Package: xcms
Authors: Johannes Rainer
Modified: 2024-12-15 13:40:29.964073
Compiled: Sun Dec 15 19:33:54 2024

1 Introduction

The xcms package provides the functionality to perform the preprocessing of LC-MS, GC-MS or LC-MS/MS data in which raw signals from mzML, mzXML or CDF files are processed into feature abundances. This preprocessing includes chromatographic peak detection, sample alignment and correspondence analysis.

The first version of the package was already published in 2006 [1] and has since been updated and modernized in several rounds to better integrate it with other R-based packages for the analysis of untargeted metabolomics data. This includes version 3 of xcms that used the MSnbase package for MS data representation [2]. The most recent update (xcms version 4) enables in addition preprocessing of MS data represented by the modern MsExperiment and Spectra packages which provides an even better integration with the RforMassSpectrometry R package ecosystem simplifying e.g. also compound annotation [3].

This document describes data import, exploration and preprocessing of a simple test LC-MS data set with the xcms package version >= 4. The same functions can be applied to the older MSnbase-based workflows (xcms version 3). Additional documents and tutorials covering also other topics of untargeted metabolomics analysis are listed at the end of this document. There is also a xcms tutorial available with more examples and details. To get a complete overview of LCMS-MS analysis, an end-to-end workflow Metabonaut website, which integrate the xcms preprocessing steps with the downstream analysis, is available.

2 Preprocessing of LC-MS data

2.1 Data import

xcms supports analysis of any LC-MS(/MS) data that can be imported with the Spectra package. Such data will typically be provided in (AIA/ANDI) NetCDF, mzXML and mzML format but can, through dedicated extensions to the Spectra package, also be imported from other sources, e.g. also directly from raw data files in manufacturer’s formats.

For demonstration purpose we will analyze in this document a small subset of the data from [4] in which the metabolic consequences of the knock-out of the fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) gene in mice was investigated. The raw data files (in NetCDF format) are provided through the faahKO data package. The data set consists of samples from the spinal cords of 6 knock-out and 6 wild-type mice. Each file contains data in centroid mode acquired in positive ion polarity from 200-600 m/z and 2500-4500 seconds. To speed-up processing of this vignette we will restrict the analysis to only 8 files.

Below we load all required packages, locate the raw CDF files within the faahKO package and build a phenodata data.frame describing the experimental setup. Generally, such data frames should contain all relevant experimental variables and sample descriptions (including also the names of the raw data files) and will be imported into R using either the read.table() function (if the file is in csv or tabulator delimited text file format) or also using functions from the readxl R package if it is in Excel file format.

library(xcms)
library(faahKO)
library(RColorBrewer)
library(pander)
library(pheatmap)
library(MsExperiment)

## Get the full path to the CDF files
cdfs <- dir(system.file("cdf", package = "faahKO"), full.names = TRUE,
            recursive = TRUE)[c(1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12)]
## Create a phenodata data.frame
pd <- data.frame(sample_name = sub(basename(cdfs), pattern = ".CDF",
                                   replacement = "", fixed = TRUE),
                 sample_group = c(rep("KO", 4), rep("WT", 4)),
                 stringsAsFactors = FALSE)

We next load our data using the readMsExperiment function from the MsExperiment package.

faahko <- readMsExperiment(spectraFiles = cdfs, sampleData = pd)
faahko
## Object of class MsExperiment 
##  Spectra: MS1 (10224) 
##  Experiment data: 8 sample(s)
##  Sample data links:
##   - spectra: 8 sample(s) to 10224 element(s).

The MS spectra data from our experiment is now available as a Spectra object within faahko. Note that this MsExperiment container could in addition to spectra data also contain other types of data or also references to other files. See the vignette from the MsExperiment for more details. Also, when loading data from mzML, mzXML or CDF files, by default only general spectra data is loaded into memory while the actual peaks data, i.e. the m/z and intensity values are only retrieved on-the-fly from the raw files when needed (this is similar to the MSnbase on-disk mode described in [2]). This guarantees a low memory footprint hence allowing to analyze also large experiments without the need of high performance computing environments. Note that also different alternative backends (and hence data representations) could be used for the Spectra object within faahko with eventually even lower memory footprint, or higher performance. See the package vignette from the Spectra package or the SpectraTutorials tutorial for more details on Spectra backends and how to change between them.

2.2 Initial data inspection

The MsExperiment object is a simple and flexible container for MS experiments. The raw MS data is stored as a Spectra object that can be accessed through the spectra() function.

spectra(faahko)
## MSn data (Spectra) with 10224 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
##         msLevel     rtime scanIndex
##       <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1             1   2501.38         1
## 2             1   2502.94         2
## 3             1   2504.51         3
## 4             1   2506.07         4
## 5             1   2507.64         5
## ...         ...       ...       ...
## 10220         1   4493.56      1274
## 10221         1   4495.13      1275
## 10222         1   4496.69      1276
## 10223         1   4498.26      1277
## 10224         1   4499.82      1278
##  ... 33 more variables/columns.
## 
## file(s):
## ko15.CDF
## ko16.CDF
## ko21.CDF
##  ... 5 more files

All spectra are organized sequentially (i.e., not by file) but the fromFile() function can be used to get for each spectrum the information to which of the data files it belongs. Below we simply count the number of spectra per file.

table(fromFile(faahko))
## 
##    1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8 
## 1278 1278 1278 1278 1278 1278 1278 1278

Information on samples can be retrieved through the sampleData() function.

sampleData(faahko)
## DataFrame with 8 rows and 3 columns
##   sample_name sample_group spectraOrigin
##   <character>  <character>   <character>
## 1        ko15           KO /home/bioc...
## 2        ko16           KO /home/bioc...
## 3        ko21           KO /home/bioc...
## 4        ko22           KO /home/bioc...
## 5        wt15           WT /home/bioc...
## 6        wt16           WT /home/bioc...
## 7        wt21           WT /home/bioc...
## 8        wt22           WT /home/bioc...

Each row in this DataFrame represents one sample (input file). Using [ it is possible to subset a MsExperiment object by sample. Below we subset the faahko to the 3rd sample (file) and access its spectra and sample data.

faahko_3 <- faahko[3]
spectra(faahko_3)
## MSn data (Spectra) with 1278 spectra in a MsBackendMzR backend:
##        msLevel     rtime scanIndex
##      <integer> <numeric> <integer>
## 1            1   2501.38         1
## 2            1   2502.94         2
## 3            1   2504.51         3
## 4            1   2506.07         4
## 5            1   2507.64         5
## ...        ...       ...       ...
## 1274         1   4493.56      1274
## 1275         1   4495.13      1275
## 1276         1   4496.69      1276
## 1277         1   4498.26      1277
## 1278         1   4499.82      1278
##  ... 33 more variables/columns.
## 
## file(s):
## ko21.CDF
sampleData(faahko_3)
## DataFrame with 1 row and 3 columns
##   sample_name sample_group spectraOrigin
##   <character>  <character>   <character>
## 1        ko21           KO /home/bioc...

As a first evaluation of the data we below plot the base peak chromatogram (BPC) for each file in our experiment. We use the chromatogram() method and set the aggregationFun to "max" to return for each spectrum the maximal intensity and hence create the BPC from the raw data. To create a total ion chromatogram we could set aggregationFun to "sum".

## Get the base peak chromatograms. This reads data from the files.
bpis <- chromatogram(faahko, aggregationFun = "max")
## Define colors for the two groups
group_colors <- paste0(brewer.pal(3, "Set1")[1:2], "60")
names(group_colors) <- c("KO", "WT")

## Plot all chromatograms.
plot(bpis, col = group_colors[sampleData(faahko)$sample_group])
Base peak chromatogram.

Figure 1: Base peak chromatogram

The chromatogram() method returned a MChromatograms object that organizes individual Chromatogram objects (which in fact contain the chromatographic data) in a two-dimensional array: columns represent samples and rows (optionally) m/z and/or retention time ranges. Below we extract the chromatogram of the first sample and access its retention time and intensity values.

bpi_1 <- bpis[1, 1]
rtime(bpi_1) |> head()
## [1] 2501.378 2502.943 2504.508 2506.073 2507.638 2509.203
intensity(bpi_1) |> head()
## [1] 43888 43960 43392 42632 42200 42288

From the BPC above it seems that after around 4200 seconds no signal is measured anymore. Thus, we filter below the full data set to a retention time range from 2550 to 4250 seconds using the filterRt() function. Note that at present this will only subset the spectra within the MsExperiment. Subsequently we re-create also the BPC.

faahko <- filterRt(faahko, rt = c(2550, 4250))
## Filter spectra
## creating the BPC on the subsetted data
bpis <- chromatogram(faahko, aggregationFun = "max")

We next create boxplots representing the distribution of the total ion currents per data file. Such plots can be very useful to spot potentially problematic MS runs. To extract this information, we use the tic() function on the Spectra object within faahko and split the values by file using fromFile().

## Get the total ion current by file
tc <- spectra(faahko) |>
    tic() |>
    split(f = fromFile(faahko))
boxplot(tc, col = group_colors[sampleData(faahko)$sample_group],
        ylab = "intensity", main = "Total ion current")
Distribution of total ion currents per file.

Figure 2: Distribution of total ion currents per file

In addition, we can also cluster the samples based on similarity of their base peak chromatograms. Samples would thus be grouped based on similarity of their LC runs. For that we need however to bin the data along the retention time axis, since retention times will generally differ between samples. Below we use the bin() function on the BPC to bin intensities into 2 second wide retention time bins. The clustering is then performed using complete linkage hierarchical clustering on the pairwise correlations of the binned base peak chromatograms.

## Bin the BPC
bpis_bin <- bin(bpis, binSize = 2)

## Calculate correlation on the log2 transformed base peak intensities
cormat <- cor(log2(do.call(cbind, lapply(bpis_bin, intensity))))
colnames(cormat) <- rownames(cormat) <- bpis_bin$sample_name

## Define which phenodata columns should be highlighted in the plot
ann <- data.frame(group = bpis_bin$sample_group)
rownames(ann) <- bpis_bin$sample_name

## Perform the cluster analysis
pheatmap(cormat, annotation = ann,
         annotation_color = list(group = group_colors))
Grouping of samples based on similarity of their base peak chromatogram.

Figure 3: Grouping of samples based on similarity of their base peak chromatogram

The samples cluster in a pairwise manner, with the KO and WT samples for the same sample index having the most similar BPC.

2.3 Chromatographic peak detection

Chromatographic peak detection aims at identifying all signal in each sample created from ions of the same originating compound species. Chromatographic peak detection can be performed in xcms with the findChromPeaks() function and a parameter object which defines and configures the algorithm that should be used (see ?findChromPeaks for a list of supported algorithms). Before running any peak detection it is however strongly suggested to first visually inspect the extracted ion chromatogram of e.g. internal standards or compounds known to be present in the samples in order to evaluate and adapt the settings of the peak detection algorithm since the default settings will not be appropriate for most LC-MS setups.

