ChIP-seq T47D

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        Note that additional data was saved in multiqc_data when this report was generated.


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        If you use plots from MultiQC in a publication or presentation, please cite:

        MultiQC: Summarize analysis results for multiple tools and samples in a single report
        Philip Ewels, Måns Magnusson, Sverker Lundin and Max Käller
        Bioinformatics (2016)
        doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btw354
        PMID: 27312411

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        About MultiQC

        This report was generated using MultiQC, version 1.6 (97f244f)

        You can see a YouTube video describing how to use MultiQC reports here: https://youtu.be/qPbIlO_KWN0

        For more information about MultiQC, including other videos and extensive documentation, please visit http://multiqc.info

        You can report bugs, suggest improvements and find the source code for MultiQC on GitHub: https://github.com/ewels/MultiQC

        MultiQC is published in Bioinformatics:

        MultiQC: Summarize analysis results for multiple tools and samples in a single report
        Philip Ewels, Måns Magnusson, Sverker Lundin and Max Käller
        Bioinformatics (2016)
        doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btw354
        PMID: 27312411

        ChIP-seq T47D
        PR, PARP, H1

        PI
        Miguel Beato
        User
        Roni Wright
        Date
        Mon Jan 18 16:47:55 UTC 2021
        Contact E-mail
        sarah.bonnin@crg.eu
        Application Type
        ChIP-seq
        Reference Genome
        hg38

        Report generated on 2021-01-18, 16:47 based on data in: /nfs/users/mbeato/sequencing_analysis/Roni_Wright/2021-01-13-ChIPseq/analysis/nextflow_pipeline/chipseq/work/0e/b1ae1ff69a01f9949adfabef7ac078


        General Statistics

        Showing 17/17 rows and 12/20 columns.
        Sample Name% Dups% GCM Seqs% Dups% GC≥ 1X≥ 5X≥ 10X% AlignedFragment LengthTreatment RedundancyControl Redundancy
        60H1_12949AAB_GATCAG
        31.4%
        44%
        43.1
        26.9%
        45%
        38.7%
        0.2%
        0.0%
        60H1_12949AAB_GATCAG_d
        98.5%
        60H1_12949AAB_GATCAG_vs_INP_12943AAB_CATTCG-macs-narrow--q_0.1
        300
        0.00
        0.00
        60P4RP_12947AAB_TATAAT
        31.7%
        44%
        55.8
        27.2%
        46%
        44.3%
        0.9%
        0.1%
        60P4RP_12947AAB_TATAAT_d
        98.7%
        60PR_12945AAB_CTAGCT
        74.1%
        48%
        52.9
        70.5%
        47%
        15.3%
        0.2%
        0.1%
        60PR_12945AAB_CTAGCT_d
        48.6%
        INP_12943AAB_CATTCG
        16.0%
        41%
        56.7
        10.3%
        43%
        54.4%
        0.4%
        0.0%
        INP_12943AAB_CATTCG_d
        95.8%
        T0H1_12948AAB_TTAGGC
        32.8%
        44%
        40.3
        28.5%
        46%
        35.8%
        0.2%
        0.0%
        T0H1_12948AAB_TTAGGC_d
        98.1%
        T0H1_12948AAB_TTAGGC_vs_INP_12943AAB_CATTCG-macs-narrow--q_0.1
        300
        0.00
        0.00
        T0P4RP_12946AAB_TCATTC
        29.1%
        44%
        45.2
        25.0%
        45%
        38.8%
        0.6%
        0.0%
        T0P4RP_12946AAB_TCATTC_d
        96.1%
        T0P4RP_12946AAB_TCATTC_vs_INP_12943AAB_CATTCG-macs-narrow--q_0.1
        165
        0.00
        0.00
        T0PR_12944AAB_CAAAAG
        83.8%
        45%
        47.1
        79.6%
        47%
        12.6%
        0.0%
        0.0%
        T0PR_12944AAB_CAAAAG_d
        87.7%

        Peak calling statistics

        Peak calling statistics Number of peaks

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        Peak annotation statistics

        Peak annotation statistics Number of peaks associated with the indicated genomic feature

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        Tool description

        Tool description This section describes the tools used during the analysis and their reference

