smartsnp, an r package for fast multivariate analyses of big genomic data

Date

2021

Authors

Herrando-Pérez, S.
Tobler, R.
Huber, C.D.

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Journal article

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Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 2021; 12(11):2084-2093

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Salvador Herrando-Pérez, Raymond Tobler, Christian D. Huber

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Abstract

1. Principal component analysis (PCA) is a powerful tool for the analysis of popula- tion structure, a genetic property that is essential to understand the evolutionary processes driving biological diversification and (pre)historical colonizations, mi- grations and extinctions. In the current era of high- throughput sequencing tech- nologies, population structure can be quantified from scores of genetic markers across hundreds to thousands of genomes. However, these big genomic datasets pose substantial computing and analytical challenges. 2. We present the R package SMARTSNP for fast and user- friendly computation of PCA on single- nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data. Inspired by the current field- standard software EIGENSOFT, smartsnp includes appropriate SNP scaling for ge- netic drift and allows projection of ancient samples onto a modern genetic space while also providing permutation- based multivariate tests for population differ- ences in genetic diversity (both location and dispersion). 3. Our extensive benchmarks show that smartsnp's PCA is 2– 4 times faster than EIGENSOFT's SMARTPCA algorithm across a wide range of sample and SNP sizes. All four smartsnp functions (smart_pca, smart_permanova, smart_permdisp and smart_mva) process datasets with up to 100 samples and 1 million simulated SNPs in less than 30 s and accurately recreate previously published SMARTPCA of ancient- human and wolf genotypes. 4. The package SMARTSNP provides fast and robust multivariate ordination and hy- pothesis testing for big genomic data that is also suitable for ancient and low- coverage modern DNA. The simple implementation should appeal to biological conservation, evolutionary, ecological and (palaeo)genomic researchers, and be useful for phenotype, ancestry and lineage studies.

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OnlinePub

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© 2021 British Ecological Society

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