Below we extract the EIC for one compound using the chromatogram() function by specifying in addition the m/z and retention time range where we would expect the signal for that compound.

## Define the rt and m/z range of the peak area
rtr <- c(2700, 2900)
mzr <- c(334.9, 335.1)
## extract the chromatogram
chr_raw <- chromatogram(faahko, mz = mzr, rt = rtr)
plot(chr_raw, col = group_colors[chr_raw$sample_group])
Extracted ion chromatogram for one peak.

Figure 4: Extracted ion chromatogram for one peak

Note that Chromatogram objects extracted by the chromatogram() method contain an NA value if in a certain scan (i.e. in a spectrum for a specific retention time) no signal was measured in the respective m/z range. This is reflected by the lines not being drawn as continuous lines in the plot above.

The peak above has thus a width of about 50 seconds. We can use this information to define the peakwidth parameter of the centWave peak detection method [5] that we will use for chromatographic peak detection on our data. The peakwidth parameter allows to define the expected lower and upper width (in retention time dimension) of chromatographic peaks. For our data we set it thus to peakwidth = c(20, 80). The second important parameter for centWave is ppm which defines the expected maximum deviation of m/z values of the centroids that should be included into one chromatographic peak (note that this is not the precision of m/z values provided by the MS instrument manufacturer).

For the ppm parameter we extract the full MS data (intensity, retention time and m/z values) corresponding to the above peak. To this end we first filter the raw object by retention time, then by m/z and finally plot the object with type = "XIC" to produce the plot below. We use the pipe (|>) operator to better illustrate the corresponding workflow.

faahko |>
filterRt(rt = rtr) |>
filterMz(mz = mzr) |>
plot(type = "XIC")
Visualization of the raw MS data for one peak. For each plot: upper panel: chromatogram plotting the intensity values against the retention time, lower panel m/z against retention time plot. The individual data points are colored according to the intensity.

Figure 5: Visualization of the raw MS data for one peak
For each plot: upper panel: chromatogram plotting the intensity values against the retention time, lower panel m/z against retention time plot. The individual data points are colored according to the intensity.

In the present data there is actually no variation in the m/z values. Usually the m/z values of the individual centroids (lower panel) in the plots above would scatter around the real m/z value of the compound (in an intensity dependent manner).

The first step of the centWave algorithm defines regions of interest (ROI) that are subsequently screened for the presence of chromatographic peaks. These ROIs are defined based on the difference of m/z values of centroids from consecutive scans (spectra). In detail, centroids from consecutive scans are included into a ROI if the difference between their m/z and the mean m/z of the ROI is smaller than the user defined ppm parameter. A reasonable choice for the ppm could thus be the maximal m/z difference of data points from neighboring scans/spectra that are part of a chromatographic peak for an internal standard of known compound. It is suggested to inspect the ranges of m/z values for several compounds (either internal standards or compounds known to be present in the sample) and define the ppm parameter for centWave according to these. See also this tutorial for additional information and examples on choosing and testing peak detection settings.

Chromatographic peak detection can also be performed on extracted ion chromatograms, which helps testing and tuning peak detection settings. Note however that peak detection on EICs does not involve the first step of centWave described above and will thus not consider the ppm parameter. Also, since less data is available to the algorithms, background signal estimation is performed differently and different settings for snthresh will need to be used (generally a lower snthresh will be used for EICs since the estimated background signal tends to be higher for data subsets than for the full data). Below we perform the peak detection with the findChromPeaks() function on the EIC generated above. The submitted parameter object defines which algorithm will be used and allows to define the settings for this algorithm. We use a CentWaveParam parameter object to use and configure the centWave algorithm with default settings, except for snthresh.

xchr <- findChromPeaks(chr_raw, param = CentWaveParam(snthresh = 2))

We can access the identified chromatographic peaks with the chromPeaks() function.

chromPeaks(xchr)
##             rt    rtmin    rtmax        into        intb  maxo   sn row column
##  [1,] 2781.505 2761.160 2809.674  412134.255  355516.374 16856   13   1      1
##  [2,] 2786.199 2764.290 2812.803 1496244.206 1391821.332 58736   20   1      2
##  [3,] 2734.556 2714.211 2765.855   21579.367   18449.428   899    4   1      3
##  [4,] 2797.154 2775.245 2815.933  159058.782  150289.314  6295   12   1      3
##  [5,] 2784.635 2761.160 2808.109   54947.545   37923.532  2715    2   1      4
##  [6,] 2859.752 2845.668 2878.532   13895.212   13874.868   905  904   1      4
##  [7,] 2897.311 2891.051 2898.876    5457.155    5450.895   995  994   1      4
##  [8,] 2819.064 2808.109 2834.713   19456.914   19438.134  1347 1576   1      4
##  [9,] 2789.329 2762.725 2808.109  174473.311   91114.975  8325    3   1      5
## [10,] 2786.199 2764.290 2812.803  932645.211  569236.246 35856    2   1      6
## [11,] 2792.461 2768.987 2823.760  876585.527  511324.134 27200    2   1      7
## [12,] 2789.329 2773.680 2806.544   89582.569   73871.386  5427    6   1      8

Parallel to the chromPeaks() matrix there is also a chromPeakData() data frame that allows to add arbitrary annotations to each chromatographic peak, such as e.g. the MS level in which the peak was detected:

chromPeakData(xchr)
## DataFrame with 12 rows and 4 columns
##      ms_level is_filled       row    column
##     <integer> <logical> <integer> <integer>
## 1           1     FALSE         1         1
## 2           1     FALSE         1         2
## 3           1     FALSE         1         3
## 4           1     FALSE         1         3
## 5           1     FALSE         1         4
## ...       ...       ...       ...       ...
## 8           1     FALSE         1         4
## 9           1     FALSE         1         5
## 10          1     FALSE         1         6
## 11          1     FALSE         1         7
## 12          1     FALSE         1         8

Below we plot the EIC along with all identified chromatographic peaks using the plot() function on the result object from above. Additional parameters peakCol and peakBg allow to define a foreground and background (fill) color for each identified chromatographic peak in the provided result object (i.e., we need to define one color for each row of chromPeaks(xchr) - column "column" (or "sample" if present) in that peak matrix specifies the sample in which the peak was identified).

## Define a color for each sample
sample_colors <- group_colors[xchr$sample_group]
## Define the background color for each chromatographic peak
bg <- sample_colors[chromPeaks(xchr)[, "column"]]
## Parameter `col` defines the color of each sample/line, `peakBg` of each
## chromatographic peak.
plot(xchr, col = sample_colors, peakBg = bg)
Signal for an example peak. Red and blue colors represent KO and wild type samples, respectively. Peak area of identified chromatographic peaks are highlighted in the sample group color.

Figure 6: Signal for an example peak
Red and blue colors represent KO and wild type samples, respectively. Peak area of identified chromatographic peaks are highlighted in the sample group color.

If we are happy with the settings we can use them for the peak detection on the full data set (i.e. on the MsExperiment object with the data for the whole experiment). Note that below we set the argument prefilter to c(6, 5000) and noise to 5000 to reduce the run time of this vignette. With this setting we consider only ROIs with at least 6 centroids with an intensity larger than 5000 for the centWave chromatographic peak detection.

cwp <- CentWaveParam(peakwidth = c(20, 80), noise = 5000,
                     prefilter = c(6, 5000))
faahko <- findChromPeaks(faahko, param = cwp)

The results of findChromPeaks() on a MsExperiment object are returned as an XcmsExperiment object. This object extends MsExperiment directly (hence providing the same access to all raw data) and contains all xcms preprocessing results. Note also that additional rounds of chromatographic peak detections could be performed and their results being added to existing peak detection results by additional calls to findChromPeaks() on the result object and using parameter add = TRUE.

The chromPeaks function can also here be used to access the results from the chromatographic peak detection. Below we show the first 6 identified chromatographic peaks.

chromPeaks(faahko) |>
    head()
##           mz mzmin mzmax       rt    rtmin    rtmax     into     intb  maxo sn
## CP0001 594.0 594.0 594.0 2601.535 2581.191 2637.529 161042.2 146073.3  7850 11
## CP0002 577.0 577.0 577.0 2604.665 2581.191 2626.574 136105.2 128067.9  6215 11
## CP0003 307.0 307.0 307.0 2618.750 2592.145 2645.354 284782.4 264907.0 16872 20
## CP0004 302.0 302.0 302.0 2617.185 2595.275 2640.659 687146.6 669778.1 30552 43
## CP0005 370.1 370.1 370.1 2673.523 2643.789 2700.127 449284.6 417225.3 25672 17
## CP0006 427.0 427.0 427.0 2675.088 2643.789 2684.478 283334.7 263943.2 11025 13
##        sample
## CP0001      1
## CP0002      1
## CP0003      1
## CP0004      1
## CP0005      1
## CP0006      1

Columns of this chromPeaks() matrix might differ depending on the used peak detection algorithm. Columns that all algorithms have to provide are: "mz", "mzmin", "mzmax", "rt", "rtmin" and "rtmax" that define the m/z and retention time range of the chromatographic peak (i.e. all mass peaks within that area are used to integrate the peak signal) as well as the m/z and retention time of the peak apex. Other mandatory columns are "into" and "maxo" with the absolute integrated peak signal and the maximum peak intensity. Finally, "sample" provides the index of the sample in which the peak was identified.

Additional annotations for each individual peak can be extracted with the chromPeakData() function. This data frame could also be used to add/store arbitrary annotations for each detected peak (that don’t necessarily need to be numeric).

chromPeakData(faahko)
## DataFrame with 2908 rows and 2 columns
##         ms_level is_filled
##        <integer> <logical>
## CP0001         1     FALSE
## CP0002         1     FALSE
## CP0003         1     FALSE
## CP0004         1     FALSE
## CP0005         1     FALSE
## ...          ...       ...
## CP2904         1     FALSE
## CP2905         1     FALSE
## CP2906         1     FALSE
## CP2907         1     FALSE
## CP2908         1     FALSE

Peak detection will not always work perfectly for all types of peak shapes present in the data set leading to peak detection artifacts, such as (partially or completely) overlapping peaks or artificially split peaks (common issues especially for centWave). xcms provides the refineChromPeaks() function that can be called on peak detection results in order to refine (or clean) peak detection results by either removing identified peaks not passing a certain criteria or by merging artificially split or partially or completely overlapping chromatographic peaks. Different algorithms are available that can again be configured with their respective parameter objects: CleanPeaksParam and FilterIntensityParam allow to remove peaks with their retention time range or intensity being below a specified threshold, respectively. With MergeNeighboringPeaksParam it is possible to merge chromatographic peaks and hence remove many of the above mentioned (centWave) peak detection artifacts. See also ?refineChromPeaks for more information and help on the different methods.