        Tool version
        Reference
        FastQC v0.11.5
        "Andrews S. (2010). FastQC: a quality control tool for high throughput sequence data. Available online at: http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc"
        bowtie2 2.3.2
        'Langmead B Salzberg SL. Fast gapped-read alignment with Bowtie 2. Nat Methods. 2012 Mar 4;9(4):357-9. doi: 10.1038/nmeth.1923. PubMed PMID: 22388286; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3322381'
        skewer version: 0.2.2
        "Jiang H Lei R Ding SW Zhu S. Skewer: a fast and accurate adapter trimmer for next-generation sequencing paired-end reads. BMC Bioinformatics. 2014 Jun 12;15:182. doi: 10.1186/1471-2105-15-182. PubMed PMID: 24925680; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4074385"
        QualiMap v.2.2.1
        "García-Alcalde F Okonechnikov K Carbonell J Cruz LM Götz S Tarazona S Dopazo J Meyer TF Conesa A. Qualimap: evaluating next-generation sequencing alignment data. Bioinformatics. 2012 Oct 15;28(20):2678-9. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/bts503. Epub 2012 Aug 22. PubMed PMID: 22914218"
        bedtools v2.26.0
        "Quinlan AR Hall IM. BEDTools: a flexible suite of utilities for comparing genomic features. Bioinformatics. 2010 Mar 15;26(6):841-2. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btq033. Epub 2010 Jan 28. PubMed PMID: 20110278; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2832824"
        deeptools 3.1.0
        "Ramírez F, Ryan DP, Grüning B, Bhardwaj V, Kilpert F, Richter AS, Heyne S, Dündar F, Manke T. deepTools2: a next generation web server for deep-sequencing data analysis. Nucleic Acids Res. 2016 Jul 8;44(W1):W160-5. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkw257. Epub 2016 Apr 13. PubMed PMID: 27079975; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4987876"
        samtools 1.4.1
        "Li H Handsaker B Wysoker A Fennell T Ruan J Homer N Marth G Abecasis G Durbin R; 1000 Genome Project Data Processing Subgroup. The Sequence Alignment/Map format and SAMtools. Bioinformatics. 2009 Aug 15;25(16):2078-9. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btp352. Epub 2009 Jun 8. PubMed PMID: 19505943; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2723002"
        macs2 2.1.1.20160309
        'Zhang Y Liu T Meyer CA Eeckhoute J Johnson DS Bernstein BE Nusbaum C Myers RM Brown M Li W Liu XS. Model-based analysis of ChIP-Seq (MACS). Genome Biol. 2008;9(9):R137. doi: 10.1186/gb-2008-9-9-r137. Epub 2008 Sep 17. PubMed PMID: 18798982; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2592715'
        epic 0.2.12
        "Xu S, Grullon S, Ge K, Peng W. Spatial clustering for identification of ChIP-enriched regions (SICER) to map regions of histone methylation patterns in embryonic stem cells. Methods Mol Biol. 2014;1150:97-111 doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-0512-6_5. PubMed PMID: 24743992; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4152844. / https://github.com/biocore-ntnu/epic"

        FastQC

        FastQC is a quality control tool for high throughput sequence data, written by Simon Andrews at the Babraham Institute in Cambridge.

        Sequence Counts

        Sequence counts for each sample. Duplicate read counts are an estimate only.

        This plot show the total number of reads, broken down into unique and duplicate if possible (only more recent versions of FastQC give duplicate info).

        You can read more about duplicate calculation in the FastQC documentation. A small part has been copied here for convenience:

        Only sequences which first appear in the first 100,000 sequences in each file are analysed. This should be enough to get a good impression for the duplication levels in the whole file. Each sequence is tracked to the end of the file to give a representative count of the overall duplication level.

        The duplication detection requires an exact sequence match over the whole length of the sequence. Any reads over 75bp in length are truncated to 50bp for this analysis.

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        Sequence Quality Histograms

        The mean quality value across each base position in the read.

        To enable multiple samples to be plotted on the same graph, only the mean quality scores are plotted (unlike the box plots seen in FastQC reports).

        Taken from the FastQC help:

        The y-axis on the graph shows the quality scores. The higher the score, the better the base call. The background of the graph divides the y axis into very good quality calls (green), calls of reasonable quality (orange), and calls of poor quality (red). The quality of calls on most platforms will degrade as the run progresses, so it is common to see base calls falling into the orange area towards the end of a read.

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        Per Sequence Quality Scores

        The number of reads with average quality scores. Shows if a subset of reads has poor quality.

        From the FastQC help:

        The per sequence quality score report allows you to see if a subset of your sequences have universally low quality values. It is often the case that a subset of sequences will have universally poor quality, however these should represent only a small percentage of the total sequences.

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        Per Base Sequence Content

        The proportion of each base position for which each of the four normal DNA bases has been called.

        To enable multiple samples to be shown in a single plot, the base composition data is shown as a heatmap. The colours represent the balance between the four bases: an even distribution should give an even muddy brown colour. Hover over the plot to see the percentage of the four bases under the cursor.

