Mass Spec Query Language Support to the Spectra Package

Package: SpectraQL
Authors: Johannes Rainer [aut, cre] (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6977-7147), Andrea Vicini [aut], Sebastian Gibb [ctb] (https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7406-4443)
Compiled: Sat Nov 2 05:44:16 2024

Introduction

The Mass Spec Query Language (MassQL) is a domain specific language meant to be a succinct way to express a query in a mass spectrometry (MS) centric fashion. It is inspired by SQL, but it attempts to bake in assumptions of MS to make querying much more natural for MS users.

The SpectraQL package provides support for the MassQL language in R, for MS data represented by Spectra objects defined in Bioconductor’s Spectra package.

Installation

The package can be installed with the BiocManager package using:

## Install BiocManager, if not already installed
install.packages("BiocManager")
## Install the package
BiocManager::install("SpectraQL")

Extracting data from Spectra objects with MassQL

The SpectraQL package adds support for most of the Mass Spec Query Language functionality to Spectra objects hence allowing to filter and extract data using platform independent and data storage agnostic queries. At present, SpectraQL supports most, but not all of the conditions and expressions of the MassQL definition. In particular, numeric operations in query fields such as MS2PROD=100+14 are not yet supported.

Below we load MS data from an example mzML file. Note also that Spectra objects can represent MS data from a very large variety of sources including but not limited to mzML or mzXML files, databases (e.g. MsBackendMassbank) or MGF files (MsBackendMgf). The use of the Spectra an hence SpectraQL package is thus not restricted to mzML-backed MS data.

library(Spectra)
## Warning: multiple methods tables found for 'setequal'
## Warning: replacing previous import 'BiocGenerics::setequal' by
## 'S4Vectors::setequal' when loading 'IRanges'
library(SpectraQL)
library(msdata)

fl <- system.file("TripleTOF-SWATH", "PestMix1_DDA.mzML", package = "msdata")
dda <- Spectra(fl)

MassQL definition

A MassQL query consists of several parts: "QUERY <type of data> WHERE <condition> AND <condition> FILTER <filter> AND <filter>" (see its definition for more details). "<type of data>" defines which data should be extracted from the selected data set, "<condition>" defines which spectra should be selected and "<filter>" allows to subset each individual spectrum (i.e. to which mass peaks each spectrum should be subsetted). See the following sections for more information on each part of such an MassQL query. SpectraQL supports the MassQL query schema is however case insensitive (i.e. both "query" and "QUERY" are accepted) and is insensitive to white spaces (i.e. both "RTMIN=10" and "RTMIN = 10" are supported). Also, it should be noted that not all keywords, filters and operations defined by MassQL are yet supported by SpectraQL. The supported types of data, conditions and filters are listed in the sections below.

Type of data

The "<type of data>" defines what should be returned by the query function. In addition, functions can be specified and applied to "<type of data>" to summarize the results. The types of data that are currently supported by SpectraQL are:

  • "*": returns the full data, i.e. returns a Spectra object.
  • "MS1DATA" (case insensitive): returns (if no function is defined; see further below) the peaks data for selected MS1 scans (i.e. a list of matrices with m/z and intensity values).
  • "MS2DATA" (case insensitive): returns (if no function is defined) the peaks data for selected MS2 scans (i.e. a list of matrices with m/z and intensity values).

In addition, functions can be used to extract specific information from the selected spectra. SpectraQL supports at present the following functions defined by MassQL:

  • "scaninfo": e.g. "scaninfo(MS1DATA)" or "scaninfo(MS2DATA)" to extract spectra information for MS1 or MS2 scans, respectively. This returns the spectraData for the sub-setted Spectra object.
  • "scansum": e.g. "scansum(MS1DATA)" or "scansum(MS2DATA)" to extract the TIC (sum of peak intensities) of the selected spectra.

