splash10-000i-0900000000-9af60e39c843cb715435")
This new spectra variable will now be listed as an additional
variable in the result of the spectraVariables()
function
and we can directly access its content with sps$splash
.
Each spectrum can have a different number of mass peaks, each
consisting of a mass-to-charge (m/z) and associated intensity value.
These can be extracted with the mz()
or
intensity()
functions, each of which return a
list
of numeric
values.
## NumericList of length 3
## [[1]] 109.2 124.2 124.5 170.16 170.52
## [[2]] 83.1 96.12 97.14 109.14 124.08 125.1 170.16
## [[3]] 56.0494 69.0447 83.0603 109.0395 110.0712 111.0551 123.0429 138.0662 195.0876
## NumericList of length 3
## [[1]] 3.407 47.494 3.094 100 13.24
## [[2]] 6.685 4.381 3.022 16.708 100 4.565 40.643
## [[3]] 0.459 2.585 2.446 0.508 8.968 0.524 0.974 100 40.994
Peak data can also be extracted with the peaksData()
function that returns a list of numerical matrices with peak
variables such as m/z and intensity values. Which peak variables
are available in a Spectra
object can be determined with
the peaksVariables()
function.
## [1] "mz" "intensity"
These can be passed to the peaksData()
function with
parameter columns
to extract the peak variables of
interest. By default peaksData()
extracts m/z and intensity
values.
## mz intensity
## [1,] 109.20 3.407
## [2,] 124.20 47.494
## [3,] 124.50 3.094
## [4,] 170.16 100.000
## [5,] 170.52 13.240
Note that we would get the same result by using the as()
method to coerce a Spectra
object to a list
or
SimpleList
:
## List of length 3
The spectraData()
function returns a
DataFrame
with the full data for each spectrum (except m/z
and intensity values), or with selected spectra variables (which can be
specified with the columns
parameter). Below we extract the
spectra data for variables "msLevel"
, "id"
and
"name"
.
## DataFrame with 3 rows and 3 columns
## msLevel id name
## <integer> <character> <character>
## 1 2 HMDB0000001 1-Methylhistidine
## 2 2 HMDB0000001 1-Methylhistidine
## 3 2 HMDB0001847 Caffeine
Spectra
are one-dimensional objects storing spectra,
even from different files or samples, in a single list. Specific
variables have thus to be used to define the originating file from which
they were extracted or the sample in which they were measured. The
data origin of each spectrum can be extracted with the
dataOrigin()
function. For sps
, the
Spectra
created from a DataFrame
, this will be
NA
because we did not specify the data origin:
## [1] NA NA NA
dataOrigin
for sps_sciex
, the
Spectra
which was initialized with data from mzML files, in
contrast, returns the originating file names:
## [1] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
## [3] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
## [5] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
The current data storage location of a spectrum can be retrieved with
the dataStorage
variable, which will return an arbitrary
string for Spectra
that use an in-memory backend or the
file where the data is stored for on-disk backends:
## [1] "<memory>" "<memory>" "<memory>"
## [1] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
## [3] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
## [5] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
Certain backends (such as the MsBackendMemory
and
MsBackendDataFrame
) support also additional peaks
variables. At present, these must already be present when the backend
gets initialized. In future a dedicated function allowing to add peaks
variables will be available. Below we thus first extract the full data
(including peaks variables) from the sps
spectra object and
add a column "peak_anno"
with peak annotations for
each individual peak. Importantly, for peak variables, a value needs to
be assigned to each individual peak, even it it is NA
(the
lengths()
of the new peak variable must match
lengths()
of mz
or intensity
,
i.e. the number of peaks per spectrum).
## Extract the full data from a spectrum
spd <- spectraData(sps, columns = union(spectraVariables(sps),
peaksVariables(sps)))
## Add a new column with a *annotation* for each peak
spd$peak_anno <- list(c("a", NA_character_, "b", "c", "d"),
c("a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g"),
c("a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g", "h", "i"))
## lengths have to match:
lengths(spd$peak_anno)
## [1] 5 7 9
## [1] 5 7 9
The parameter peaksVariables()
(currently only available
for the backendInitialize()
method of
MsBackendMemory
and MsBackendDataFrame
) allows
to define which of the columns from an input data contain peaks
variables (in our case "mz"
, "intensity"
and
the additional "peak_anno"
column).
sps2 <- Spectra(spd, backend = MsBackendMemory(),
peaksVariables = c("mz", "intensity", "peak_anno"))
peaksVariables(sps2)
## [1] "mz" "intensity" "peak_anno"
Full peak data can be extracted with the peaksData()
function that has a second parameter columns
allowing to
define which peak variables to return. Below we extract the peak data
for the second spectrum.
## mz intensity peak_anno
## 1 83.10 6.685 a
## 2 96.12 4.381 b
## 3 97.14 3.022 c
## 4 109.14 16.708 d
## 5 124.08 100.000 e
## 6 125.10 4.565 f
## 7 170.16 40.643 g
We can also use the peaksData()
function to extract the
values for individual peak variables.
## peak_anno
## 1 a
## 2 <NA>
## 3 b
## 4 c
## 5 d
## peak_anno
## 1 a
## 2 b
## 3 c
## 4 d
## 5 e
## 6 f
## 7 g
Peak variables can also be extracted using the $
method:
## [[1]]
## [1] "a" NA "b" "c" "d"
##
## [[2]]
## [1] "a" "b" "c" "d" "e" "f" "g"
##
## [[3]]
## [1] "a" "b" "c" "d" "e" "f" "g" "h" "i"
Similar to spectra variables it is also possible to replace values
for existing peaks variables using the
$<-
function.
Various functions are available to filter, subset and merge
Spectra
objects. These can be generally subdivided into
functions that subset or filter spectra data and operations
that filter mass peak data. A third category of function allows
to aggregate data within a Spectra
or to merge and combine
multiple Spectra
objects into one. Functions of the various
categories are described in the following subsections. Please refer to
the function’s documentation for more details and information.
These functions comprise subset operations that reduce the total
number of spectra in a Spectra
object as well as filter
functions that reduce the content of the Spectra
’s spectra
data (i.e. the content of its spectraVariables()
). These
functions thus don’t change or affect the mass peaks data of the
Spectra
’s individual spectra.