        To see the data as a line plot, as in the original FastQC graph, click on a sample track.

        From the FastQC help:

        Per Base Sequence Content plots out the proportion of each base position in a file for which each of the four normal DNA bases has been called.

        In a random library you would expect that there would be little to no difference between the different bases of a sequence run, so the lines in this plot should run parallel with each other. The relative amount of each base should reflect the overall amount of these bases in your genome, but in any case they should not be hugely imbalanced from each other.

        It's worth noting that some types of library will always produce biased sequence composition, normally at the start of the read. Libraries produced by priming using random hexamers (including nearly all RNA-Seq libraries) and those which were fragmented using transposases inherit an intrinsic bias in the positions at which reads start. This bias does not concern an absolute sequence, but instead provides enrichement of a number of different K-mers at the 5' end of the reads. Whilst this is a true technical bias, it isn't something which can be corrected by trimming and in most cases doesn't seem to adversely affect the downstream analysis.

        Click a sample row to see a line plot for that dataset.
        Rollover for sample name
        Position: -
        %T: -
        %C: -
        %A: -
        %G: -

        Per Sequence GC Content

        The average GC content of reads. Normal random library typically have a roughly normal distribution of GC content.

        From the FastQC help:

        This module measures the GC content across the whole length of each sequence in a file and compares it to a modelled normal distribution of GC content.

        In a normal random library you would expect to see a roughly normal distribution of GC content where the central peak corresponds to the overall GC content of the underlying genome. Since we don't know the the GC content of the genome the modal GC content is calculated from the observed data and used to build a reference distribution.

        An unusually shaped distribution could indicate a contaminated library or some other kinds of biased subset. A normal distribution which is shifted indicates some systematic bias which is independent of base position. If there is a systematic bias which creates a shifted normal distribution then this won't be flagged as an error by the module since it doesn't know what your genome's GC content should be.

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        Per Base N Content

        The percentage of base calls at each position for which an N was called.

        From the FastQC help:

        If a sequencer is unable to make a base call with sufficient confidence then it will normally substitute an N rather than a conventional base call. This graph shows the percentage of base calls at each position for which an N was called.

        It's not unusual to see a very low proportion of Ns appearing in a sequence, especially nearer the end of a sequence. However, if this proportion rises above a few percent it suggests that the analysis pipeline was unable to interpret the data well enough to make valid base calls.

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        Sequence Length Distribution

        All samples have sequences of a single length (50bp).

        Sequence Duplication Levels

        The relative level of duplication found for every sequence.

        From the FastQC Help:

        In a diverse library most sequences will occur only once in the final set. A low level of duplication may indicate a very high level of coverage of the target sequence, but a high level of duplication is more likely to indicate some kind of enrichment bias (eg PCR over amplification). This graph shows the degree of duplication for every sequence in a library: the relative number of sequences with different degrees of duplication.

        Only sequences which first appear in the first 100,000 sequences in each file are analysed. This should be enough to get a good impression for the duplication levels in the whole file. Each sequence is tracked to the end of the file to give a representative count of the overall duplication level.

        The duplication detection requires an exact sequence match over the whole length of the sequence. Any reads over 75bp in length are truncated to 50bp for this analysis.

        In a properly diverse library most sequences should fall into the far left of the plot in both the red and blue lines. A general level of enrichment, indicating broad oversequencing in the library will tend to flatten the lines, lowering the low end and generally raising other categories. More specific enrichments of subsets, or the presence of low complexity contaminants will tend to produce spikes towards the right of the plot.

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        Overrepresented sequences

        The total amount of overrepresented sequences found in each library.

        FastQC calculates and lists overrepresented sequences in FastQ files. It would not be possible to show this for all samples in a MultiQC report, so instead this plot shows the number of sequences categorized as over represented.

        Sometimes, a single sequence may account for a large number of reads in a dataset. To show this, the bars are split into two: the first shows the overrepresented reads that come from the single most common sequence. The second shows the total count from all remaining overrepresented sequences.

        From the FastQC Help:

        A normal high-throughput library will contain a diverse set of sequences, with no individual sequence making up a tiny fraction of the whole. Finding that a single sequence is very overrepresented in the set either means that it is highly biologically significant, or indicates that the library is contaminated, or not as diverse as you expected.

        FastQC lists all of the sequences which make up more than 0.1% of the total. To conserve memory only sequences which appear in the first 100,000 sequences are tracked to the end of the file. It is therefore possible that a sequence which is overrepresented but doesn't appear at the start of the file for some reason could be missed by this module.

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        Adapter Content

        The cumulative percentage count of the proportion of your library which has seen each of the adapter sequences at each position.