Below we post-process the peak detection results merging peaks that overlap in a 4 second window per file and for which the signal between them is lower than 75% of the smaller peak’s maximal intensity. See the ?MergeNeighboringPeaksParam help page for a detailed description of the settings and the approach.

mpp <- MergeNeighboringPeaksParam(expandRt = 4)
faahko_pp <- refineChromPeaks(faahko, mpp)

An example for a merged peak is given below.

mzr_1 <- 305.1 + c(-0.01, 0.01)
chr_1 <- chromatogram(faahko[1], mz = mzr_1)
## Processing chromatographic peaks
chr_2 <- chromatogram(faahko_pp[1], mz = mzr_1)
## Processing chromatographic peaks
par(mfrow = c(1, 2))
plot(chr_1)
plot(chr_2)
Result from the peak refinement step. Left: data before processing, right: after refinement. The splitted peak was merged into one.

Figure 7: Result from the peak refinement step
Left: data before processing, right: after refinement. The splitted peak was merged into one.

centWave thus detected originally 3 chromatographic peaks in the m/z slice (left panel in the plot above) and peak refinement with MergeNeighboringPeaksParam and the specified settings merged the first two peaks into a single one (right panel in the figure above). Other close peaks, with a lower intensity between them, were however not merged (see below).

mzr_1 <- 496.2 + c(-0.01, 0.01)
chr_1 <- chromatogram(faahko[1], mz = mzr_1)
## Processing chromatographic peaks
chr_2 <- chromatogram(faahko_pp[1], mz = mzr_1)
## Processing chromatographic peaks
par(mfrow = c(1, 2))
plot(chr_1)
plot(chr_2)
Result from the peak refinement step. Left: data before processing, right: after refinement. The peaks were not merged.

Figure 8: Result from the peak refinement step
Left: data before processing, right: after refinement. The peaks were not merged.

It is also possible to perform the peak refinement on extracted ion chromatograms. This could again be used to test and fine-tune the settings for the parameter and to avoid potential problematic behavior. The minProp parameter for example has to be carefully chosen to avoid merging of isomer peaks (like in the example above). With the default minProp = 0.75 only peaks are merged if the signal between the two peaks is higher than 75% of the smaller peak’s maximal intensity. Setting this value too low could eventually result in merging of isomers as shown below.

#' Too low minProp could cause merging of isomers!
res <- refineChromPeaks(chr_1, MergeNeighboringPeaksParam(minProp = 0.05))
chromPeaks(res)
##         mz  mzmin  mzmax       rt    rtmin    rtmax     into intb    maxo  sn
## CPM1 496.2 496.19 496.21 3384.012 3294.809 3412.181 45940118   NA 1128960 177
##      sample row column
## CPM1      1   1      1
plot(res)

Thus, before running such a peak refinement evaluate that isomers present in the data set were not wrongly merged based on the chosen settings.

Before proceeding we next replace the faahko object with the results from the peak refinement step.

faahko <- faahko_pp

Below we use the data from the chromPeaks() matrix to calculate per-file summaries of the peak detection results, such as the number of peaks per file as well as the distribution of the retention time widths.

summary_fun <- function(z)
    c(peak_count = nrow(z), rt = quantile(z[, "rtmax"] - z[, "rtmin"]))

T <- chromPeaks(faahko) |>
    split.data.frame(f = chromPeaks(faahko)[, "sample"]) |>
    lapply(FUN = summary_fun) |>
    do.call(what = rbind)
rownames(T) <- basename(fileNames(faahko))
pandoc.table(
    T,
    caption = paste0("Summary statistics on identified chromatographic",
                     " peaks. Shown are number of identified peaks per",
                     " sample and widths/duration of chromatographic ",
                     "peaks."))
Summary statistics on identified chromatographic peaks. Shown are number of identified peaks per sample and widths/duration of chromatographic peaks.
  peak_count rt.0% rt.25% rt.50% rt.75% rt.100%
ko15.CDF 397 10.95 34.43 42.25 53.21 319.2
ko16.CDF 520 10.95 32.86 42.25 53.21 151.8
ko21.CDF 207 10.95 42.25 50.08 65.73 164.3
ko22.CDF 233 10.95 37.56 46.95 59.47 147.1
wt15.CDF 403 10.95 32.86 42.25 53.21 161.2
wt16.CDF 361 10.95 35.99 45.38 57.9 162.8
wt21.CDF 227 10.95 35.21 48.51 64.16 172.1
wt22.CDF 328 10.95 35.99 45.38 57.9 228.5

While by default chromPeaks() will return all identified chromatographic peaks in a result object it is also possible to extract only chromatographic peaks for a specified m/z and/or rt range:

chromPeaks(faahko, mz = c(334.9, 335.1), rt = c(2700, 2900))
##         mz mzmin mzmax       rt    rtmin    rtmax      into      intb  maxo sn
## CP0038 335   335   335 2781.505 2761.160 2809.674  412134.3  383167.4 16856 23
## CP0494 335   335   335 2786.199 2764.290 2812.803 1496244.2 1461187.3 58736 72
## CP1025 335   335   335 2797.154 2775.245 2815.933  159058.8  149229.6  6295 13
## CP1964 335   335   335 2786.199 2764.290 2812.803  932645.2  915333.8 35856 66
## CP2349 335   335   335 2792.461 2768.987 2823.760  876585.5  848569.1 27200 36
##        sample
## CP0038      1
## CP0494      2
## CP1025      3
## CP1964      6
## CP2349      7

We can also plot the location of the identified chromatographic peaks in the m/z - retention time space for one file using the plotChromPeaks() function. Below we plot this information for the third sample.

plotChromPeaks(faahko, file = 3)
Identified chromatographic peaks in the m/z by retention time space for one sample.

Figure 9: Identified chromatographic peaks in the m/z by retention time space for one sample

As a general overview of the peak detection results we can in addition visualize the number of identified chromatographic peaks per file along the retention time axis. Parameter binSize allows to define the width of the bins in rt dimension in which peaks should be counted. This number of chromatographic peaks within each bin is then shown color-coded in the resulting plot.

plotChromPeakImage(faahko, binSize = 10)
Frequency of identified chromatographic peaks along the retention time axis. The frequency is color coded with higher frequency being represented by yellow-white. Each line shows the peak frequency for one file.

Figure 10: Frequency of identified chromatographic peaks along the retention time axis
The frequency is color coded with higher frequency being represented by yellow-white. Each line shows the peak frequency for one file.

Note that extracting ion chromatorams from an xcms result object will in addition to the chromatographic data also extract any identified chromatographic peaks within that region. This can thus also be used to validate and verify that the used peak detection settings identified e.g. peaks for known compounds or internal standards properly. Below we extract the ion chromatogram for the m/z - rt region above and access the detected peaks in that region using the chromPeaks() function.

chr_ex <- chromatogram(faahko, mz = mzr, rt = rtr)
chromPeaks(chr_ex)
##         mz mzmin mzmax       rt    rtmin    rtmax      into      intb  maxo sn
## CP0038 335   335   335 2781.505 2761.160 2809.674  412134.3  383167.4 16856 23
## CP0494 335   335   335 2786.199 2764.290 2812.803 1496244.2 1461187.3 58736 72
## CP1025 335   335   335 2797.154 2775.245 2815.933  159058.8  149229.6  6295 13
## CP1964 335   335   335 2786.199 2764.290 2812.803  932645.2  915333.8 35856 66
## CP2349 335   335   335 2792.461 2768.987 2823.760  876585.5  848569.1 27200 36
##        sample row column
## CP0038      1   1      1
## CP0494      2   1      2
## CP1025      3   1      3
## CP1964      6   1      6
## CP2349      7   1      7

We can also plot this extracted ion chromatogram which will also visualize all identified chromatographic peaks in that region.

sample_colors <- group_colors[chr_ex$sample_group]
plot(chr_ex, col = group_colors[chr_raw$sample_group], lwd = 2,
     peakBg = sample_colors[chromPeaks(chr_ex)[, "sample"]])
Signal for an example peak. Red and blue colors represent KO and wild type samples, respectively. The signal area of identified chromatographic peaks are filled with a color.

Figure 11: Signal for an example peak
Red and blue colors represent KO and wild type samples, respectively. The signal area of identified chromatographic peaks are filled with a color.

Chromatographic peaks can be visualized also in other ways: by setting peakType = "rectangle" the they are indicated with a rectangle instead of the default highlighting option (peakType = "polygon") used above. As a third alternative it would also possible to just indicate the apex position for each identified chromatographic peak with a single point (peakType = "point"). Below we plot the data again using peakType = "rectangle".

plot(chr_ex, col = sample_colors, peakType = "rectangle",
     peakCol = sample_colors[chromPeaks(chr_ex)[, "sample"]],
     peakBg = NA)
Signal for an example peak. Red and blue colors represent KO and wild type samples, respectively. The rectangles indicate the identified chromatographic peaks per sample.

Figure 12: Signal for an example peak
Red and blue colors represent KO and wild type samples, respectively. The rectangles indicate the identified chromatographic peaks per sample.

Finally we plot also the distribution of peak intensity per sample. This allows to investigate whether systematic differences in peak signals between samples are present.

## Extract a list of per-sample peak intensities (in log2 scale)
ints <- split(log2(chromPeaks(faahko)[, "into"]),
              f = chromPeaks(faahko)[, "sample"])
boxplot(ints, varwidth = TRUE, col = sample_colors,
        ylab = expression(log[2]~intensity), main = "Peak intensities")
grid(nx = NA, ny = NULL)
Peak intensity distribution per sample.

Figure 13: Peak intensity distribution per sample

Over and above the signal of the identified chromatographic peaks is comparable across samples, with the exception of samples 3, 4 and, to some degree, also 7 that show slightly higher average intensities, but also a lower number of detected peaks (indicated by the smaller width of the boxes).

Note that in addition to the above described identification of chromatographic peaks, it is also possible to manually define and add chromatographic peaks with the manualChromPeaks() function (see ?manualChromPeaks help page for more information).

2.4 Alignment

The time at which analytes elute in the chromatography can vary between samples (and even compounds). Such differences were already visible in the BPC and even the extracted ion chromatogram plot in the previous section. The alignment step, also referred to as retention time correction, aims to adjust these differences by shifting signals along the retention time axis and aligning them between different samples within an experiment.