[
: operation to reduce a Spectra
object to
selected elements.dropNaSpectraVariables()
: drops
spectraVariables()
that contain only missing values. The
function returns a Spectra
object with the same number of
elements, but with eventually fewer spectra variables.filterAcquisitionNum()
: retains spectra with certain
acquisition numbers.filterDataOrigin()
: subsets to spectra from specific
origins.filterDataStorage()
: subsets to spectra from certain
data storage files.filterEmptySpectra()
: removes spectra without mass
peaks.filterIsolationWindow()
: keeps spectra with the
provided mz
in their isolation window (m/z range).filterMsLevel()
: filters by MS level.filterPolarity()
: filters by polarity.filterPrecursorCharge()
: retains (MSn) spectra with
specified precursor charge(s).filterPrecursorIsotopes()
: identifies precursor ions
(from fragment spectra) that could represent isotopes of the same
molecule. For each of these spectra groups only the spectrum of the
monoisotopic precursor ion is returned. MS1 spectra are returned without
filtering.filterPrecursorMaxIntensity()
: filters spectra keeping,
for groups of spectra with similar precursor m/z, the one spectrum with
the highest precursor intensity. All MS1 spectra are returned without
filtering.filterPrecursorMzRange()
: retains (MSn) spectra with a
precursor m/z within the provided m/z range.filterPrecursorMzValues(()
: retains (MSn) spectra with
precursor m/z value matching the provided value(s) considering also a
tolerance
and ppm
.filterPrecursorScan()
: retains (parent and children)
scans of an acquisition number.filterRanges()
: filters a Spectra
object
based on (multiple) user defined numeric ranges for one or more
available (numeric) spectra variables.filterRt()
: filters based on retention time range.filterValues()
: filters a Spectra
object
based on similarities of numeric values of one or more
available spectra variables.selectSpectraVariables()
: reduces the (spectra) data
within the object to the selected spectra variables.These function filter or aggregate the mass peak data
(peaksData()
) of each spectrum in a Spectra
without changing the total number of spectra.
combinePeaks()
: groups peaks within each
spectrum based on similarity of their m/z values and combines
these into a single peak per peak group.deisotopeSpectra()
: deisotopes each individual spectrum
keeping only the monoisotopic peak for peaks groups of potential
isotopologues.filterFourierTransformArtefacts()
: removes (Orbitrap)
fast fourier transform artifact peaks from spectra.filterIntensity()
: filter each spectrum keeping only
peaks with intensities meeting certain criteria.filterMzRange()
: filters mass peaks keeping (or
removing) those with an m/z within the provided m/z range.filterMzValues()
: filters mass peaks within each
spectrum keeping (or removing) those with an m/z matching the provided
value(s).filterPeaksRanges()
: filters mass peaks using any set
of range-based filters on numeric spectra or peaks variables.filterPrecursorPeaks()
: removes peaks with either an
m/z value matching the precursor m/z of the respective spectrum (with
parameter mz = "=="
) or peaks with an m/z value larger or
equal to the precursor m/z (with parameter
mz = ">="
).reduceSpectra()
: filters individual spectra keeping
only the largest peak for groups of peaks with similar m/z values.c()
: combine several Spectra
into a single
Spectra
object.combineSpectra()
: allows to combine the MS data from
sets of spectra into a single spectrum per set. Thus, instead of
filtering the data, this function aggregates it.joinSpectraData()
: merge a DataFrame
to
the existing spectra data.split()
: splits the Spectra
object based
on a provided grouping factor.In this example, we use the filterValues()
function to
retain spectra with a base peak m/z close to 100 (+/- 30 ppm) and a
retention time around 230 (+/- 5 s).
sps_sub <- filterValues(sps_sciex, spectraVariables = c("basePeakMZ", "rtime"),
values = c(123.089, 230), tolerance = c(0,5),
ppm = c(30, 0), match = "all")
length(sps_sub)
## [1] 72
Then, we demonstrate the usage of the filterRanges()
function to filter spectra based on ranges of values for variables such
as base peak m/z, peak count, and retention time.
sps_ranges <- filterRanges(sps_sciex,
spectraVariables = c("basePeakMZ","peaksCount",
"rtime"),
ranges = c(123.09,124, 3500, 3520, 259, 260),
match = "all")
length(sps_ranges)
## [1] 1
Only one spectrum matches all the ranges. Another option for
filterValues()
and filterRanges()
is to use
the parameter match = "any"
, which retains spectra that
match any one of the conditions instead of having to match all of them.
Let’s run the code once again but change the match parameter this
time:
sps_ranges <- filterRanges(sps_sciex,
spectraVariables = c("basePeakMZ",
"peaksCount", "rtime"),
ranges = c(123.09, 124, 3500, 3520, 259, 260),
match = "any")
length(sps_ranges)
## [1] 473
We can see many more spectra passed the filtering step this time.
In the example below we use specific functions to select all spectra measured in the second mzML file and subsequently filter them to retain spectra measured between 175 and 189 seconds in the measurement run.
fls <- unique(dataOrigin(sps_sciex))
file_2 <- filterDataOrigin(sps_sciex, dataOrigin = fls[2])
length(file_2)
## [1] 931
## [1] 50
In addition, Spectra
support also subsetting with
[
. Below we perform the filtering above with [
-based subsetting.
## MSn data (Spectra) with 50 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 1 175.212 628
## 2 1 175.491 629
## 3 1 175.770 630
## 4 1 176.049 631
## 5 1 176.328 632
## ... ... ... ...
## 46 1 187.768 673
## 47 1 188.047 674
## 48 1 188.326 675
## 49 1 188.605 676
## 50 1 188.884 677
## ... 33 more variables/columns.
##
## file(s):
## 20171016_POOL_POS_3_105-134.mzML
The equivalent using filter function is shown below, with the added benefit that the filtering is recorded in the processing slot.
## MSn data (Spectra) with 50 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 1 175.212 628
## 2 1 175.491 629
## 3 1 175.770 630
## 4 1 176.049 631
## 5 1 176.328 632
## ... ... ... ...
## 46 1 187.768 673
## 47 1 188.047 674
## 48 1 188.326 675
## 49 1 188.605 676
## 50 1 188.884 677
## ... 33 more variables/columns.
##
## file(s):
## 20171016_POOL_POS_3_105-134.mzML
## Processing:
## Filter: select data origin(s) /github/workspace/pkglib/msdata/sciex/20171016_POOL_POS_3_105-134.mzML [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
## Filter: select retention time [175..189] on MS level(s) 1 [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
Note that the use of the filter functions might be more efficient for some backends, depending on their implementation, (e.g. database-based backends could translate the filter function into a SQL condition to perform the subsetting already within the database).