        Note that only samples with ≥ 0.1% adapter contamination are shown.

        There may be several lines per sample, as one is shown for each adapter detected in the file.

        From the FastQC Help:

        The plot shows a cumulative percentage count of the proportion of your library which has seen each of the adapter sequences at each position. Once a sequence has been seen in a read it is counted as being present right through to the end of the read so the percentages you see will only increase as the read length goes on.

        No samples found with any adapter contamination > 0.1%

        Picard

        Picard is a set of Java command line tools for manipulating high-throughput sequencing data.

        Mark Duplicates

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        QualiMap

        QualiMap is a platform-independent application to facilitate the quality control of alignment sequencing data and its derivatives like feature counts.

        Coverage histogram

        Distribution of the number of locations in the reference genome with a given depth of coverage.

        For a set of DNA or RNA reads mapped to a reference sequence, such as a genome or transcriptome, the depth of coverage at a given base position is the number of high-quality reads that map to the reference at that position (Sims et al. 2014).

        QualiMap groups the bases of a reference sequence by their depth of coverage (0×, 1×, …, N×), then plots the number of bases of the reference (y-axis) at each level of coverage depth (x-axis). This plot shows the frequency of coverage depths relative to the reference sequence for each read dataset, which provides an indirect measure of the level and variation of coverage depth in the corresponding sequenced sample.

        If reads are randomly distributed across the reference sequence, this plot should resemble a Poisson distribution (Lander & Waterman 1988), with a peak indicating approximate depth of coverage, and more uniform coverage depth being reflected in a narrower spread. The optimal level of coverage depth depends on the aims of the experiment, though it should at minimum be sufficiently high to adequately address the biological question; greater uniformity of coverage is generally desirable, because it increases breadth of coverage for a given depth of coverage, allowing equivalent results to be achieved at a lower sequencing depth (Sampson et al. 2011; Sims et al. 2014). However, it is difficult to achieve uniform coverage depth in practice, due to biases introduced during sample preparation (van Dijk et al. 2014), sequencing (Ross et al. 2013) and read mapping (Sims et al. 2014).

        This plot may include a small peak for regions of the reference sequence with zero depth of coverage. Such regions may be absent from the given sample (due to a deletion or structural rearrangement), present in the sample but not successfully sequenced (due to bias in sequencing or preparation), or sequenced but not successfully mapped to the reference (due to the choice of mapping algorithm, the presence of repeat sequences, or mismatches caused by variants or sequencing errors). Related factors cause most datasets to contain some unmapped reads (Sims et al. 2014).

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        Cumulative genome coverage

        Percentage of the reference genome with at least the given depth of coverage.

        For a set of DNA or RNA reads mapped to a reference sequence, such as a genome or transcriptome, the depth of coverage at a given base position is the number of high-quality reads that map to the reference at that position, while the breadth of coverage is the fraction of the reference sequence to which reads have been mapped with at least a given depth of coverage (Sims et al. 2014).

        Defining coverage breadth in terms of coverage depth is useful, because sequencing experiments typically require a specific minimum depth of coverage over the region of interest (Sims et al. 2014), so the extent of the reference sequence that is amenable to analysis is constrained to lie within regions that have sufficient depth. With inadequate sequencing breadth, it can be difficult to distinguish the absence of a biological feature (such as a gene) from a lack of data (Green 2007).

        For increasing coverage depths (1×, 2×, …, N×), QualiMap calculates coverage breadth as the percentage of the reference sequence that is covered by at least that number of reads, then plots coverage breadth (y-axis) against coverage depth (x-axis). This plot shows the relationship between sequencing depth and breadth for each read dataset, which can be used to gauge, for example, the likely effect of a minimum depth filter on the fraction of a genome available for analysis.

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        GC content distribution

        Each solid line represents the distribution of GC content of mapped reads for a given sample.

        GC bias is the difference between the guanine-cytosine content (GC-content) of a set of sequencing reads and the GC-content of the DNA or RNA in the original sample. It is a well-known issue with sequencing systems, and may be introduced by PCR amplification, among other factors (Benjamini & Speed 2012; Ross et al. 2013).

        QualiMap calculates the GC-content of individual mapped reads, then groups those reads by their GC-content (1%, 2%, …, 100%), and plots the frequency of mapped reads (y-axis) at each level of GC-content (x-axis). This plot shows the GC-content distribution of mapped reads for each read dataset, which should ideally resemble that of the original sample. It can be useful to display the GC-content distribution of an appropriate reference sequence for comparison, and QualiMap has an option to do this (see the Qualimap 2 documentation).

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        MACS2

        MACS2 identifies transcription factor binding sites in ChIP-seq data.

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