A plethora of alignment algorithms exist (see [6]), with some of them being also implemented in xcms. Alignment of LC-MS data can be performed in xcms using the adjustRtime() method and an algorithm-specific parameter class (see ?adjustRtime for an overview of available methods in xcms).

In the example below we use the obiwarp method [7] to align the samples. We use a binSize = 0.6 which creates warping functions in m/z bins of 0.6. Also here it is advisable to modify and adapt the settings for each experiment.

faahko <- adjustRtime(faahko, param = ObiwarpParam(binSize = 0.6))

Note that adjustRtime(), besides calculating adjusted retention times for each spectrum, adjusts also the retention times of the identified chromatographic peaks in the xcms result object. Adjusted retention times of individual spectra can be extracted from the result object using either the adjustedRtime() function or using rtime() with parameter adjusted = TRUE (the default):

## Extract adjusted retention times
adjustedRtime(faahko) |> head()
## [1] 2551.457 2553.089 2554.720 2556.352 2557.983 2559.615
## Or simply use the rtime method
rtime(faahko) |> head()
## [1] 2551.457 2553.089 2554.720 2556.352 2557.983 2559.615
## Get raw (unadjusted) retention times
rtime(faahko, adjusted = FALSE) |> head()
## [1] 2551.457 2553.022 2554.586 2556.151 2557.716 2559.281

To evaluate the impact of the alignment we plot the BPC on the adjusted data. In addition we plot also the differences between the adjusted and the raw retention times per sample using the plotAdjustedRtime() function. To disable the automatic extraction of all identified chromatographic peaks by the chromatogram() function (which would not make much sense for a BPC) we use chromPeaks = "none" below.

## Get the base peak chromatograms.
bpis_adj <- chromatogram(faahko, aggregationFun = "max", chromPeaks = "none")
par(mfrow = c(3, 1), mar = c(4.5, 4.2, 1, 0.5))
plot(bpis, col = sample_colors)
grid()
plot(bpis_adj, col = sample_colors)
grid()
## Plot also the difference of adjusted to raw retention time.
plotAdjustedRtime(faahko, col = sample_colors)
grid()
Obiwarp aligned data. Base peak chromatogram before (top) and after alignment (middle) and difference between adjusted and raw retention times along the retention time axis (bottom).

Figure 14: Obiwarp aligned data
Base peak chromatogram before (top) and after alignment (middle) and difference between adjusted and raw retention times along the retention time axis (bottom).

Too large differences between adjusted and raw retention times could indicate poorly performing samples or alignment.

At last we evaluate also the impact of the alignment on the test peak.

par(mfrow = c(2, 1))
## Plot the raw data
plot(chr_raw, col = sample_colors)
grid()
## Extract the chromatogram from the adjusted object
chr_adj <- chromatogram(faahko, rt = rtr, mz = mzr)
plot(chr_adj, col = sample_colors, peakType = "none")
grid()
Example extracted ion chromatogram before (top) and after alignment (bottom).

Figure 15: Example extracted ion chromatogram before (top) and after alignment (bottom)

Note: xcms result objects (XcmsExperiment as well as XCMSnExp) contain both the raw and the adjusted retention times for all spectra and subset operation will in many cases drop adjusted retention times. Thus it might sometimes be useful to immediately replace the raw retention times in the data using the applyAdjustedRtime() function.

2.4.1 Subset-based alignment

For some experiments it might be better to perform the alignment based on only a subset of the available samples, e.g. if pooled QC samples were injected at regular intervals or if the experiment contains blanks. All alignment methods in xcms support such a subset-based alignment in which retention time shifts are estimated on only a specified subset of samples followed by an alignment of the whole data set based on the aligned subset.

The subset of samples for such an alignment can be specified with the parameter subset of the PeakGroupsParam or ObiwarpParam object. Parameter subsetAdjust allows to specify the method by which the left-out samples will be adjusted. There are currently two options available:

  • subsetAdjust = "previous": adjust the retention times of a non-subset sample based on the alignment results of the previous subset sample (e.g. a QC sample). If samples are e.g. in the order A1, B1, B2, A2, B3, B4 with A representing QC samples and B study samples, using subset = c(1, 4) and subsetAdjust = "previous" would result in all A samples to be aligned with each other and non-subset samples B1 and B2 being adjusted based on the alignment result of subset samples A1 and B3 and B4 on those of A2.

  • subsetAdjust = "average": adjust retention times of non-subset samples based on an interpolation of the alignment results of the previous and subsequent subset sample. In the example above, B1 would be adjusted based on the average of adjusted retention times between subset (QC) samples A1 and A2. Since there is no subset sample after non-subset samples B3 and B4 these will be adjusted based on the alignment results of A2 alone. Note that a weighted average is used to calculate the adjusted retention time averages, which uses the inverse of the difference of the index of the non-subset sample to the subset samples as weights. Thus, if we have a setup like A1, B1, B2, A2 the adjusted retention times of A1 would get a larger weight than those of A2 in the adjustment of non-subset sample B1 causing it’s adjusted retention times to be closer to those of A1 than to A2. See below for examples.

Important: both cases require a meaningful/correct ordering of the samples within the object (i.e., samples should be ordered by injection index).

The examples below aim to illustrate the effect of these alignment options. We assume samples 1, 4 and 7 in the faahKO data set to be QC pool samples. We thus want to perform the alignment based on these samples and subsequently adjust the retention times of the left-out samples (2, 3, 5, 6 and 8) based on interpolation of the results from the neighboring subset (QC) samples. After initial peak grouping we perform the subset-based alignment with the peak groups method by passing the indices of the QC samples with the subset parameter to the PeakGroupsParam function and set subsetAdjust = "average" to adjust the study samples based on interpolation of the alignment results from neighboring subset/QC samples.

Note that for any subset-alignment all parameters such as minFraction are relative to the subset, not the full experiment!

Below we first remove any previous alignment results with the dropAdjustedRtime() function to allow a fresh alignment using the subset-based option outlined above. In addition to removing adjusted retention times for all spectra, this function will also restore the original retention times for identified chromatographic peaks.

faahko <- dropAdjustedRtime(faahko)

## Define the experimental layout
sampleData(faahko)$sample_type <- "study"
sampleData(faahko)$sample_type[c(1, 4, 7)] <- "QC"

For an alignment with the peak groups method an initial peak grouping (correspondence) analysis is required, because the algorithm estimates retention times shifts between samples using the retention times of hook peaks (i.e. chromatographic peaks present in most/all samples). Here we use the default settings for an peak density method-based correspondence, but it is strongly advised to adapt the parameters for each data set (details in the next section). The definition of the sample groups (i.e. assignment of individual samples to the sample groups in the experiment) is mandatory for the PeakDensityParam. If there are no sample groups in the experiment, sampleGroups should be set to a single value for each file (e.g. rep(1, length(fileNames(faahko))).

## Initial peak grouping. Use sample_type as grouping variable
pdp_subs <- PeakDensityParam(sampleGroups = sampleData(faahko)$sample_type,
                             minFraction = 0.9)
faahko <- groupChromPeaks(faahko, param = pdp_subs)

## Define subset-alignment options and perform the alignment
pgp_subs <- PeakGroupsParam(
    minFraction = 0.85,
    subset = which(sampleData(faahko)$sample_type == "QC"),
    subsetAdjust = "average", span = 0.4)
faahko <- adjustRtime(faahko, param = pgp_subs)

Below we plot the results of the alignment highlighting the subset samples in green. This nicely shows how the interpolation of the subsetAdjust = "average" works: retention times of sample 2 are adjusted based on those from subset sample 1 and 4, giving however more weight to the closer subset sample 1 which results in the adjusted retention times of 2 being more similar to those of sample 1. Sample 3 on the other hand gets adjusted giving more weight to the second subset sample (4).

clrs <- rep("#00000040", 8)
clrs[sampleData(faahko)$sample_type == "QC"] <- c("#00ce0080")
par(mfrow = c(2, 1), mar = c(4, 4.5, 1, 0.5))
plot(chromatogram(faahko, aggregationFun = "max", chromPeaks = "none"),
     col = clrs)
grid()
plotAdjustedRtime(faahko, col = clrs, peakGroupsPch = 1,
                  peakGroupsCol = "#00ce0040")
grid()
Subset-alignment results with option average. Difference between adjusted and raw retention times along the retention time axis. Samples on which the alignment models were estimated are shown in green, study samples in grey.

Figure 16: Subset-alignment results with option average
Difference between adjusted and raw retention times along the retention time axis. Samples on which the alignment models were estimated are shown in green, study samples in grey.

Option subsetAdjust = "previous" would adjust the retention times of a non-subset sample based on a single subset sample (the previous), which results in most cases in the adjusted retention times of the non-subset sample being highly similar to those of the subset sample which was used for adjustment.

2.5 Correspondence

Correspondence is usually the final step in LC-MS data preprocessing in which data, presumably representing signal from the same originating ions, is matched across samples. As a result, chromatographic peaks from different samples with similar m/z and retention times get grouped into LC-MS features. The function to perform the correspondence in xcms is called groupChromPeaks() that again supports different algorithms which can be selected and configured with a specific parameter object (see ?groupChromPeaks for an overview). For our example we will use the peak density method [1] that, within small slices along the m/z dimension, combines chromatographic peaks depending on the density of these peaks along the retention time axis. To illustrate this, we simulate below the peak grouping for an m/z slice containing multiple chromatoghaphic peaks within each sample using the plotChromPeakDensity() function and a PeakDensityParam object with parameter minFraction = 0.4 (features are only defined if in at least 40% of samples a chromatographic peak was present) - parameter sampleGroups is used to define to which sample group each sample belongs.

## Define the mz slice.
mzr <- c(305.05, 305.15)

## Extract and plot the chromatograms
chr_mzr <- chromatogram(faahko, mz = mzr)
## Define the parameters for the peak density method
pdp <- PeakDensityParam(sampleGroups = sampleData(faahko)$sample_group,
                        minFraction = 0.4, bw = 30)
plotChromPeakDensity(chr_mzr, col = sample_colors, param = pdp,
                     peakBg = sample_colors[chromPeaks(chr_mzr)[, "sample"]],
                     peakCol = sample_colors[chromPeaks(chr_mzr)[, "sample"]],
                     peakPch = 16)
Example for peak density correspondence. Upper panel: chromatogram for an mz slice with multiple chromatographic peaks. lower panel: identified chromatographic peaks at their retention time (x-axis) and index within samples of the experiments (y-axis) for different values of the bw parameter. The black line represents the peak density estimate. Grouping of peaks (based on the provided settings) is indicated by grey rectangles.

Figure 17: Example for peak density correspondence
Upper panel: chromatogram for an mz slice with multiple chromatographic peaks. lower panel: identified chromatographic peaks at their retention time (x-axis) and index within samples of the experiments (y-axis) for different values of the bw parameter. The black line represents the peak density estimate. Grouping of peaks (based on the provided settings) is indicated by grey rectangles.