Multiple Spectra
objects can also be combined into a
single Spectra
with the c()
or the
concatenateSpectra()
function. The resulting
Spectra
object will contain an union of the spectra
variables of the individual objects. Below we combine the
Spectra
object sps
with an additional object
containing another MS2 spectrum for Caffeine.
caf_df <- DataFrame(msLevel = 2L, name = "Caffeine",
id = "HMDB0001847",
instrument = "Agilent 1200 RRLC; Agilent 6520 QTOF",
splash = "splash10-0002-0900000000-413259091ba7edc46b87",
centroided = TRUE)
caf_df$mz <- list(c(110.0710, 138.0655, 138.1057, 138.1742, 195.9864))
caf_df$intensity <- list(c(3.837, 32.341, 0.84, 0.534, 100))
caf <- Spectra(caf_df)
Next we combine the two objects.
## MSn data (Spectra) with 4 spectra in a MsBackendMemory backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 2 NA NA
## 2 2 NA NA
## 3 2 NA NA
## 4 2 NA NA
## ... 20 more variables/columns.
## Processing:
## Merge 2 Spectra into one [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
The resulting object contains now the data for all 4 MS2 spectra and an union of all spectra variables from both objects.
## [1] "msLevel" "rtime"
## [3] "acquisitionNum" "scanIndex"
## [5] "dataStorage" "dataOrigin"
## [7] "centroided" "smoothed"
## [9] "polarity" "precScanNum"
## [11] "precursorMz" "precursorIntensity"
## [13] "precursorCharge" "collisionEnergy"
## [15] "isolationWindowLowerMz" "isolationWindowTargetMz"
## [17] "isolationWindowUpperMz" "id"
## [19] "name" "splash"
## [21] "instrument"
The second object had an additional spectra variable
instrument that was not present in sps
and all the
spectra in this object will thus get a value of NA
for this
variable.
## [1] NA
## [2] NA
## [3] NA
## [4] "Agilent 1200 RRLC; Agilent 6520 QTOF"
Sometimes not all spectra variables might be required (e.g. also
because many of them are empty). This might be specifically interesting
also for Spectra
containing the data from very large
experiments, because it can significantly reduce the object’s size in
memory. In such cases the selectSpectraVariables()
function
can be used to retain only specified spectra variables.
Some analyses require manipulation of the mass peak data (i.e. the
m/z and/or intensity values). One example would be to remove all peaks
from a spectrum that have an intensity lower than a certain threshold.
Below we perform such an operation with the
replaceIntensitiesBelow()
function to replace peak
intensities below 10 in each spectrum in sps
with a value
of 0.
As a result intensities below 10 were set to 0 for all peaks.
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 0 47.494 0 100 13.24
## [[2]] 0 0 0 16.708 100 0 40.643
## [[3]] 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 40.994
## [[4]] 0 32.341 0 0 100
Zero-intensity peaks (and peaks with missing intensities) can then be
removed with the filterIntensity()
function specifying a
lower required intensity level or optionally also an upper intensity
limit.
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 47.494 100 13.24
## [[2]] 16.708 100 40.643
## [[3]] 100 40.994
## [[4]] 32.341 100
The filterIntensity()
supports also a user-provided
function to be passed with parameter intensity
which would
allow e.g. to remove peaks smaller than the median peak intensity of a
spectrum. See examples in the ?filterIntensity
help page
for details.
Note that any data manipulations on Spectra
objects are
not immediately applied to the peak data. They are added to a so called
processing queue which is applied each time peak data is
accessed (with the peaksData()
, mz()
or
intensity()
functions). Thanks to this processing queue
data manipulation operations are also possible for read-only
backends (e.g. mzML-file based backends or database-based backends). The
information about the number of such processing steps can be seen below
(next to Lazy evaluation queue).
## MSn data (Spectra) with 4 spectra in a MsBackendMemory backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 2 NA NA
## 2 2 NA NA
## 3 2 NA NA
## 4 2 NA NA
## ... 20 more variables/columns.
## Lazy evaluation queue: 2 processing step(s)
## Processing:
## Merge 2 Spectra into one [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
## Signal <= 10 in MS level(s) 2 set to 0 [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
## Remove peaks with intensities outside [0.1, Inf] in spectra of MS level(s) 2. [Thu Nov 21 07:24:08 2024]
It is possible to add also custom functions to the processing queue
of a Spectra
object. Such a function must take a peaks
matrix as its first argument, have ...
in the function
definition and must return a peaks matrix (a peaks matrix is a numeric
two-column matrix with the first column containing the peaks’ m/z values
and the second the corresponding intensities). Below we define a
function that divides the intensities of each peak by a value which can
be passed with argument y
.
## Define a function that takes a matrix as input, divides the second
## column by parameter y and returns it. Note that ... is required in
## the function's definition.
divide_intensities <- function(x, y, ...) {
x[, 2] <- x[, 2] / y
x
}
## Add the function to the procesing queue
sps_2 <- addProcessing(sps_rep, divide_intensities, y = 2)
sps_2
## MSn data (Spectra) with 4 spectra in a MsBackendMemory backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 2 NA NA
## 2 2 NA NA
## 3 2 NA NA
## 4 2 NA NA
## ... 20 more variables/columns.
## Lazy evaluation queue: 3 processing step(s)
## Processing:
## Merge 2 Spectra into one [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
## Signal <= 10 in MS level(s) 2 set to 0 [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
## Remove peaks with intensities outside [0.1, Inf] in spectra of MS level(s) 2. [Thu Nov 21 07:24:08 2024]
Object sps_2
has now 3 processing steps in its lazy
evaluation queue. Calling intensity()
on this object will
now return intensities that are half of the intensities of the original
objects sps
.
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 23.747 50 6.62
## [[2]] 8.354 50 20.3215
## [[3]] 50 20.497
## [[4]] 16.1705 50
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 47.494 100 13.24
## [[2]] 16.708 100 40.643
## [[3]] 100 40.994
## [[4]] 32.341 100
Alternatively we could define a function that returns the maximum
peak from each spectrum (note: we use the unname()
function
to remove any names from the results):
max_peak <- function(x, ...) {
unname(x[which.max(x[, 2]), , drop = FALSE])
}
sps_2 <- addProcessing(sps_rep, max_peak)
lengths(sps_2)
## [1] 1 1 1 1
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 100
## [[2]] 100
## [[3]] 100
## [[4]] 100
Each spectrum in sps_2
thus contains only a single peak.
