Skip to content
/ HiCSR Public

HiCSR: a Hi-C super-resolution framework for producing highly realistic contact maps

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

PSI-Lab/HiCSR

Repository files navigation


Logo

HiCSR: a Hi-C super-resolution framework for producing highly realistic contact maps

Implementation of HiCSR framework described in this paper:

Michael C Dimmick, Leo J Lee, and Brendan J Frey
HiCSR: a Hi-C super-resolution framework for producing highly realistic contact maps
bioRxiv preprint
10.1101/2020.02.24.961714

About HiCSR

HiCSR is a Hi-C super-resolution framework written in python capable of producing enhanced contact maps which are both accurate and realistic. The HiCSR framework optimizes for a weighted combination of adversarial loss, pixel-wise L1 loss, and a feature reconstruction loss obtained from the latent representation of a task specific denoising autoencoder.

A sample of HiCSR-enhanced Hi-C data is shown below:

Table of Contents

Installation

Dependencies

HiCSR is developed with Python 3 and PyTorch (1.1.0 +). We provide a tested Conda environment.

Anaconda Python

We recommend using HiCSR with the conda package manager from Anaconda.

To create a Conda environment for running HiCSR, use the environment.yaml file, which will install all required dependencies:

conda env create -f environment.yaml

Activate your environment with

conda activate HiCSR

Pip

Alternatively you can install the dependencies via the requirements.txt file for pip:

pip install -f requirements.txt

Usage

Preprocessing

The preprocessing script is located here: preprocessing.py. This script takes raw n x n Hi-C contact matrices as input and generates HiCSR training samples as described in the paper. The resultant dataset can be directly used for training. Call the script with the --help flag to receive parameter usage:

$ python preprocessing.py --help
usage: preprocessing.py [-h] --input_fp INPUT_FP --output_fp OUTPUT_FP
                        [--normalize NORMALIZE] [--max_dist MAX_DIST]
                        [--input_size INPUT_SIZE] [--output_size OUTPUT_SIZE]

optional arguments:
-h, --help            show this help message and exit
--input INPUT         root directory where both high resolution (hr) and low
                      resolution (lr) intrachromosomal Hi-C interaction
                      matrices are stored
--output OUTPUT       output directory to write preprocessing results to
--normalize NORMALIZE
                      option to normalize input before splitting data, for
                      information about the normalization method see the
                      paper, if set, normalized low and high resolution
                      contact maps will be stored also default = 1
--max_dist MAX_DIST   maximum genomic distance to create submatrices, splits
                      with a loci greater than this value are not created.
                      Value is a number of pixels and is dependant on the
                      resolution of the dataset to be processed, default =
                      200 pixels
--input_size INPUT_SIZE
                      submatrix split size for low resolution input, default
                      = 40
--output_size OUTPUT_SIZE
                      submatrix split size for high resolution label,
                      default = 28

Training

The preprocessing script is located here: train.py. Call the script with the --help flag to receive parameter usage:

$ python train.py --help
usage: train.py [-h] --data_fp DATA_FP --model MODEL [--gpu GPU] --experiment
                EXPERIMENT

optional arguments:
-h, --help            show this help message and exit
--data_fp DATA_FP     directory containing training and validation data to
                      use for model training
--model MODEL         Set the model to be trained, There are two options:
                      'HiCSR' will train the Hi-C enhancement model and
                      'DAE' will train the Denoising Autoencoder on the high
                      resolution data
--gpu GPU             GPU number to use for training, if the system has no
                      GPU, training will automatically default to using the
                      CPU. default = 0.
--experiment EXPERIMENT
                      experiment name associated with the training run, all
                      model logging and final model file are saved under
                      this name. Experiment name must match an entry in the
                      experiment_hyperparameters.json config file

The filepath required by --data_fp uses the following directory structure:

├── train
    ├── train-samples-1.npz
    ├── ...
    └── train-samples-n.npz
└── valid
    ├── valid_samples-1.npz
    ├── ...
    └── valid_samples-m.npz

HiCSR training requires an experiment name which matches an entry in the configuration file for model training which specifies the model parameters. These configurations are stored here: experiment_hyperparameters.json.