The upper panel in the plot shows the extracted ion chromatogram for each sample with the detected peaks highlighted. The retention times for the individual chromatographic peaks in each sample (y-axis being the index of the sample in the data set) are shown in the lower panel with the solid black line representing the density estimate for the distribution of detected peaks along the retention time. Parameter bw defines the smoothness of this estimation. The grey rectangles indicate which chromatographic peaks would be grouped into a feature (each grey rectangle thus representing one feature). This type of visualization is thus ideal to test, validate and optimize correspondence settings on manually defined m/z slices before applying them to the full data set. For the tested m/z slice the settings seemed to be OK and we are thus applying them to the full data set below. Especially the parameter bw will be very data set dependent (or more specifically LC-dependent) and should be adapted to each data set.

Another important parameter is binSize that defines the size of the m/z slices (bins) within which peaks are being grouped. This parameter thus defines the required similarity in m/z values for the chromatographic peaks that are then assumed to represent signal from the same (type of ion of a) compound and hence evaluated for grouping. By default, a constant m/z bin size is used, but by changing parameter ppm to a value larger than 0, m/z-relative bin sizes would be used instead (i.e., the bin size will increase with the m/z value hence better representing the measurement error/precision of some MS instruments). The bin sizes (and subsequently the m/z width of the defined features) would then reach a maximal value of binSize plus ppm parts-per-million of the largest m/z value of any chromatographic peak in the data set.

See also the xcms tutorial for more examples and details.

## Perform the correspondence using fixed m/z bin sizes.
pdp <- PeakDensityParam(sampleGroups = sampleData(faahko)$sample_group,
                        minFraction = 0.4, bw = 30)
faahko <- groupChromPeaks(faahko, param = pdp)

As an alternative we perform the correspondence using m/z relative bin sizes.

## Drop feature definitions and re-perform the correspondence
## using m/z-relative bin sizes.
faahko_ppm <- groupChromPeaks(
    dropFeatureDefinitions(faahko),
    PeakDensityParam(sampleGroups = sampleData(faahko)$sample_group,
                     minFraction = 0.4, bw = 30, ppm = 10))

The results will be mostly similar, except for the higher m/z range (in which larger m/z bins will be used). Below we plot the m/z range for features against their median m/z. For the present data set (acquired with a triple quad instrument) no clear difference can be seen for the two approaches hence we proceed the analysis with the fixed bin size setting. A stronger relationship would be expected for example for data measured on TOF instruments.

## Calculate m/z width of features
mzw <- featureDefinitions(faahko)$mzmax - featureDefinitions(faahko)$mzmin
mzw_ppm <- featureDefinitions(faahko_ppm)$mzmax -
                                        featureDefinitions(faahko_ppm)$mzmin
plot(featureDefinitions(faahko_ppm)$mzmed, mzw_ppm,
     xlab = "m/z", ylab = "m/z width", pch = 21,
     col = "#0000ff20", bg = "#0000ff10")
points(featureDefinitions(faahko)$mzmed, mzw, pch = 21,
     col = "#ff000020", bg = "#ff000010")
Relationship between a feature's m/z and the m/z width (max - min m/z) of the feature. Red points represent the results with the fixed m/z bin size, blue with the m/z-relative bin size.

Figure 18: Relationship between a feature’s m/z and the m/z width (max - min m/z) of the feature
Red points represent the results with the fixed m/z bin size, blue with the m/z-relative bin size.

Results from the correspondence analysis can be accessed with the featureDefinitions() and featureValues() function. The former returns a data frame with general information on each of the defined features, with each row being one feature and columns providing information on the median m/z and retention time as well as the indices of the chromatographic peaks assigned to the feature in column "peakidx". Below we show the information on the first 6 features.

featureDefinitions(faahko) |> head()
##       mzmed mzmin mzmax    rtmed    rtmin    rtmax npeaks KO WT      peakidx
## FT001 200.1 200.1 200.1 2902.634 2882.603 2922.664      2  2  0    458, 1161
## FT002 205.0 205.0 205.0 2789.901 2782.955 2796.531      8  4  4 44, 443,....
## FT003 206.0 206.0 206.0 2789.405 2781.389 2794.219      7  3  4 29, 430,....
## FT004 207.1 207.1 207.1 2718.560 2714.047 2727.347      7  4  3 16, 420,....
## FT005 233.0 233.0 233.1 3023.579 3015.145 3043.959      7  3  4 69, 959,....
## FT006 241.1 241.1 241.2 3683.299 3661.586 3695.886      8  3  4 276, 284....
##       ms_level
## FT001        1
## FT002        1
## FT003        1
## FT004        1
## FT005        1
## FT006        1

The featureValues() function returns a matrix with rows being features and columns samples. The content of this matrix can be defined using the value argument which can be any column name in the chromPeaks() matrix. With the default value = "into" a matrix with the integrated signal of the peaks corresponding to a feature in a sample are returned. This is then generally used as the intensity matrix for downstream analysis. Below we extract the intensities for the first 6 features.

featureValues(faahko, value = "into") |> head()
##        ko15.CDF  ko16.CDF  ko21.CDF  ko22.CDF  wt15.CDF  wt16.CDF  wt21.CDF
## FT001        NA  506848.9        NA  169955.6        NA        NA        NA
## FT002 1924712.0 1757151.0 1383416.7 1180288.2 2129885.1 1634342.0 1623589.2
## FT003  213659.3  289500.7        NA  178285.7  253825.6  241844.4  240606.0
## FT004  349011.5  451863.7  343897.8  208002.8  364609.8  360908.9        NA
## FT005  286221.4        NA  164009.0  149097.6  255697.7  311296.8  366441.5
## FT006 1160580.5        NA  380970.3  588986.4 1286883.0 1739516.6  639755.3
##        wt22.CDF
## FT001        NA
## FT002 1354004.9
## FT003  185399.5
## FT004  221937.5
## FT005  271128.0
## FT006  508546.4

As we can see we have several missing values in this feature matrix. Missing values are reported if in one sample no chromatographic peak was detected in the m/z - rt region of the feature. This does however not necessarily mean that there is no signal for that specific ion in that sample. The chromatographic peak detection algorithm could also just have failed to identify any peak in that region, e.g. because the signal was too noisy or too low. Thus it is advisable to perform, after correspondence, also a gap-filling (see next section).

The performance of peak detection, alignment and correspondence should always be evaluated by inspecting extracted ion chromatograms e.g. of known compounds, internal standards or identified features in general. The featureChromatograms() function allows to extract chromatograms for each feature present in featureDefinitions(). The returned MChromatograms object contains an ion chromatogram for each feature (each row containing the data for one feature) and sample (each column representing containing data for one sample). Parameter features allows to define specific features for which the EIC should be returned. These can be specified with their index or their ID (i.e. their row name in the featureDefinitions() data frame. If features is not defined, EICs are returned for all features in a data set, which can take also a considerable amount of time. Below we extract the chromatograms for the first 4 features.

feature_chroms <- featureChromatograms(faahko, features = 1:4)

feature_chroms
## XChromatograms with 4 rows and 8 columns
##             ko15.CDF        ko16.CDF        ko21.CDF        ko22.CDF
##      <XChromatogram> <XChromatogram> <XChromatogram> <XChromatogram>
## [1,]        peaks: 0        peaks: 1        peaks: 0        peaks: 1
## [2,]        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 1
## [3,]        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 0        peaks: 1
## [4,]        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 1
##             wt15.CDF        wt16.CDF        wt21.CDF        wt22.CDF
##      <XChromatogram> <XChromatogram> <XChromatogram> <XChromatogram>
## [1,]        peaks: 0        peaks: 0        peaks: 0        peaks: 0
## [2,]        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 1
## [3,]        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 1
## [4,]        peaks: 1        peaks: 1        peaks: 0        peaks: 1
## phenoData with 4 variables
## featureData with 4 variables
## - - - xcms preprocessing - - -
## Chromatographic peak detection:
##  method: centWave 
## Correspondence:
##  method: chromatographic peak density 
##  4 feature(s) identified.

And plot the extracted ion chromatograms. We again use the group color for each identified peak to fill the area.

plot(feature_chroms, col = sample_colors,
     peakBg = sample_colors[chromPeaks(feature_chroms)[, "sample"]])
Extracted ion chromatograms for features 1 to 4.

Figure 19: Extracted ion chromatograms for features 1 to 4

To access the EICs of the second feature we can simply subset the feature_chroms object.

eic_2 <- feature_chroms[2, ]
chromPeaks(eic_2)
##         mz mzmin mzmax       rt    rtmin    rtmax    into    intb  maxo sn
## CP0048 205   205   205 2791.873 2771.300 2815.623 1924712 1850331 84280 64
## CP0495 205   205   205 2795.796 2773.702 2821.043 1757151 1711473 68384 69
## CP1033 205   205   205 2796.531 2774.506 2821.697 1383417 1334570 47384 54
## CP1255 205   205   205 2789.405 2769.019 2812.924 1180288 1126958 48336 32
## CP1535 205   205   205 2782.955 2762.596 2806.444 2129885 2054677 93312 44
## CP1967 205   205   205 2787.464 2767.135 2812.486 1634342 1566379 67984 53
## CP2350 205   205   205 2790.396 2763.847 2821.630 1623589 1531573 49208 28
## CP2601 205   205   205 2787.273 2766.970 2812.261 1354005 1299188 55712 35
##        sample row column
## CP0048      1   1      1
## CP0495      2   1      2
## CP1033      3   1      3
## CP1255      4   1      4
## CP1535      5   1      5
## CP1967      6   1      6
## CP2350      7   1      7
## CP2601      8   1      8

2.6 Gap filling

Missing values in LC-MS data are in many cases the result of the chromatographic peak detection algorithm failing to identify peaks (because of noisy or low intensity signal). The aim of the gap filling step is to reduce the number of such missing values by integrating signals from the original data files for samples in which no chromatographic peak was found from the m/z - rt region where signal from the ion is expected. Gap filling can be performed in xcms with the fillChromPeaks() function and a parameter object selecting and configuring the gap filling algorithm. The method of choice is ChromPeakAreaParam that integrates the signal (in samples in which no chromatographic peak was found for a feature) in the m/z - rt region that is defined based on the m/z and retention time ranges of all detected chromatographic peaks of that specific feature. The lower m/z limit of the area is defined as the lower quartile (25% quantile) of the "mzmin" values of all peaks of the feature, the upper m/z value as the upper quartile (75% quantile) of the "mzmax" values, the lower rt value as the lower quartile (25% quantile) of the "rtmin" and the upper rt value as the upper quartile (75% quantile) of the "rtmax" values. Below we perform this gap filling on our test data and extract the feature values for the first 6 features after gap filling. An NA is reported if no signal is measured at all for a specific sample.