Condition

The "<condition>" allows to subset a Spectra object. Several conditions can be combined with "and". The syntax for a condition is "<condition> = <value>", e.g. "MS2PROD = 144.1". Such conditions can be further refined by additional expressions that allow for example to define acceptable tolerances for m/z differences (see further below for details). SpectraQL supports the following conditions:

  • "RTMIN": minimum retention time (in seconds).
  • "RTMAX": maximum retention time (in seconds).
  • "SCANMIN": the minimum scan number (acquisition number).
  • "SCANMAX": the maximum scan number (acquisition number).
  • "CHARGE": the charge for MS2 spectra.
  • "POLARITY": the polarity of the spectra (can be "positive", "negative", "pos" or "neg", case insensitive).
  • "MS2PROD" or "MS2MZ": allows to select MS2 spectra that contain a peak with a particular m/z.
  • "MS2PREC": allows to select MS2 spectra with the defined precursor m/z.
  • "MS1MZ": allows to select MS1 spectra containing peaks with the defined m/z.
  • "MS2NL": allows to look for a neutral loss from precursor in MS2 spectra.

All conditions involving m/z values allow to specify a mass accuracy using the optional fields "TOLERANCEMZ" and "TOLERANCEPPM" that define the absolute and m/z-relative acceptable difference in m/z values. One or both fields can be attached to a condition such as "MS2PREC=100:TOLERANCEMZ=0.1:TOLERANCEPPM=20" to select for example all MS2 spectra with a precursor m/z equal to 100 accepting a difference of 0.1 and 20 ppm. Note that in contrast to MassQL, the default tolarance and ppm is 0 for all calls.

Filter

Filters allow to subset individual spectra keeping e.g. only peaks that match a user-defined m/z value. SpectraQL supports the following filters:

  • "MS1MZ": filters MS1 spectra keeping only peaks with matching m/z values (tolerance can be specified as above with "TOLERANCEMZ" and "TOLERANCEPPM".
  • "MS2MZ": filters MS2 spectra keeping only peaks with matching m/z values (tolerance can be specified as above with "TOLERANCEMZ" and "TOLERANCEPPM".

Differences of the SpectraQL implementation to the MassQL definition

  • Retention times (for "RTMIN", "RTMAX") are expressed in seconds, not minutes.
  • Default for "TOLERANCEMZ" is 0 instead of 0.1.

Examples

In this section we use MassQL queries to subset and extract data from our Spectra object dda. This object contains MS1 and MS2 spectra from a data dependent acquisition. Some general information is provided below.

#' Number of MS1 and MS2 spectra
table(msLevel(dda))
## 
##    1    2 
## 4627 2975
#' retention time range
range(rtime(dda))
## [1]   0.231 899.993

Filtering and subsetting

To restrict the data to spectra measured between 200 and 300 seconds of the measurement run we can use a MassQL query with the "rtmin" and "rtmax" conditions.

dda_rt <- query(dda, "QUERY * WHERE RTMIN = 200 AND RTMAX = 300")
dda_rt
## MSn data (Spectra) with 717 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
##       msLevel     rtime scanIndex
##     <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1           1   200.053      1554
## 2           1   200.173      1555
## 3           1   200.293      1556
## 4           1   200.413      1557
## 5           1   200.533      1558
## ...       ...       ...       ...
## 713         1   299.176      2266
## 714         1   299.304      2267
## 715         2   299.575      2268
## 716         1   299.713      2269
## 717         2   299.985      2270
##  ... 33 more variables/columns.
## 
## file(s):
## PestMix1_DDA.mzML
## Processing:
##  Filter: select retention time [200..300] on MS level(s) 1 2 [Sat Nov  2 05:44:19 2024]

Internally, SpectraQL translates the MassQL query into filter functions that are applied to the Spectra object. The returned result is now a Spectra object with all spectra measured between 200 and 300 seconds.

range(rtime(dda_rt))
## [1] 200.053 299.985

To restrict to MS2 spectra with their precursor m/z matching a certain value, we can use the "MS2PREC" condition. Conditions on m/z values support also accuracy specifications. Using "TOLERANCEMZ" and "TOLERANCEPPM" it is thus possible to define an absolute and m/z relative acceptable difference. Below we use such a condition to select MS2 spectra with a precursor m/z matching 278.093 with a tolerance of 0 and ppm of 20. Since SpectraQL is case insensitive, we write the full MassQL query in lower case below.