The parameter spectraVariables
of the
addProcessing()
function allows in addition to define
spectra variables that should be passed (in addition to the peaks
matrix) to the user-provided function. This would enable for example to
calculate neutral loss spectra from a Spectra
by
subtracting the precursor m/z from each m/z of a spectrum (note that
there would also be a dedicated neutralLoss()
function to
perform this operation more efficiently). Our tool example does not have
precursor m/z values defined, thus we first set them to arbitrary
values. Then we define a function neutral_loss
that
calculates the difference between the precursor m/z and the fragment
peak’s m/z. In addition we need to ensure the peaks in the resulting
spectra are ordered by (the delta) m/z values. Note that, in order to be
able to access the precursor m/z of the spectrum within our function, we
have to add a parameter to the function that has the same name as the
spectrum variable we want to access (in our case
precursorMz
).
sps_rep$precursorMz <- c(170.5, 170.5, 195.1, 195.1)
neutral_loss <- function(x, precursorMz, ...) {
x[, "mz"] <- precursorMz - x[, "mz"]
x[order(x[, "mz"]), , drop = FALSE]
}
We have then to call addProcessing()
with
spectraVariables = "precursorMz"
to specify that this
spectra variable is passed along to our function.
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 124.2 170.16 170.52
## [[2]] 109.14 124.08 170.16
## [[3]] 138.0662 195.0876
## [[4]] 138.0655 195.9864
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] -0.0200000000000102 0.340000000000003 46.3
## [[2]] 0.340000000000003 46.42 61.36
## [[3]] 0.0123999999999853 57.0338
## [[4]] -0.886400000000009 57.0345
As we can see, the precursor m/z was subtracted from each m/z of the
respective spectrum. A better version of the function, that only
calculates neutral loss spectra for MS level 2 spectra would be the
neutral_loss
function below. Since we are accessing also
the spectrum’s MS level we have to call addProcessing()
adding also the spectra variable msLevel
to the
spectraVariables
parameter. Note however that the
msLevel
spectra variable is by default
renamed to spectrumMsLevel
prior passing it to the
function. We have thus to use a parameter called
spectrumMsLevel
in the neutral_loss
function
instead of msLevel
.
neutral_loss <- function(x, spectrumMsLevel, precursorMz, ...) {
if (spectrumMsLevel == 2L) {
x[, "mz"] <- precursorMz - x[, "mz"]
x <- x[order(x[, "mz"]), , drop = FALSE]
}
x
}
sps_3 <- addProcessing(sps_rep, neutral_loss,
spectraVariables = c("msLevel", "precursorMz"))
mz(sps_3)
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] -0.0200000000000102 0.340000000000003 46.3
## [[2]] 0.340000000000003 46.42 61.36
## [[3]] 0.0123999999999853 57.0338
## [[4]] -0.886400000000009 57.0345
Using the same concept it would also be possible to provide any
spectrum-specific user-defined value to the processing function. This
variable could simply be added first as a new spectra variable to the
Spectra
object and then this variable could be passed along
to the function in the same way we passed the precursor m/z to our
function above.
Another example for spectra processing potentially helpful for
spectral matching against reference fragment spectra libraries would be
a function that removes fragment peaks with an m/z matching the
precursor m/z of a spectrum. Below we define such a function that takes
the peaks matrix and the precursor m/z as input and evaluates with the
closest()
function from the MsCoreUtils
whether the spectrum contains peaks with an m/z value matching the one
of the precursor (given tolerance
and ppm
).
The returned peaks matrix contains all peaks except those matching the
precursor m/z.
library(MsCoreUtils)
remove_precursor <- function(x, precursorMz, tolerance = 0.1, ppm = 0, ...) {
if (!is.na(precursorMz)) {
keep <- is.na(closest(x[, "mz"], precursorMz, tolerance = tolerance,
ppm = ppm, .check = FALSE))
x[keep, , drop = FALSE]
} else x
}
We can now again add this processing step to our Spectra
object. As a result, peaks matching the precursor m/z (with
tolerance = 0.1
and ppm = 0
) will be
removed.
sps_4 <- addProcessing(sps_rep, remove_precursor,
spectraVariables = "precursorMz")
peaksData(sps_4) |> as.list()
## [[1]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 124.20 47.494
## [2,] 170.16 100.000
##
## [[2]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 109.14 16.708
## [2,] 124.08 100.000
## [3,] 170.16 40.643
##
## [[3]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 138.0662 100
##
## [[4]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 138.0655 32.341
## [2,] 195.9864 100.000
As a reference, the original peak matrices are shown below.
## [[1]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 124.20 47.494
## [2,] 170.16 100.000
## [3,] 170.52 13.240
##
## [[2]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 109.14 16.708
## [2,] 124.08 100.000
## [3,] 170.16 40.643
##
## [[3]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 138.0662 100.000
## [2,] 195.0876 40.994
##
## [[4]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 138.0655 32.341
## [2,] 195.9864 100.000
Note that we can also perform a more relaxed matching of m/z values
by passing a different value for tolerance
to the
function:
sps_4 <- addProcessing(sps_rep, remove_precursor, tolerance = 0.6,
spectraVariables = "precursorMz")
peaksData(sps_4) |> as.list()
## [[1]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 124.2 47.494
##
## [[2]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 109.14 16.708
## [2,] 124.08 100.000
##
## [[3]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 138.0662 100
##
## [[4]]
## mz intensity
## [1,] 138.0655 32.341
## [2,] 195.9864 100.000
Since all data manipulations above did not change the original
intensity or m/z values, it is possible to restore the original
data. This can be done with the reset()
function which will
empty the lazy evaluation queue and call the reset()
method
on the storage backend. Below we call reset()
on the
sps_2
object and hence restore the data to its original
state.
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 3.407 47.494 3.094 100 13.24
## [[2]] 6.685 4.381 3.022 16.708 100 4.565 40.643
## [[3]] 0.459 2.585 2.446 0.508 8.968 0.524 0.974 100 40.994
## [[4]] 3.837 32.341 0.84 0.534 100
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 3.407 47.494 3.094 100 13.24
## [[2]] 6.685 4.381 3.022 16.708 100 4.565 40.643
## [[3]] 0.459 2.585 2.446 0.508 8.968 0.524 0.974 100 40.994
## [[4]] 3.837 32.341 0.84 0.534 100
Finally, for Spectra
that use a writeable
backend, such as the MsBackendMemory
,
MsBackendDataFrame
or MsBackendHdf5Peaks
, it
is possible to apply the processing queue to the peak data and write
that back to the data storage with the applyProcessing()
function. Below we use this to make all data manipulations on peak data
of the sps_rep
object persistent.