faahko <- fillChromPeaks(faahko, param = ChromPeakAreaParam())

featureValues(faahko, value = "into") |> head()
##        ko15.CDF  ko16.CDF  ko21.CDF  ko22.CDF  wt15.CDF  wt16.CDF  wt21.CDF
## FT001  135162.4  506848.9  111657.3  169955.6  209929.4  141607.9  226853.7
## FT002 1924712.0 1757151.0 1383416.7 1180288.2 2129885.1 1634342.0 1623589.2
## FT003  213659.3  289500.7  164380.7  178285.7  253825.6  241844.4  240606.0
## FT004  349011.5  451863.7  343897.8  208002.8  364609.8  360908.9  226234.4
## FT005  286221.4  285857.6  164009.0  149097.6  255697.7  311296.8  366441.5
## FT006 1160580.5 1102832.6  380970.3  588986.4 1286883.0 1739516.6  639755.3
##        wt22.CDF
## FT001  138341.2
## FT002 1354004.9
## FT003  185399.5
## FT004  221937.5
## FT005  271128.0
## FT006  508546.4

2.7 Final result

While we can continue using the xcms result set for further analysis (e.g. also for feature grouping with the MsFeatures package; see the LC-MS feature grouping vignette for details) we could also extract all results as a SummarizedExperiment object. This is the standard data container for Bioconductor defined in the SummarizedExperiment package and integration with other Bioconductor packages might thus be easier using that type of object. Below we use the quantify() function to extract the xcms preprocessing results as such a SummarizedExperiment object. Internally, the featureValues() function is used to generate the feature value matrix. We can pass any parameters from that function to the quantify() call. Below we use value = "into" and method = "sum" to report the integrated peak signal as intensity and to sum these values in samples in which more than one chromatographic peak was assigned to a feature (for that option it is important to run refineChromPeaks() like described above to merge overlapping peaks in each sample).

library(SummarizedExperiment)
## Loading required package: MatrixGenerics
## Loading required package: matrixStats
## 
## Attaching package: 'matrixStats'
## The following objects are masked from 'package:Biobase':
## 
##     anyMissing, rowMedians
## 
## Attaching package: 'MatrixGenerics'
## The following objects are masked from 'package:matrixStats':
## 
##     colAlls, colAnyNAs, colAnys, colAvgsPerRowSet, colCollapse,
##     colCounts, colCummaxs, colCummins, colCumprods, colCumsums,
##     colDiffs, colIQRDiffs, colIQRs, colLogSumExps, colMadDiffs,
##     colMads, colMaxs, colMeans2, colMedians, colMins, colOrderStats,
##     colProds, colQuantiles, colRanges, colRanks, colSdDiffs, colSds,
##     colSums2, colTabulates, colVarDiffs, colVars, colWeightedMads,
##     colWeightedMeans, colWeightedMedians, colWeightedSds,
##     colWeightedVars, rowAlls, rowAnyNAs, rowAnys, rowAvgsPerColSet,
##     rowCollapse, rowCounts, rowCummaxs, rowCummins, rowCumprods,
##     rowCumsums, rowDiffs, rowIQRDiffs, rowIQRs, rowLogSumExps,
##     rowMadDiffs, rowMads, rowMaxs, rowMeans2, rowMedians, rowMins,
##     rowOrderStats, rowProds, rowQuantiles, rowRanges, rowRanks,
##     rowSdDiffs, rowSds, rowSums2, rowTabulates, rowVarDiffs, rowVars,
##     rowWeightedMads, rowWeightedMeans, rowWeightedMedians,
##     rowWeightedSds, rowWeightedVars
## The following object is masked from 'package:Biobase':
## 
##     rowMedians
## Loading required package: GenomicRanges
## Loading required package: IRanges
## 
## Attaching package: 'IRanges'
## The following object is masked from 'package:xcms':
## 
##     distance
## Loading required package: GenomeInfoDb
res <- quantify(faahko, value = "into", method = "sum")
res
## class: SummarizedExperiment 
## dim: 351 8 
## metadata(6): '' '' ... '' ''
## assays(1): raw
## rownames(351): FT001 FT002 ... FT350 FT351
## rowData names(10): mzmed mzmin ... WT ms_level
## colnames(8): ko15.CDF ko16.CDF ... wt21.CDF wt22.CDF
## colData names(4): sample_name sample_group spectraOrigin sample_type

The information from featureDefinitions() is now stored in the rowData() of this object. The rowData() provides annotations and information for each row in the SummarizedExperiment (which in our case are the features).

rowData(res)
## DataFrame with 351 rows and 10 columns
##           mzmed     mzmin     mzmax     rtmed     rtmin     rtmax    npeaks
##       <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric>
## FT001     200.1     200.1     200.1   2902.63   2882.60   2922.66         2
## FT002     205.0     205.0     205.0   2789.90   2782.95   2796.53         8
## FT003     206.0     206.0     206.0   2789.40   2781.39   2794.22         7
## FT004     207.1     207.1     207.1   2718.56   2714.05   2727.35         7
## FT005     233.0     233.0     233.1   3023.58   3015.14   3043.96         7
## ...         ...       ...       ...       ...       ...       ...       ...
## FT347    595.25     595.2     595.3   3010.60   2992.76   3014.37         6
## FT348    596.20     596.2     596.2   2997.78   2992.76   3002.79         2
## FT349    596.30     596.3     596.3   3819.83   3811.52   3836.39         4
## FT350    597.40     597.4     597.4   3820.88   3817.76   3826.13         3
## FT351    599.30     599.3     599.3   4071.41   4044.94   4125.32         3
##              KO        WT  ms_level
##       <numeric> <numeric> <integer>
## FT001         2         0         1
## FT002         4         4         1
## FT003         3         4         1
## FT004         4         3         1
## FT005         3         4         1
## ...         ...       ...       ...
## FT347         2         3         1
## FT348         0         2         1
## FT349         2         2         1
## FT350         1         2         1
## FT351         1         2         1

Annotations for columns (in our case samples) are stored as colData(). In this data frame each row contains annotations for one sample (and hence one column in the feature values matrix).

colData(res)
## DataFrame with 8 rows and 4 columns
##          sample_name sample_group spectraOrigin sample_type
##          <character>  <character>   <character> <character>
## ko15.CDF        ko15           KO /home/bioc...          QC
## ko16.CDF        ko16           KO /home/bioc...       study
## ko21.CDF        ko21           KO /home/bioc...       study
## ko22.CDF        ko22           KO /home/bioc...          QC
## wt15.CDF        wt15           WT /home/bioc...       study
## wt16.CDF        wt16           WT /home/bioc...       study
## wt21.CDF        wt21           WT /home/bioc...          QC
## wt22.CDF        wt22           WT /home/bioc...       study

Finally, the feature matrix is stored as an assay within the object. Note that a SummarizedExperiment can have multiple assays which have to be numeric matrices with the number of rows and columns matching the number of features and samples, respectively. Below we list the names of the available assays.

assayNames(res)
## [1] "raw"

And we can access the actual data using the assay() function, optionally also providing the name of the assay we want to access. Below we show the first 6 lines of that matrix.

assay(res) |> head()
##        ko15.CDF  ko16.CDF  ko21.CDF  ko22.CDF  wt15.CDF  wt16.CDF  wt21.CDF
## FT001  135162.4  506848.9  111657.3  169955.6  209929.4  141607.9  226853.7
## FT002 1924712.0 1757151.0 1383416.7 1180288.2 2129885.1 1634342.0 1623589.2
## FT003  213659.3  289500.7  164380.7  178285.7  253825.6  241844.4  240606.0
## FT004  349011.5  451863.7  343897.8  208002.8  364609.8  360908.9  226234.4
## FT005  286221.4  285857.6  164009.0  149097.6  255697.7  311296.8  366441.5
## FT006 1923307.8 1102832.6  380970.3  588986.4 1286883.0 1739516.6  639755.3
##        wt22.CDF
## FT001  138341.2
## FT002 1354004.9
## FT003  185399.5
## FT004  221937.5
## FT005  271128.0
## FT006  508546.4

Since a SummarizedExperiment supports multiple assays, we in addition add also the feature value matrix without filled-in values (i.e. feature intensities that were added by the gap filling step).

assays(res)$raw_nofill <- featureValues(faahko, filled = FALSE, method = "sum")

With that we have now two assays in our result object.

assayNames(res)
## [1] "raw"        "raw_nofill"

And we can extract the feature values without gap-filling:

assay(res, "raw_nofill") |> head()
##        ko15.CDF  ko16.CDF  ko21.CDF  ko22.CDF  wt15.CDF  wt16.CDF  wt21.CDF
## FT001        NA  506848.9        NA  169955.6        NA        NA        NA
## FT002 1924712.0 1757151.0 1383416.7 1180288.2 2129885.1 1634342.0 1623589.2
## FT003  213659.3  289500.7        NA  178285.7  253825.6  241844.4  240606.0
## FT004  349011.5  451863.7  343897.8  208002.8  364609.8  360908.9        NA
## FT005  286221.4        NA  164009.0  149097.6  255697.7  311296.8  366441.5
## FT006 1923307.8        NA  380970.3  588986.4 1286883.0 1739516.6  639755.3
##        wt22.CDF
## FT001        NA
## FT002 1354004.9
## FT003  185399.5
## FT004  221937.5
## FT005  271128.0
## FT006  508546.4

Finally, a history of the full processing with xcms is available as metadata in the SummarizedExperiment.

metadata(res)
## [[1]]
## Object of class "XProcessHistory"
##  type: Peak detection 
##  date: Sun Dec 15 19:34:23 2024 
##  info:  
##  fileIndex: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 
##  Parameter class: CentWaveParam 
##  MS level(s) 1 
## 
## [[2]]
## Object of class "XProcessHistory"
##  type: Peak refinement 
##  date: Sun Dec 15 19:34:26 2024 
##  info:  
##  fileIndex: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 
##  Parameter class: MergeNeighboringPeaksParam 
##  MS level(s) 1 
## 
## [[3]]
## Object of class "XProcessHistory"
##  type: Peak grouping 
##  date: Sun Dec 15 19:34:42 2024 
##  info:  
##  fileIndex: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 
##  Parameter class: PeakDensityParam 
##  MS level(s) 1 
## 
## [[4]]
## Object of class "XProcessHistory"
##  type: Retention time correction 
##  date: Sun Dec 15 19:34:43 2024 
##  info:  
##  fileIndex: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 
##  Parameter class: PeakGroupsParam 
##  MS level(s) 1 
## 
## [[5]]
## Object of class "XProcessHistory"
##  type: Peak grouping 
##  date: Sun Dec 15 19:34:50 2024 
##  info:  
##  fileIndex: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 
##  Parameter class: PeakDensityParam 
##  MS level(s) 1 
## 
## [[6]]
## Object of class "XProcessHistory"
##  type: Missing peak filling 
##  date: Sun Dec 15 19:34:57 2024 
##  info:  
##  fileIndex: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 
##  Parameter class: ChromPeakAreaParam 
##  MS level(s) 1