dda_pmz <- query(
    dda,
    "query * where ms2prec = 278.093:toleancemz=0:toleranceppm=30")
length(dda_pmz)
## [1] 9
dda_pmz
## MSn data (Spectra) with 9 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
##     msLevel     rtime scanIndex
##   <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1         2   268.587      2041
## 2         2   269.007      2043
## 3         2   269.427      2046
## 4         2   381.709      3058
## 5         2   382.069      3062
## 6         2   382.549      3066
## 7         2   385.879      3105
## 8         2   386.699      3120
## 9         2   387.849      3137
##  ... 33 more variables/columns.
## 
## file(s):
## PestMix1_DDA.mzML
## Processing:
##  Filter: select spectra with precursor m/z matching 278.093 [Sat Nov  2 05:44:19 2024]

We thus selected 9 spectra from the data set with a precursor m/z matching our filter criteria.

precursorMz(dda_pmz)
## [1] 278.0936 278.0914 278.0954 278.0921 278.0909 278.0917 278.0913 278.0914
## [9] 278.0918

We can obviously also combine the two queries into a single MassQL query. This time we also omit the "tolerancemz" field as we set that anyway to a value of 0.

dda_rt <- query(dda,
                paste0("query * where rtmin = 200 and rtmax = 300 and ",
                       "ms2prec = 278.093:toleranceppm = 30"))
dda_rt
## MSn data (Spectra) with 3 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
##     msLevel     rtime scanIndex
##   <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1         2   268.587      2041
## 2         2   269.007      2043
## 3         2   269.427      2046
##  ... 33 more variables/columns.
## 
## file(s):
## PestMix1_DDA.mzML
## Processing:
##  Filter: select retention time [200..300] on MS level(s) 1 2 [Sat Nov  2 05:44:20 2024]
##  Filter: select spectra with precursor m/z matching 278.093 [Sat Nov  2 05:44:20 2024]

For conditions "MS2PROD", "MS2PREC" and "MS1MZ" it is also possible to provide multiple values to select spectra that match any of the provided m/z values. These values can be separated by "OR" (or "or"), "TOLERANCEPPM" and "TOLERANCEMZ" will be applied to each of these. Below we select all spectra that contain an (MS1) peak with an m/z matching any of the provided values.

query(dda, "QUERY * WHERE MS1MZ = (123 OR 234.1 OR 300):TOLERANCEMZ=0.05")
## MSn data (Spectra) with 2385 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
##        msLevel     rtime scanIndex
##      <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1            1     0.471         3
## 2            1     0.591         4
## 3            1     1.191         9
## 4            1     1.311        10
## 5            1     1.551        12
## ...        ...       ...       ...
## 2381         1   899.491      7598
## 2382         1   899.613      7599
## 2383         1   899.747      7600
## 2384         1   899.872      7601
## 2385         1   899.993      7602
##  ... 33 more variables/columns.
## 
## file(s):
## PestMix1_DDA.mzML
## Processing:
##  Filter: select MS level(s) 1 [Sat Nov  2 05:44:20 2024]

Note that using "MS1MZ" will return only MS1 spectra and "MS2PROD", "MS2MZ" and "MS2PREC" only MS2 spectra.

Choosing which data to return

Thus far we uses "*" in all queries, which returns the result as a Spectra object. Alternatively, we can use "MS1DATA" or "MS2DATA" which will return the peak data for MS1 or MS2 spectra, respectively. The result is thus not a Spectra object, but a list of two-column matrices with the m/z and intensity values of all selected spectra. Below we use this to extract the peaks data for all MS2 spectra measured between 200 and 300 seconds.

pks <- query(dda, "query ms2data where rtmin = 200 and rtmax = 300")
length(pks)
## [1] 216
head(pks[[1L]])
##            mz   intensity
## [1,] 54.93746 0.021841669
## [2,] 55.93555 0.173691928
## [3,] 70.94262 0.011819169
## [4,] 71.71149 0.017824525
## [5,] 71.72899 0.005942247
## [6,] 71.93047 0.834873378

We can in addition also use functions to extract only specific data from the result. "scansum" would for example return the sum of intensities per spectra and would thus allow to extract a total ion chromatogram:

tic <- query(dda, "query scansum(ms1data)")
plot(tic, type = "l", xlab = "scan index")

Please note that the x-axis does not represent the retention times but the scan indices.