## [1] 2
## [1] 0
## MSn data (Spectra) with 4 spectra in a MsBackendMemory backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 2 NA NA
## 2 2 NA NA
## 3 2 NA NA
## 4 2 NA NA
## ... 20 more variables/columns.
## Processing:
## Merge 2 Spectra into one [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
## Signal <= 10 in MS level(s) 2 set to 0 [Thu Nov 21 07:24:07 2024]
## Remove peaks with intensities outside [0.1, Inf] in spectra of MS level(s) 2. [Thu Nov 21 07:24:08 2024]
## ...1 more processings. Use 'processingLog' to list all.
Before applyProcessing()
the lazy evaluation queue
contained 2 processing steps, which were then applied to the peak data
and written to the data storage. Note that calling
reset()
after
applyProcessing()
can no longer restore the
data.
Spectra
The Spectra
package provides the following functions to
visualize spectra data: - plotSpectra()
: plot each spectrum
in Spectra
in its own panel. -
plotSpectraOverlay()
: plot multiple spectra into the
same plot.
Below we use plotSpectra()
to plot the 4 spectra from
the sps
object using their names (as provided in spectra
variable "name"
) as plot titles.
It is also possible to label individual peaks in each plot. Below we
use the m/z value of each peak as its label. In the example we define a
function that accesses information from each spectrum (z
)
and returns a character
for each peak with the text that
should be used as label. Parameters labelSrt
,
labelPos
and labelOffset
define the rotation
of the label text and its position relative to the x and y coordinates
of the peak.
plotSpectra(sps, main = sps$name,
labels = function(z) format(mz(z)[[1L]], digits = 4),
labelSrt = -30, labelPos = 2, labelOffset = 0.1)
These plots are rather busy and for some peaks the m/z values are overplotted. Below we define a label function that will only indicate the m/z of peaks with an intensity higher than 30.
mzLabel <- function(z) {
z <- peaksData(z)[[1L]]
lbls <- format(z[, "mz"], digits = 4)
lbls[z[, "intensity"] < 30] <- ""
lbls
}
plotSpectra(sps, main = sps$name, labels = mzLabel,
labelSrt = -30, labelPos = 2, labelOffset = 0.1)
Sometimes it might be of interest to plot multiple spectra into the
same plot (e.g. to directly compare peaks from multiple
spectra). This can be done with plotSpectraOverlay()
which
we use below to create an overlay-plot of our 4 example
spectra, using a different color for each spectrum.
cols <- c("#E41A1C80", "#377EB880", "#4DAF4A80", "#984EA380")
plotSpectraOverlay(sps, lwd = 2, col = cols)
legend("topleft", col = cols, legend = sps$name, pch = 15)
Lastly, plotSpectraMirror()
allows to plot two spectra
against each other as a mirror plot which is ideal to visualize
spectra comparison results. Below we plot a spectrum of
1-Methylhistidine against one of Caffeine.
The upper panel shows the spectrum from 1-Methylhistidine, the lower
the one of Caffeine. None of the peaks of the two spectra match. Below
we plot the two spectra of 1-Methylhistidine and the two of Caffeine
against each other matching peaks with a ppm
of 50.
par(mfrow = c(1, 2))
plotSpectraMirror(sps[1], sps[2], main = "1-Methylhistidine", ppm = 50)
plotSpectraMirror(sps[3], sps[4], main = "Caffeine", ppm = 50)
See also ?plotSpectra
for more plotting options and
examples.
The Spectra
package provides the
combineSpectra()
function that allows to aggregate
multiple spectra into a single one. The main parameters of this function
are f
, which defines the sets of spectra that should be
combined, and FUN
, which allows to define the function that
performs the actual aggregation. The default aggregation function is
combinePeaksData()
(see ?combinePeaksData
for
details) that combines multiple spectra into a single spectrum with all
peaks from all input spectra (with additional paramter
peaks = "union"
), or peaks that are present in a certain
proportion of input spectra (with parameter
peaks = "intersect"
; parameter minProp
allows
to define the minimum required proportion of spectra in which a peak
needs to be present. It is important to mention that, by default, the
function combines all mass peaks from all spectra with a similar m/z
value into a single, representative mass peak aggregating all their
intensities into one. To avoid the resulting intensity to be affected by
potential noise peaks it might be advised to first clean the
individual mass spectra using e.g. the combinePeaks()
or
reduceSpectra()
functions that first aggregate mass peaks
within each individual spectrum.
In this example we below we use combineSpectra()
to
combine the spectra for 1-methylhistidine and caffeine into a single
spectrum for each compound. We use the spectra variable
$name
, that contains the names of the compounds, to define
which spectra should be grouped together.
As a result, the 4 spectra got aggregated into two.
By default, all peaks present in all spectra are reported. As an
alternative, by specifying peaks = "intersect"
and
minProp = 1
, we could combine the spectra keeping only
peaks that are present in both input spectra.
sps_agg <- combineSpectra(sps, f = sps$name, peaks = "intersect", minProp = 1)
plotSpectra(sps_agg, main = sps_agg$name)
This results thus in a single peak for 1-methylhistidine and none for
caffeine - why? The reason for that is that the difference of the peaks’
m/z values is larger than the default tolerance used for the peak
grouping (the defaults for combinePeaksData()
is
tolerance = 0
and ppm = 0
). We could however
already see in the previous section that the reported peaks’ m/z values
have a larger measurement error (most likely because the fragment
spectra were measured on different instruments with different
precision). Thus, we next increase the tolerance
and
ppm
parameters to group also peaks with a larger difference
in their m/z values.
sps_agg <- combineSpectra(sps, f = sps$name, peaks = "intersect",
minProp = 1, tolerance = 0.2)
plotSpectra(sps_agg, main = sps_agg$name)
Whether in a real analysis we would be OK with such a large tolerance
is however questionable. Note: which m/z and intensity is reported for
the aggregated spectra can be defined with the parameters
intensityFun
and mzFun
of
combinePeaksData()
(see ?combinePeaksData
for
more information).
While the combinePeaksData()
function is indeed helpful
to combine peaks from different spectra, the
combineSpectra()
function would in addition also allow us
to provide our own, custom, peak aggregation function. As a simple
example, instead of combining the spectra, we would like to select one
of the input spectra as representative spectrum for grouped
input spectra. combineSpectra()
supports any function that
takes a list of peak matrices as input and returns a single peak matrix
as output. We thus define below a function that calculates the total
signal (TIC) for each input peak matrix, and returns the one peak matrix
with the largest TIC.