This same information can also be extracted from the xcms result object using the processHistory() function. Below we extract the information for the first processing step.

processHistory(faahko)[[1]]
## Object of class "XProcessHistory"
##  type: Peak detection 
##  date: Sun Dec 15 19:34:23 2024 
##  info:  
##  fileIndex: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 
##  Parameter class: CentWaveParam 
##  MS level(s) 1

These processing steps contain also the individual parameter objects used for the analysis, hence allowing to exactly reproduce the analysis.

processHistory(faahko)[[1]] |> processParam()
## Object of class:  CentWaveParam 
##  Parameters:
##  - ppm: [1] 25
##  - peakwidth: [1] 20 80
##  - snthresh: [1] 10
##  - prefilter: [1]    6 5000
##  - mzCenterFun: [1] "wMean"
##  - integrate: [1] 1
##  - mzdiff: [1] -0.001
##  - fitgauss: [1] FALSE
##  - noise: [1] 5000
##  - verboseColumns: [1] FALSE
##  - roiList: list()
##  - firstBaselineCheck: [1] TRUE
##  - roiScales: numeric(0)
##  - extendLengthMSW: [1] FALSE
##  - verboseBetaColumns: [1] FALSE

At last we perform also a principal component analysis to evaluate the grouping of the samples in this experiment. Note that we did not perform any data normalization hence the grouping might (and will) also be influenced by technical biases.

## Extract the features and log2 transform them
ft_ints <- log2(assay(res, "raw"))

## Perform the PCA omitting all features with an NA in any of the
## samples. Also, the intensities are mean centered.
pc <- prcomp(t(na.omit(ft_ints)), center = TRUE)

## Plot the PCA
pcSummary <- summary(pc)
plot(pc$x[, 1], pc$x[,2], pch = 21, main = "",
     xlab = paste0("PC1: ", format(pcSummary$importance[2, 1] * 100,
                                   digits = 3), " % variance"),
     ylab = paste0("PC2: ", format(pcSummary$importance[2, 2] * 100,
                                   digits = 3), " % variance"),
     col = "darkgrey", bg = sample_colors, cex = 2)
grid()
text(pc$x[, 1], pc$x[,2], labels = res$sample_name, col = "darkgrey",
     pos = 3, cex = 2)
PCA for the faahKO data set, un-normalized intensities.

Figure 20: PCA for the faahKO data set, un-normalized intensities

We can see the expected separation between the KO and WT samples on PC2. On PC1 samples separate based on their ID, samples with an ID <= 18 from samples with an ID > 18. This separation might be caused by a technical bias (e.g. measurements performed on different days/weeks) or due to biological properties of the mice analyzed (sex, age, litter mates etc).

3 Further data processing and analysis

3.1 Quality-based filtering of features

When dealing with metabolomics results, it is often necessary to filter features based on certain criteria. These criteria are typically derived from statistical formulas applied to full rows of data, where each row represents a feature. The filterFeatures() function provides a robust solution for filtering features based on these conventional quality assessment criteria. It supports multiple types of filtering, allowing users to tailor the filtering process to their specific needs, all controlled by the filter argument. This function and its implementations are applicable to both XcmsExperiment results objects and SummarizedExperiment objects.

We will demonstrate how to use the filterFeatures() function to perform quality assessment and filtering on both the faahko and res variables defined above. The filter argument can accommodate various types of input, each determining the specific type of quality assessment and filtering to be performed.

The PercentMissingFilter allows to filter features based on the percentage of missing values for each feature. This function takes as an input the parameter f which is supposed to be a vector of length equal to the length of the object (i.e. number of samples) with the sample type for each. The function then computes the percentage of missing values per sample groups and filters features based on this. Features with a percent of missing values larger than the threshold in all sample groups will be removed. Another option is to base this quality assessment and filtering only on QC samples.

Both examples are shown below:

# To set up parameter `f` to filter only based on QC samples
f <- sampleData(faahko)$sample_type
f[f != "QC"] <- NA

# To set up parameter `f` to filter per sample type excluding QC samples
f <- sampleData(faahko)$sample_type
f[f == "QC"] <- NA

missing_filter <- PercentMissingFilter(threshold = 30, f = f)
# Apply the filter to faakho object
filtered_faahko <- filterFeatures(object = faahko, filter = missing_filter)
## 3 features were removed
# Apply the filter to res object
missing_filter <- PercentMissingFilter(threshold = 30, f = f)
filtered_res <- filterFeatures(object = res, filter = missing_filter)
## 3 features were removed

Here, no feature was removed, meaning that all the features had less than 30% of NA values in at least one of the sample type.

Although not directly relevant to this experiment, the BlankFlag filter can be used to flag features based on the intensity relationship between blank and QC samples. More information can be found in the documentation of the filter:

# Retrieve documentation for the main function and the specific filter.
?filterFeatures
## Help on topic 'filterFeatures' was found in the following packages:
## 
##   Package               Library
##   ProtGenerics          /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.21-bioc/R/site-library
##   xcms                  /tmp/Rtmpgg96QS/Rinst19060c4a5f7c83
##   QFeatures             /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.21-bioc/R/site-library
## 
## 
## Using the first match ...
?BlankFlag

The RsdFilter enable users to filter features based on their relative standard deviation (coefficient of variation) for a specified threshold. It is recommended to base the computation on quality control (QC) samples, as demonstrated below:

# Set up parameters for RsdFilter
rsd_filter <- RsdFilter(threshold = 0.3,
                        qcIndex = sampleData(filtered_faahko)$sample_type == "QC")

# Apply the filter to faakho object
filtered_faahko <- filterFeatures(object = filtered_faahko, filter = rsd_filter)
## 252 features were removed
# Now apply the same strategy to the res object
rsd_filter <- RsdFilter(threshold = 0.3, qcIndex = filtered_res$sample_type == "QC")
filtered_res <- filterFeatures(object = filtered_res, filter = rsd_filter, assay = "raw")
## 257 features were removed

All features with an RSD (CV) strictly larger than 0.3 in QC samples were thus removed from the data set.

The DratioFilter can be used to filter features based on the D-ratio or dispersion ratio, which compares the standard deviation in QC samples to that in study samples.

# Set up parameters for DratioFilter
dratio_filter <- DratioFilter(
    threshold = 0.5,
    qcIndex = sampleData(filtered_faahko)$sample_type == "QC",
    studyIndex = sampleData(filtered_faahko)$sample_type == "study")

# Apply the filter to faahko object
filtered_faakho <- filterFeatures(object = filtered_faahko,
                                  filter = dratio_filter)
## 38 features were removed
# Now same but for the res object
dratio_filter <- DratioFilter(
    threshold = 0.5,
    qcIndex = filtered_res$sample_type == "QC",
    studyIndex = filtered_res$sample_type == "study")

filtered_res <- filterFeatures(object = filtered_res,
                               filter = dratio_filter)
## 38 features were removed

All features with an D-ratio strictly larger than 0.5 were thus removed from the data set.

3.2 Alignment to an external reference dataset

In certain experiments, aligning two different datasets is necessary. This can involve comparing runs of the same samples conducted across different laboratories or runs with MS2 recorded after the initial MS1 run. Across laboratories and over time, the same samples may result in variation in retention time, especially because the LC system can be quite unstable. In these cases, an alignment step using the adjustRtime() function with the LamaParam parameter can allow the user to perform this type of alignment. We will go through this step by step below.

Let’s load an already analyzed dataset ref and our previous dataset before alignment, which will be tst. We will first restrict their retention time range to be the same for both dataset.

ref <- loadXcmsData("xmse")
tst <- loadXcmsData("faahko_sub2")

Now, we will attempt to align these two samples with the previous dataset. The first step is to extract landmark features (referred to as lamas). To achieve this, we will identify the features present in every QC sample of the ref dataset. To do so, we will categorize (using factor()) our data by sample_type and only retain the QC samples. This variable will be utilized to filter the features using the PercentMissingFilter parameter within the filterFeatures() function (see section above for more information on this method)

f <- sampleData(ref)$sample_type
f[f != "QC"] <- NA
ref <- filterFeatures(ref, PercentMissingFilter(threshold = 0, f = f))
## 4 features were removed
ref_mz_rt <- featureDefinitions(ref)[, c("mzmed","rtmed")]
head(ref_mz_rt)
##       mzmed    rtmed
## FT001 200.1 2902.634
## FT002 205.0 2789.901
## FT003 206.0 2789.405
## FT004 207.1 2718.560
## FT005 233.0 3023.579
## FT006 241.1 3683.299
nrow(ref_mz_rt)
## [1] 347

This is what the lamas input should look like for alignment. In terms of how this method works, the alignment algorithm matches chromatographic peaks from the experimental data to the lamas, fitting a model based on this match to adjust their retention times and minimize differences between the two datasets.