The function "scaninfo" extracts all information from the selected spectra. For SpectraQL this means that the result from spectraData() are returned:

si <- query(dda, "query scaninfo(*) where rtmin = 300 and rtmax = 500")
si
## DataFrame with 2236 rows and 34 columns
##        msLevel     rtime acquisitionNum scanIndex            dataStorage
##      <integer> <numeric>      <integer> <integer>            <character>
## 1            1   300.123           2271      2271 /github/workspace/pk..
## 2            2   300.395           2272      2272 /github/workspace/pk..
## 3            1   300.533           2273      2273 /github/workspace/pk..
## 4            1   300.654           2274      2274 /github/workspace/pk..
## 5            1   300.775           2275      2275 /github/workspace/pk..
## ...        ...       ...            ...       ...                    ...
## 2232         2   499.391           4502      4502 /github/workspace/pk..
## 2233         1   499.529           4503      4503 /github/workspace/pk..
## 2234         2   499.691           4504      4504 /github/workspace/pk..
## 2235         2   499.811           4505      4505 /github/workspace/pk..
## 2236         1   499.948           4506      4506 /github/workspace/pk..
##                  dataOrigin centroided  smoothed  polarity precScanNum
##                 <character>  <logical> <logical> <integer>   <integer>
## 1    /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## 2    /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## 3    /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## 4    /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## 5    /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## ...                     ...        ...       ...       ...         ...
## 2232 /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## 2233 /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## 2234 /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## 2235 /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
## 2236 /github/workspace/pk..       TRUE        NA         1          NA
##      precursorMz precursorIntensity precursorCharge collisionEnergy
##        <numeric>          <numeric>       <integer>       <numeric>
## 1             NA                 NA              NA              NA
## 2        320.106                  0               0               0
## 3             NA                 NA              NA              NA
## 4             NA                 NA              NA              NA
## 5             NA                 NA              NA              NA
## ...          ...                ...             ...             ...
## 2232     252.995                  0               0               0
## 2233          NA                 NA              NA              NA
## 2234     173.079                  0               0               0
## 2235     368.182                  0               0               0
## 2236          NA                 NA              NA              NA
##      isolationWindowLowerMz isolationWindowTargetMz isolationWindowUpperMz
##                   <numeric>               <numeric>              <numeric>
## 1                        NA                      NA                     NA
## 2                   319.606                 320.106                320.606
## 3                        NA                      NA                     NA
## 4                        NA                      NA                     NA
## 5                        NA                      NA                     NA
## ...                     ...                     ...                    ...
## 2232                252.495                 252.995                253.495
## 2233                     NA                      NA                     NA
## 2234                172.579                 173.079                173.579
## 2235                367.682                 368.182                368.682
## 2236                     NA                      NA                     NA
##      peaksCount totIonCurrent basePeakMZ basePeakIntensity ionisationEnergy
##       <integer>     <numeric>  <numeric>         <numeric>        <numeric>
## 1           327        236402    54.0089             44069                0
## 2            52          5440   233.0023               288                0
## 3           348        221394    54.0089             39904                0
## 4           198        211449    54.0089             43642                0
## 5           377        248240    54.0099             32575                0
## ...         ...           ...        ...               ...              ...
## 2232          2          1025    98.9837                32                0
## 2233        370        307324    54.0088             24136                0
## 2234         10          1360    55.0552                42                0
## 2235          4          1103   368.1747                42                0
## 2236        426        318309    54.0088             25913                0
##          lowMZ    highMZ mergedScan mergedResultScanNum
##      <numeric> <numeric>  <integer>           <integer>
## 1            0         0         NA                  NA
## 2            0         0         NA                  NA
## 3            0         0         NA                  NA
## 4            0         0         NA                  NA
## 5            0         0         NA                  NA
## ...        ...       ...        ...                 ...
## 2232         0         0         NA                  NA
## 2233         0         0         NA                  NA
## 2234         0         0         NA                  NA
## 2235         0         0         NA                  NA
## 2236         0         0         NA                  NA
##      mergedResultStartScanNum mergedResultEndScanNum injectionTime filterString
##                     <integer>              <integer>     <numeric>  <character>
## 1                          NA                     NA             0           NA
## 2                          NA                     NA             0           NA
## 3                          NA                     NA             0           NA
## 4                          NA                     NA             0           NA
## 5                          NA                     NA             0           NA
## ...                       ...                    ...           ...          ...
## 2232                       NA                     NA             0           NA
## 2233                       NA                     NA             0           NA
## 2234                       NA                     NA             0           NA
## 2235                       NA                     NA             0           NA
## 2236                       NA                     NA             0           NA
##                  spectrumId ionMobilityDriftTime scanWindowLowerLimit
##                 <character>            <numeric>            <numeric>
## 1    sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## 2    sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## 3    sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## 4    sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## 5    sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## ...                     ...                  ...                  ...
## 2232 sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## 2233 sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## 2234 sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## 2235 sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
## 2236 sample=1 period=1 cy..                   NA                   50
##      scanWindowUpperLimit
##                 <numeric>
## 1                    2000
## 2                    2000
## 3                    2000
## 4                    2000
## 5                    2000
## ...                   ...
## 2232                 2000
## 2233                 2000
## 2234                 2000
## 2235                 2000
## 2236                 2000