#' function to select and return the peak matrix with the largest tic from
#' the provided list of peak matrices.
maxTic <- function(x, ...) {
tic <- vapply(x, function(z) sum(z[, "intensity"], na.rm = TRUE),
numeric(1))
x[[which.max(tic)]]
}
We can now use this function with combineSpectra()
to
select for each compound the spectrum with the largest TIC.
Spectra can be compared with the compareSpectra()
function, that allows to calculate similarities between spectra using a
variety of methods. compareSpectra()
implements similarity
scoring as a two-step approach: first the peaks from the pair of spectra
that should be compared are matched (mapped) against each other and then
a similarity score is calculated on these. The MAPFUN
parameter of compareSpectra()
defines the function to match
(or map) the peaks between the spectra and parameter FUN
specifies the function to calculate the similarity. By default,
compareSpectra()
uses MAPFUN = joinPeaks
(see
?joinPeaks
for a description and alternative options) and
FUN = ndotproduct
(the normalized dot-product spectra
similarity score). Parameters to configure these functions can be passed
to compareSpectra()
as additional parameter (such as
e.g. ppm
to define the m/z-relative tolerance for peak
matching in joinPeaks()
).
Below we calculate pairwise similarities between all spectra in
sps
accepting a 50 ppm difference of peaks’ m/z values for
being considered matching.
## 1 2 3 4
## 1 1.0000000 0.1380817 0.0000000 0.0000000
## 2 0.1380817 1.0000000 0.0000000 0.0000000
## 3 0.0000000 0.0000000 1.0000000 0.1817149
## 4 0.0000000 0.0000000 0.1817149 1.0000000
The resulting matrix provides the similarity scores from the pairwise
comparison. As expected, the first two and the last two spectra are
similar, albeit only moderately, while the spectra from
1-Methylhistidine don’t share any similarity with those of Caffeine.
Similarities between Spectra
objects can be
calculated with calls in the form of compareSpectra(a, b)
with a
and b
being the two
Spectra
objects to compare. As a result a n x m
matrix will be returned with n (rows) being the spectra in
a
and m (columns) being the spectra in
b
.
The above similarity was calculated with the default (normalized)
dot-product, but also other similarity scores can be used instead.
Either one of the other metrics provided by the MsCoreUtils
could be used (see ?MsCoreUtils::distance
for a list of
available options) or any other external or user-provided similarity
scoring function. As an example, we use below the spectral entropy
similarity score introduced in (Y et al.
2021) and provided with the msentropy
package. Since this msentropy_similarity()
function
performs also the mapping of the peaks between the compared spectra
internally (along with some spectra cleaning), we have to disable that
in the compareSpectra()
function using
MAPFUN = joinPeaksNone
. To configure the similarity scoring
we can pass all additional parameters of the
msentropy_similarity()
(see
?msentropy_similarity
) to the compareSpectra()
call. We use ms2_tolerance_in_ppm = 50
to set the tolerance
for m/z-relative peak matching (equivalent to ppm = 50
used
above) and ms2_tolerance_in_da = -1
to disable absolute
tolerance matching.
## Loading required package: Rcpp
compareSpectra(sps, MAPFUN = joinPeaksNone, FUN = msentropy_similarity,
ms2_tolerance_in_ppm = 50, ms2_tolerance_in_da = -1)
## 1 2 3 4
## 1 1.0000000 0.3002225 0.0000000 0.0000000
## 2 0.3002225 1.0000000 0.0000000 0.0000000
## 3 0.0000000 0.0000000 1.0000000 0.5144764
## 4 0.0000000 0.0000000 0.5144764 1.0000000
Note also that GNPS-like scores can be calculated with
MAPFUN = joinPeaksGnps
and
FUN = MsCoreUtils::gnps
. For additional information and
examples see also (Rainer et al. 2022) or
the SpectraTutorials
tutorial.
Another way of comparing spectra would be to bin the spectra
and to cluster them based on similar intensity values. Spectra binning
ensures that the binned m/z values are comparable across all spectra.
Below we bin our spectra using a bin size of 0.1 (i.e. all peaks with an
m/z smaller than 0.1 are aggregated into one binned peak. Below, we
explicitly set zero.rm = FALSE
to retain all bins generated
by the function, including those with an intensity of zero.
All spectra will now have the same number of m/z values.
## [1] 1400 1400 1400 1400
Most of the intensity values for these will however be 0 (because in the original spectra no peak for the respective m/z bin was present).
## NumericList of length 4
## [[1]] 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
## [[2]] 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
## [[3]] 0.459 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ... 0 0 0 0 0 40.994 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
## [[4]] 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 100
We’re next creating an intensity matrix for our Spectra
object, each row being one spectrum and columns representing the binned
m/z values.
We can now identify those columns (m/z bins) with only 0s across all spectra and remove these.
## [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4] [,5] [,6] [,7] [,8] [,9] [,10] [,11] [,12]
## [1,] 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 3.407 0.000 0.000 0.000
## [2,] 0.000 0.000 0.000 6.685 4.381 3.022 0.000 16.708 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
## [3,] 0.459 2.585 2.446 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.508 0.000 0.000 8.968 0.524 0.974
## [4,] 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 3.837 0.000 0.000
## [,13] [,14] [,15] [,16] [,17] [,18] [,19] [,20] [,21] [,22]
## [1,] 0 47.494 3.094 0.000 0.000 0.000 100.000 13.24 0.000 0
## [2,] 100 0.000 0.000 4.565 0.000 0.000 40.643 0.00 0.000 0
## [3,] 0 0.000 0.000 0.000 100.000 0.000 0.000 0.00 40.994 0
## [4,] 0 0.000 0.000 0.000 32.341 1.374 0.000 0.00 0.000 100
The associated m/z values for the bins can be extracted with
mz()
from the binned Spectra
object. Below we
use these as column names for the intensity matrix.
This intensity matrix could now for example be used to cluster the spectra based on their peak intensities.
As expected, the first 2 and the last 2 spectra are more similar and are clustered together.
Spectra data can be exported with the export()
method.
This method takes the Spectra
that is supposed to be
exported and the backend (parameter backend
) which should
be used to export the data and additional parameters for the export
function of this backend. The backend thus defines the format of the
exported file. Note however that not all MsBackend
classes
might support data export. The backend classes currently supporting data
export and its format are: - MsBackendMzR
(Spectra
package): export data in mzML and
mzXML format. Can not export all custom, user specified spectra
variables. - MsBackendMgf
(MsBackendMgf
package): exports data in Mascot Generic Format (mgf). Exports
all spectra variables as individual spectrum fields in the mgf file. -
MsBackendMsp
(MsBackendMsp
):
exports data in NIST MSP format. - MsBackendMassbank
(MsBackendMassbank
)
exports data in Massbank text file format.
In the example below we use the MsBackendMzR
to export
all spectra from the variable sps
to an mzML file. We thus
pass the data, the backend that should be used for the export and the
file name of the result file (a temporary file) to the
export()
function (see also the help page of the
export,MsBackendMzR
function for additional supported
parameters).
## Writing file file110a559ce0e0...OK
To evaluate which of the spectra variables were exported, we load the exported data again and identify spectra variables in the original file which could not be exported (because they are not defined variables in the mzML standard).
sps_im <- Spectra(backendInitialize(MsBackendMzR(), fl))
spectraVariables(sps)[!spectraVariables(sps) %in% spectraVariables(sps_im)]
## [1] "id" "name" "splash" "instrument"
These additional variables were thus not exported. How data export is
performed and handled depends also on the used backend. The
MsBackendMzR
for example exports all spectra by default to
a single file (specified with the file
parameter), but it
allows also to specify for each individual spectrum in the
Spectra
to which file it should be exported (parameter
file
has thus to be of length equal to the number of
spectra). As an example we export below the spectrum 1 and 3 to one file
and spectra 2 and 4 to another.
## Writing file file110a6747d3ec...OK
## Writing file file110a6e14e2f0...OK
A more realistic use case for mzML export would be to export MS data
after processing, such as smoothing (using the smooth()
function) and centroiding (using the pickPeaks()
function)
of raw profile-mode MS data.
In the previous sections we learned already that a
Spectra
object can use different backends for the actual
data handling. It is also possible to change the backend of a
Spectra
to a different one with the
setBackend()
function. We could for example change the
(MsBackendMzR
) backend of the sps_sciex
object
to a MsBackendMemory
backend to enable use of the data even
without the need to keep the original mzML files. Below we change the
backend of sps_sciex
to the in-memory
MsBackendMemory
backend.
## 0.4 Mb
## MSn data (Spectra) with 1862 spectra in a MsBackendMemory backend:
## msLevel rtime scanIndex
## <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1 1 0.280 1
## 2 1 0.559 2
## 3 1 0.838 3
## 4 1 1.117 4
## 5 1 1.396 5
## ... ... ... ...
## 1858 1 258.636 927
## 1859 1 258.915 928
## 1860 1 259.194 929
## 1861 1 259.473 930
## 1862 1 259.752 931
## ... 33 more variables/columns.
## Processing:
## Switch backend from MsBackendMzR to MsBackendMemory [Thu Nov 21 07:24:11 2024]
With the call the full peak data was imported from the original mzML files into the object. This has obviously an impact on the object’s size, which is now much larger than before.
## 53.2 Mb
The dataStorage
spectrum variable has now changed, while
dataOrigin
still keeps the information about the
originating files:
## [1] "<memory>" "<memory>" "<memory>" "<memory>" "<memory>" "<memory>"
## [1] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
## [3] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
## [5] "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML" "20171016_POOL_POS_1_105-134.mzML"
Backends allow to use different backends to store mass
spectrometry data while providing via the Spectra
class a unified interface to use that data. This is a further
abstraction to the on-disk and in-memory data modes
from MSnbase
(Gatto, Gibb, and
Rainer 2020). The Spectra
package defines a set of
example backends but any object extending the base
MsBackend
class could be used instead. The default backends
are:
MsBackendMemory
: the default backend to
store data in memory. Due to its design the MsBackendMemory
provides fast access to the peaks matrices (using the
peaksData()
function) and is also optimized for fast access
to spectra variables and subsetting. Since all data is kept in memory,
this backend has a relatively large memory footprint (depending on the
data) and is thus not suggested for very large MS experiments.
MsBackendDataFrame
: the mass spectrometry data is
stored (in-memory) in a DataFrame
. Keeping the data in
memory guarantees high performance but has also, depending on the number
of mass peaks in each spectrum, a much higher memory footprint.
MsBackendMzR
: this backend keeps only general
spectra variables in memory and relies on the mzR package
to read mass peaks (m/z and intensity values) from the original MS files
on-demand.
MsBackendHdf5Peaks
: similar to
MsBackendMzR
this backend reads peak data only on-demand
from disk while all other spectra variables are kept in memory. The peak
data are stored in Hdf5 files which guarantees scalability.
All of the above mentioned backends support changing all of their
their spectra variables, except the
MsBackendMzR
that does not support changing m/z or
intensity values for the mass peaks.
With the example below we load the data from a single mzML file and
use a MsBackendHdf5Peaks
backend for data storage. The
hdf5path
parameter allows us to specify the storage
location of the HDF5 file.
library(msdata)
fl <- proteomics(full.names = TRUE)[5]
sps_tmt <- Spectra(fl, backend = MsBackendHdf5Peaks(), hdf5path = tempdir())
head(basename(dataStorage(sps_tmt)))
## [1] "TMT_Erwinia_1uLSike_Top10HCD_isol2_45stepped_60min_01.mzML.h5"
## [2] "TMT_Erwinia_1uLSike_Top10HCD_isol2_45stepped_60min_01.mzML.h5"
## [3] "TMT_Erwinia_1uLSike_Top10HCD_isol2_45stepped_60min_01.mzML.h5"
## [4] "TMT_Erwinia_1uLSike_Top10HCD_isol2_45stepped_60min_01.mzML.h5"
## [5] "TMT_Erwinia_1uLSike_Top10HCD_isol2_45stepped_60min_01.mzML.h5"
## [6] "TMT_Erwinia_1uLSike_Top10HCD_isol2_45stepped_60min_01.mzML.h5"
A (possibly incomplete) list of R packages providing additional backends that add support for additional data types or storage options is provided below:
MsBackendCompDb
(package CompoundDb):
provides access to spectra data (spectra and peaks variables) from a
CompDb database. Has a small memory footprint because all data
(except precursor m/z values) are retrieved on-the-fly from the
database.
MsBackendHmdbXml
(package MsbackendHmdb
):
allows import of MS data from xml files of the Human Metabolome Database
(HMDB). Extends the MsBackendDataFrame
and keeps thus all
data, after import, in memory.