Now we can define our param object LamaParama to prepare for the alignment. Parameters such as tolerance, toleranceRt, and ppm relate to the matching between chromatographic peaks and lamas. Other parameters are related to the type of fitting generated between these data points. More details on each parameter and the overall method can be found by searching ?adjustRtime. Below is an example using default parameters.

param <- LamaParama(lamas = ref_mz_rt, method = "loess", span = 0.5,
                    outlierTolerance = 3, zeroWeight = 10, ppm = 20,
                    tolerance = 0, toleranceRt = 20, bs = "tp")

#' input into `adjustRtime()`
tst_adjusted <- adjustRtime(tst, param = param)
tst_adjusted <- applyAdjustedRtime(tst_adjusted)

We extract the base peak chromatogram (BPC) to visualize and evaluate the alignment:

#' evaluate the results with BPC
bpc <- chromatogram(ref, chromPeaks = "none")
bpc_tst_raw <- chromatogram(tst, chromPeaks = "none")
bpc_tst_adj <- chromatogram(tst_adjusted, chromPeaks = "none")

We generate plots to visually compare the alignment to the reference dataset (black) both before (red) and after (blue) adjustment:

#' BPC of a sample
par(mfrow = c(1, 2),  mar = c(4, 2.5, 1, 0.5))
plot(bpc[1, 1], col = "#00000080", main = "Before Alignment")
points(rtime(bpc_tst_raw[1, 1]), intensity(bpc_tst_raw[1, 1]), type = "l",
       col = "#ff000080")
grid()

plot(bpc[1, 1], col = "#00000080", main = "After Alignment")
points(rtime(bpc_tst_adj[1, 1]), intensity(bpc_tst_adj[1, 1]), type = "l",
       col = "#0000ff80")
grid()

It appears that certain time intervals (2500 to 3000 and 3500 to 4500 seconds) exhibit better alignment than others. This variance can be elucidated by examining the distribution of matched peaks, as illustrated below. The matchLamaChromPeaks() function facilitates the assessment of how well the lamas correspond with the chromatographic peaks in each file. This analysis can be conducted prior to any adjustments.

param <- matchLamasChromPeaks(tst, param = param)
mtch <- matchedRtimes(param)

#' BPC of the first sample with matches to lamas overlay
par(mfrow = c(1, 1))
plot(bpc[1, 1], col = "#00000080", main = "Distribution CP matched to Lamas")
points(rtime(bpc_tst_adj[1, 1]), intensity(bpc_tst_adj[1, 1]), type = "l",
       col = "#0000ff80")
grid()
abline(v = mtch[[1]]$obs)

The overlay of BPC above provides insight into the correlation between accurate alignment and the presence of peaks matching with lamas. For this particular sample no chromatographic peaks were matched to the lamas between 2500 and 3000 seconds and hence the alignment in that region was not good. For the second file, chrom peaks could also be matched in that region resulting in a better alignment.

par(mfrow = c(1, 1))
plot(bpc[1, 2], col = "#00000080", main = "Distribution CP matched to Lamas")
points(rtime(bpc_tst_adj[1, 2]), intensity(bpc_tst_adj[1, 2]), type = "l",
       col = "#0000ff80")
grid()
abline(v = mtch[[2]]$obs)

Furthermore, a more detailed examination of the matching and the model used for fitting each file is possible. Numerical information can be obtained using the summarizeLamaMatch() function. From this, the percentage of chromatographic peaks utilized for alignment can be computed relative to the total number of peaks in the file. Additionally, it is feasible to directly plot() the param object for the file of interest, showcasing the distribution of these chromatographic peaks along with the fitted model line.

#' access summary of matches and model information
summary <- summarizeLamaMatch(param)
summary
##   Total_peaks Matched_peaks Total_lamas Model_summary
## 1          87            34         347  30, c(0.....
## 2         100            51         347  48, c(0.....
## 3          61            34         347  33, c(0.....
#' coverage for each file
summary$Matched_peaks / summary$Total_peaks * 100
## [1] 39.08046 51.00000 55.73770
#' access the information on the model of for the first file
summary$Model_summary[[1]]
## Call:
## loess(formula = ref ~ obs, data = rt_map, weights = weights, 
##     span = span)
## 
## Number of Observations: 30 
## Equivalent Number of Parameters: 7.64 
## Residual Standard Error: 2.235 
## Trace of smoother matrix: 8.45  (exact)
## 
## Control settings:
##   span     :  0.5 
##   degree   :  2 
##   family   :  gaussian
##   surface  :  interpolate      cell = 0.2
##   normalize:  TRUE
##  parametric:  FALSE
## drop.square:  FALSE
#' Plot obs vs. ref with fitting line
plot(param, index = 1L, main = "ChromPeaks versus Lamas for the first file",
     colPoint = "red")
abline(0, 1, lty = 3, col = "grey")
grid()

4 Additional details and notes

4.1 Subsetting and filtering

xcms result objects can be subset/filtered by sample using the [ method or one of the filter* functions (although the XcmsExperiment supports at present only few selected filter functions). In some cases filtering can remove preprocessing results, but most filter functions support parameters keepFeatures and keepAdjustedRtime that can be set to TRUE to avoid their removal.

4.2 Parallel processing

Most functions in xcms support parallel processing, which is enabled by default and is performed, for most operations, on a per-file basis. Parallel processing is handled and configured by the BiocParallel Bioconductor package and can be globally defined for an R session. Note that, while all data objects are designed to have a low memory footprint by loading only peak data into memory when needed, parallel processing will increase this demand: in general, the full data for as many files as there are parallel processes are loaded into memory. This needs also to be considered, when the number of parallel processes is defined.

Unix-based systems (Linux, macOS) support multicore-based parallel processing. To configure it globally we register() the parameter class. Note also that bpstart() is used below to initialize the parallel processes.

register(bpstart(MulticoreParam(2)))

Windows supports only socket-based parallel processing:

register(bpstart(SnowParam(2)))

4.3 Main differences to the MSnbase-based xcms version 3

  • Spectra is used as the main container for the (raw) MS data. Thus changing backends is supported at any stage of the analysis (e.g. to load all data into memory or to load data from remote databases).

5 Additional documentation resources

Some of the documentations listed here are still based on xcms version 3 but will be subsequently updated.

6 Session information

R packages used for this document are listed below.

sessionInfo()
## R Under development (unstable) (2024-10-21 r87258)
## Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
## Running under: Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS
## 
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS:   /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.21-bioc/R/lib/libRblas.so 
## LAPACK: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/lapack/liblapack.so.3.12.0
## 
## locale:
##  [1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8       LC_NUMERIC=C              
##  [3] LC_TIME=en_GB              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: America/New_York
## tzcode source: system (glibc)
## 
## attached base packages:
## [1] stats4    stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets  methods  
## [8] base     
## 
## other attached packages:
##  [1] SummarizedExperiment_1.37.0 GenomicRanges_1.59.1       
##  [3] GenomeInfoDb_1.43.2         IRanges_2.41.2             
##  [5] MatrixGenerics_1.19.0       matrixStats_1.4.1          
##  [7] RColorBrewer_1.1-3          MetaboCoreUtils_1.15.0     
##  [9] MsBackendMgf_1.15.1         MsExperiment_1.9.0         
## [11] pander_0.6.5                Spectra_1.17.2             
## [13] MassSpecWavelet_1.73.0      pheatmap_1.0.12            
## [15] faahKO_1.47.1               MSnbase_2.33.2             
## [17] ProtGenerics_1.39.0         S4Vectors_0.45.2           
## [19] mzR_2.41.1                  Rcpp_1.0.13-1              
## [21] Biobase_2.67.0              BiocGenerics_0.53.3        
## [23] generics_0.1.3              MsFeatures_1.15.0          
## [25] xcms_4.5.2                  BiocParallel_1.41.0        
## [27] BiocStyle_2.35.0           
## 
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
##  [1] DBI_1.2.3                   rlang_1.1.4                
##  [3] magrittr_2.0.3              clue_0.3-66                
##  [5] compiler_4.5.0              vctrs_0.6.5                
##  [7] reshape2_1.4.4              stringr_1.5.1              
##  [9] pkgconfig_2.0.3             crayon_1.5.3               
## [11] fastmap_1.2.0               magick_2.8.5               
## [13] XVector_0.47.0              utf8_1.2.4                 
## [15] rmarkdown_2.29              UCSC.utils_1.3.0           
## [17] preprocessCore_1.69.0       tinytex_0.54               
## [19] purrr_1.0.2                 xfun_0.49                  
## [21] MultiAssayExperiment_1.33.1 zlibbioc_1.53.0            
## [23] cachem_1.1.0                jsonlite_1.8.9             
## [25] progress_1.2.3              DelayedArray_0.33.3        
## [27] prettyunits_1.2.0           parallel_4.5.0             
## [29] cluster_2.1.8               R6_2.5.1                   
## [31] bslib_0.8.0                 stringi_1.8.4              
## [33] limma_3.63.2                jquerylib_0.1.4            
## [35] bookdown_0.41               iterators_1.0.14           
## [37] knitr_1.49                  Matrix_1.7-1               
## [39] igraph_2.1.2                tidyselect_1.2.1           
## [41] abind_1.4-8                 yaml_2.3.10                
## [43] doParallel_1.0.17           codetools_0.2-20           
## [45] affy_1.85.0                 lattice_0.22-6             
## [47] tibble_3.2.1                plyr_1.8.9                 
## [49] signal_1.8-1                evaluate_1.0.1             
## [51] pillar_1.9.0                affyio_1.77.1              
## [53] BiocManager_1.30.25         foreach_1.5.2              
## [55] MALDIquant_1.22.3           ncdf4_1.23                 
## [57] hms_1.1.3                   ggplot2_3.5.1              
## [59] munsell_0.5.1               scales_1.3.0               
## [61] glue_1.8.0                  lazyeval_0.2.2             
## [63] tools_4.5.0                 mzID_1.45.0                
## [65] QFeatures_1.17.0            vsn_3.75.0                 
## [67] fs_1.6.5                    XML_3.99-0.17              
## [69] grid_4.5.0                  impute_1.81.0              
## [71] tidyr_1.3.1                 MsCoreUtils_1.19.0         
## [73] colorspace_2.1-1            GenomeInfoDbData_1.2.13    
## [75] PSMatch_1.11.0              cli_3.6.3                  
## [77] fansi_1.0.6                 S4Arrays_1.7.1             
## [79] dplyr_1.1.4                 AnnotationFilter_1.31.0    
## [81] pcaMethods_1.99.0           gtable_0.3.6               
## [83] sass_0.4.9                  digest_0.6.37              
## [85] SparseArray_1.7.2           farver_2.1.2               
## [87] htmltools_0.5.8.1           lifecycle_1.0.4            
## [89] httr_1.4.7                  statmod_1.5.0              
## [91] MASS_7.3-61

References

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2. Gatto L, Gibb S, Rainer J: MSnbase, Efficient and Elegant R-Based Processing and Visualization of Raw Mass Spectrometry Data. Journal of Proteome Research 2020.
3. Rainer J, Vicini A, Salzer L, Stanstrup J, Badia JM, Neumann S, Stravs MA, Verri Hernandes V, Gatto L, Gibb S, Witting M: A Modular and Expandable Ecosystem for Metabolomics Data Annotation in R. Metabolites 2022, 12:173.
4. Saghatelian A, Trauger SA, Want EJ, Hawkins EG, Siuzdak G, Cravatt BF: Assignment of endogenous substrates to enzymes by global metabolite profiling. Biochemistry 2004, 43:14332–9.
5. Tautenhahn R, Böttcher C, Neumann S: Highly sensitive feature detection for high resolution LC/MS. BMC Bioinformatics 2008, 9:504.
6. Smith R, Ventura D, Prince JT: LC-MS alignment in theory and practice: a comprehensive algorithmic review. Briefings in bioinformatics 2013, 16:bbt080–117.
7. Prince JT, Marcotte EM: Chromatographic alignment of ESI-LC-MS proteomics data sets by ordered bijective interpolated warping. Analytical chemistry 2006, 78:6140–6152.