Filtering peaks within spectra

In contrast to the condition statements ("WHERE"), "FILTER" allows to filter the peak data within spectra. We can for example filter all spectra keeping only peaks with a certain m/z. Below we filter the MS1 data keeping only peaks with an m/z value matching 219.095 with a tolerance of 0.01 and extract the ion count for that.

ic <- query(
    dda, "query scansum(ms1data) filter ms1mz = 219.095:tolerancemz=0.1")
plot(ic, type = "l", xlab = "scan index")

We can also combine that with "QUERY" to restrict to a certain retention time range to generate an extracted ion chromatogram (XIC).

ic <- query(
    dda,
    paste0("query scansum(ms1data) where rtmin = 235 and rtmax = 250",
           " filter ms1mz = 219.095:tolerancemz=0.1"))
plot(ic, type = "l", xlab = "scan index")

Internally, SpectraQL’s function translates the MassQL query into the following combination of function calls:

res <- dda |>
    filterMsLevel(1L) |>
    filterRt(c(235, 250)) |>
    filterMzValues(219.095, tolerance = 0.1) |>
    ionCount()

plot(res, type = "l", xlab = "scan index")

Session information

## R version 4.4.1 (2024-06-14)
## 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_0.45.0       SpectraQL_0.99.3    ProtGenerics_1.39.0
## [4] Spectra_1.17.0      BiocParallel_1.41.0 S4Vectors_0.45.0   
## [7] BiocGenerics_0.53.1 generics_0.1.3      BiocStyle_2.35.0   
## 
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
##  [1] jsonlite_1.8.9         highr_0.11             compiler_4.4.1        
##  [4] BiocManager_1.30.25    Rcpp_1.0.13            Biobase_2.67.0        
##  [7] parallel_4.4.1         cluster_2.1.6          jquerylib_0.1.4       
## [10] IRanges_2.41.0         yaml_2.3.10            fastmap_1.2.0         
## [13] R6_2.5.1               knitr_1.48             MASS_7.3-61           
## [16] maketools_1.3.1        bslib_0.8.0            rlang_1.1.4           
## [19] cachem_1.1.0           xfun_0.49              fs_1.6.5              
## [22] MsCoreUtils_1.19.0     sass_0.4.9             sys_3.4.3             
## [25] cli_3.6.3              ncdf4_1.23             digest_0.6.37         
## [28] mzR_2.41.0             MetaboCoreUtils_1.15.0 lifecycle_1.0.4       
## [31] clue_0.3-65            evaluate_1.0.1         codetools_0.2-20      
## [34] buildtools_1.0.0       rmarkdown_2.28         tools_4.4.1           
## [37] htmltools_0.5.8.1