MsBackendMassbank
(package MsBackendMassbank):
allows to import/export data in MassBank text file format. Extends the
MsBackendDataFrame
and keeps thus all data, after import,
in memory.
MsBackendMassbankSql
(package MsBackendMassbank):
allows to directly connect to a MassBank SQL database to retrieve all MS
data and variables. Has a minimal memory footprint because all data is
retrieved on-the-fly from the SQL database.
MsBackendMetaboLights
(package
r BiocStyle::Biocpkg("MsBackendMetaboLights")
): retrieves
and caches MS data files from the MetaboLights repository.
MsBackendMgf
: (package MsBackendMgf):
support for import/export of mass spectrometry files in mascot generic
format (MGF).
MsBackendMsp
: (package MsBackendMsp):
allows to import/export data in NIST MSP format. Extends the
MsBackendDataFrame
and keeps thus all data, after import,
in memory.
MsBackendRawFileReader
(package MsBackendRawFileReader):
implements a backend for reading MS data from Thermo Fisher Scientific’s
raw data files using the manufacturer’s NewRawFileReader .Net libraries.
The package generalizes the functionality introduced by the rawrr
package, see also (Kockmann and Panse
2021).
MsBackendSql
(package MsBackendSql):
stores all MS data in a SQL database and has thus a minimal memory
footprint.
MsBackendTimsTof
(package MsBackendTimsTof
:
allows import of data from Bruker TimsTOF raw data files (using the
opentimsr
R package).
MsBackendWeizMass
(package MsBackendWeizMass
:
allows to access MS data from WeizMass MS/MS spectral
databases.
The Spectra
package was designed to support also
efficient processing of very large data sets. Most of the functionality
do not require to keep the full MS data in memory (specifically, the
peaks data, i.e., m/z and intensity values, which represent the largest
chunk of data for MS experiments). For some functions however the peaks
data needs to be loaded into memory. One such example is the
lengths()
function to determine the number of peaks per
spectra that is calculated (on the fly) by evaluating the number of rows
of the peaks matrix. Backends such as the MsBackendMzR
perform by default any data processing separately (and eventually in
parallel) by data file and it should thus be safe to call any such
functions on a Spectra
object with that backend. For other
backends (such as the MsBackendSql
or the MsBackendMassbankSql
)
it is however advised to process the data in a chunk-wise
manner using the spectrapply()
function with parameter
chunkSize
. This will split the original
Spectra
object into chunks of size chunkSize
and applies the function separately to each chunk. That way only data
from one chunk will eventually be loaded into memory in each iteration
enabling to process also very large Spectra
objects on
computers with limited hardware resources. Instead of a
lengths(sps)
call, the number of peaks per spectra could
also be determined (in a less memory demanding way) with
spectrapply(sps, lengths, chunkSize = 5000L)
. In that way
only peak data of 5000 spectra at a time will be loaded into memory.
Spectra
objectsSerializing and re-loading variables/objects during an analysis using
e.g. the save()
and load()
functions are
common in many workflows, especially if some of the tasks are
computationally intensive and take long time. Sometimes such serialized
objects might even be moved from one computer (or file system) to
another. These operations are unproblematic for Spectra
objects with in-memory backends such as the
MsBackendMemory
or MsBackendDataFrame
, that
keep all data in memory, would however break for on-disk
backends such as the MsBackendMzR
if the file path to the
original data files is not identical. It is thus suggested (if the size
of the MS data respectively the available system memory allows it) to
change the backend for such Spectra
objects to a
MsBackendMemory
before serializing the object with
save()
. For Spectra
objects with a
MsBackendMzR
an alternative option would be to eventually
update/adapt the path to the directory containing the raw (e.g. mzML)
data files: assuming these data files are available on both computers,
the path to the directory containing these can be updated with the
dataStorageBasePath<-
function allowing thus to
move/copy serialized Spectra
objects between computers or
file systems.
An example workflow could be:
files a.mzML, b.mzML are stored in a directory
/data/mzML/ on one computer. These get loaded as a
Spectra
object with MsBackendMzR
and then
serialized to a file A.RData.
Assuming this file gets now copied to another computer (where the
data is not available in a folder /data/mzML/) and loaded with
load()
.
This Spectra
object would not be valid because its
MsBackendMzR
can no longer access the MS data in the
original data files. Assuming the user also copied the data files
a.mzML and b.mzML, but to a folder
/some_other_folder/, the base storage path of the object would
need to be adapted to match the directory where the data files are
available on the second computer:
By pointing now the storage path to the new storage location of the
data files, the Spectra
object A
would also be
usable on the second computer.
## R version 4.4.2 (2024-10-31)
## Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
## Running under: Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS
##
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/openblas-pthread/libblas.so.3
## LAPACK: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/openblas-pthread/libopenblasp-r0.3.26.so; LAPACK version 3.12.0
##
## locale:
## [1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=C
## [3] LC_TIME=en_US.UTF-8 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
##
## time zone: Etc/UTC
## tzcode source: system (glibc)
##
## attached base packages:
## [1] stats4 stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods
## [8] base
##
## other attached packages:
## [1] msdata_0.46.0 msentropy_0.1.4 Rcpp_1.0.13-1
## [4] MsCoreUtils_1.19.0 IRanges_2.41.1 Spectra_1.17.1
## [7] BiocParallel_1.41.0 S4Vectors_0.45.2 BiocGenerics_0.53.3
## [10] generics_0.1.3 BiocStyle_2.35.0
##
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
## [1] jsonlite_1.8.9 compiler_4.4.2 BiocManager_1.30.25
## [4] Biobase_2.67.0 rhdf5filters_1.19.0 parallel_4.4.2
## [7] cluster_2.1.6 jquerylib_0.1.4 yaml_2.3.10
## [10] fastmap_1.2.0 R6_2.5.1 ProtGenerics_1.39.0
## [13] knitr_1.49 MASS_7.3-61 maketools_1.3.1
## [16] bslib_0.8.0 rlang_1.1.4 cachem_1.1.0
## [19] xfun_0.49 fs_1.6.5 sass_0.4.9
## [22] sys_3.4.3 cli_3.6.3 Rhdf5lib_1.29.0
## [25] ncdf4_1.23 digest_0.6.37 mzR_2.41.1
## [28] MetaboCoreUtils_1.15.0 rhdf5_2.51.0 lifecycle_1.0.4
## [31] clue_0.3-66 evaluate_1.0.1 codetools_0.2-20
## [34] buildtools_1.0.0 rmarkdown_2.29 tools_4.4.2
## [37] htmltools_0.5.8.1