Inference

The preprocessing script is located here: predict.py. Call the script with the --help flag to receive parameter usage:

$ python predict.py --help
usage: predict.py [-h] --input_fp INPUT_FP --output_fp OUTPUT_FP --model_type
                  MODEL_TYPE --model_fp MODEL_FP

optional arguments:
-h, --help            show this help message and exit
--input INPUT         input directory where the low resolution Hi-C matrices
                      to be enhanced are stored
--output OUTPUT       output directory to store resultant Hi-C matrices are
                      stored
--model_type MODEL_TYPE
                      model type to predict with, HiCSR or DAE (Denoising
                      Autoencoder). HiCSR is used for Hi-C enhancement, DAE
                      is the loss network used to train HiCSR
--model_fp MODEL_FP   pytorch model filepath to load for enhancement
                      predictions

Inference with HiCSR expects normalized Hi-C contact maps.

Example

We provide a small sample set of Hi-C matrix data to demonstrate how to use the HiCSR package. These sample matrices are stored in the input_samples directory, where each sample has the following naming convention <chromosome>-<cell_type>-<downsample_factor>-<file_tag>.txt.gz:

input_samples/
├── hr
│   ├── chr21-GM12878-1-sample.txt.gz
│   └── chr22-GM12878-1-sample.txt.gz
└── lr
    ├── chr21-GM12878-16-sample.txt.gz
    └── chr22-GM12878-16-sample.txt.gz

1. Creating HiCSR Dataset from Hi-C Contact Maps

To preprocess the samples, call the preprocessing script on the root directory input_samples with the desired flags. In this example we use the default split settings and normalize the inputs, saving the output to the preprocessing_output directory:

$ python preprocessing.py --input input_samples/ --output preprocessing_output/ --normalize 1

This will generate the normalized HiCSR submatrix dataset samples, their respective matrix indices, and the normalized data:

preprocessing_output/
├── HiCSR_dataset
│   ├── indices
│   │   ├── chr21-GM12878-HiCSR-dataset-normalized-idxs.npz
│   │   └── chr22-GM12878-HiCSR-dataset-normalized-idxs.npz
│   └── samples
│       ├── chr21-GM12878-HiCSR-dataset-normalized-samples.npz
│       └── chr22-GM12878-HiCSR-dataset-normalized-samples.npz
└── normalized
    ├── hr
    │   ├── chr21-GM12878-1-norm.txt.gz
    │   └── chr22-GM12878-1-norm.txt.gz
    └── lr
        ├── chr21-GM12878-16-norm.txt.gz
        └── chr22-GM12878-16-norm.txt.gz

2. Training HiCSR (Optional)

To train HiCSR, the script train.py is used. For this example, one of the sample matrices are put into the training folder and the other is put into the validation folder. The script expects the following directory structure:

├── train
    └── chr21-GM12878-HiCSR-dataset-normalized-samples.npz
└── valid
    └── chr22-GM12878-HiCSR-dataset-normalized-samples.npz

Once the correct directory structure has been made the script can be called as follows:

$ python train.py --data_fp preprocessing_output/HiCSR_dataset/samples/ --model HiCSR --experiment test_HiCSR

This will begin the training procedure. Training progress is logged in the experiments directory:

experiments/
└── test_HiCSR
    ├── checkpoints
    │   └── HiCSRModel_ckpt_0.pth
    ├── HiCSRModel.pkl
    ├── logs
    │   └── test_HiCSR.log
    ├── tensorboard
    │   ├── ... (tensorboard files)
    └── test_HiCSR.pth

Each experiment generates training checkpoints, a pickled class model, training logs, tensorboard files for training monitoring, and a final pytorch model.

3. Enhancing Hi-C Contact Maps

Hi-C contact maps can be enhanced using either a newly trained model from step 2, or using the pretrained model files. In either case, the prediction script expects normalized data generated from step 1:

$ python predict.py --input preprocessing_output/normalized/lr/ --output HiCSR_predictions/ --model_type HiCSR --model_fp pretrained_models/HiCSR.pth

If the enhancement is successful, you should find one output file for each corresponding input file. These predicted matrices are normalized to the range [-1,1].

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License

About

HiCSR: a Hi-C super-resolution framework for producing highly realistic contact maps

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages