This tutorial will cover how to embed JBrowseR into a shiny app, and how to customize the browser by creating data tracks and a custom theme. Before we get started with writing R code, it is necessary to cover some JBrowse 2 concepts, and look at how to prepare data for use with the browser. There are three core aspects of JBrowse 2 configuration:
Other import points of configuration are the location, which is the location in the genome on first load, and the theme, which can be used to create a custom color palette for your browser. While all of these values are possible, the only required configuration is an assembly.
The steps for preparing an assembly for use in the browser can be found in the JBrowse 2 docs, but we will cover them again here. In order to be used, an assembly must first be indexed. We will be using the Sars-CoV-2 genome for this tutorial.
To create an index, we first need to download the FASTA for the
assembly. This can be found here. We also
need htslib, which provides the
tools we need for indexing and compression. (I prefer to install htslib
using bioconda). The remaining
steps assume the htslib is installed, and we have a fasta file named
sars-cov2.fa
.
With these steps taken, we are going to compress and index the assembly, for best performance. The necessary commands are:
# 1. compresses sars-cov2.fa to sars-cov2.fa.gz
# 2. generates sars-cov2.fa.gz.fai and sars-cov2.fa.gz.gzi
bgzip sars-cov2.fa
samtools faidx sars-cov2.fa.gz
For the rest of the tutorial code, we are going to use the following already hosted results of these commands:
https://jbrowse.org/genomes/sars-cov2/fasta/sars-cov2.fa.gz
https://jbrowse.org/genomes/sars-cov2/fasta/sars-cov2.fa.gz.fai
https://jbrowse.org/genomes/sars-cov2/fasta/sars-cov2.fa.gz.gzi
However, these are the same steps for preparing any assembly for use with the browser. For notes on creating URLs for your data either locally or hosted, read more here.
Shiny is an excellent web framework that makes it easy to create interactive web applications with a minimal amount of R code. The basic Shiny app consists of a UI and a server:
library(shiny)
library(JBrowseR)
<- fluidPage()
ui
<- function(input, output, session) {}
server
shinyApp(ui, server)
This is all of the boilerplate code we need for our app. Now, we can add the browser displaying the Sars-CoV-2 genome.
<- fluidPage(
ui titlePanel("Sars-CoV-2 JBrowseR Example"),
# this adds to the browser to the UI, and specifies the output ID in the server
JBrowseROutput("browserOutput")
)
<- function(input, output, session) {
server # create the necessary JB2 assembly configuration
<- assembly(
assembly "https://jbrowse.org/genomes/sars-cov2/fasta/sars-cov2.fa.gz",
bgzip = TRUE
)
# link the UI with the browser widget
$browserOutput <- renderJBrowseR(
outputJBrowseR(
"View",
assembly = assembly
)
)
}
shinyApp(ui, server)
That is all of the code we need to add a custom genome browser to a
Shiny app! It is worth noting that the assembly()
function
takes only the root FASTA file as the argument, but infers the
.fai
and .gzi
files because they use the
standard naming convention. A similar pattern is true for other tracks
that require index files. In these cases, it is noted in the function
documentation.
With an embedded browser running in a Shiny app, we can look at how to add data tracks to the browser. Adding tracks takes place in the server function:
<- function(input, output, session) {
server # create the necessary JB2 assembly configuration
<- assembly(
assembly "https://jbrowse.org/genomes/sars-cov2/fasta/sars-cov2.fa.gz",
bgzip = TRUE
)
# create configuration for a JB2 GFF FeatureTrack
<- track_feature(
annotations_track "https://jbrowse.org/genomes/sars-cov2/sars-cov2-annotations.sorted.gff.gz",
assembly
)
# create the tracks array to pass to browser
<- tracks(annotations_track)
tracks
# link the UI with the browser widget
$browserOutput <- renderJBrowseR(
outputJBrowseR(
"View",
assembly = assembly,
# pass our tracks here
tracks = tracks
)
) }
JBrowseR has functions for adding four track types:
track_alignments()
: visualize BAM or CRAM alignment
datatrack_feature()
: visualize GFF3 datatrack_variant()
: visualize VCF datatrack_wiggle()
: visualize bigWig dataAny number of tracks can be passed to the main tracks function, for example:
<- tracks(
tracks
annotations,
variants,
alignments )
but for now, we will stick with the feature track that we’ve created.
Up until this point, nothing is displayed by default in the browser when the app first loads. We can change that by configuring the default session:
# set up the default session for the browser
<- default_session(
default_session
assembly,c(annotations_track)
)
This sets up the browser to display the reference track and the annotations track by default when it loads.
Now we update the call to our renderer:
$browserOutput <- renderJBrowseR(
outputJBrowseR(
"View",
assembly = assembly,
tracks = tracks,
location = "NC_045512.2:1..100",
defaultSession = default_session
) )
Here we have passed the default_session
we created, and
set a starting location for the browser (the first 100 bases).
In addition to visualizing your own data, you may want your browser to have your own theme. Another JBrowseR function makes creating a custom theme very simple:
# accepts up to four colors for creating a custom palette
<- theme("#5da8a3", "#333") theme
And again we update the renderer, now passing the theme:
$browserOutput <- renderJBrowseR(
outputJBrowseR(
"View",
assembly = assembly,
tracks = tracks,
location = "NC_045512.2:1..100",
defaultSession = default_session,
theme = theme
) )
Let’s take a look at the final complete app:
<- fluidPage(
ui titlePanel("Sars-CoV-2 JBrowseR Example"),
# this adds to the browser to the UI, and specifies the output ID in the server
JBrowseROutput("browserOutput")
)
<- function(input, output, session) {
server # create the necessary JB2 assembly configuration
<- assembly(
assembly "https://jbrowse.org/genomes/sars-cov2/fasta/sars-cov2.fa.gz",
bgzip = TRUE
)
# create configuration for a JB2 GFF FeatureTrack
<- track_feature(
annotations_track "https://jbrowse.org/genomes/sars-cov2/sars-cov2-annotations.sorted.gff.gz",
assembly
)
# create the tracks array to pass to browser
<- tracks(
tracks
annotations_track
)
# set up the default session for the browser
<- default_session(
default_session
assembly,c(annotations_track)
)
<- theme("#5da8a3", "#333")
theme
# link the UI with the browser widget
$browserOutput <- renderJBrowseR(
outputJBrowseR(
"View",
assembly = assembly,
tracks = tracks,
location = "NC_045512.2:1..100",
defaultSession = default_session,
theme = theme
)
)
}
shinyApp(ui, server)
Awesome, we’ve added a genome browser with annotations and a custom theme to a Shiny app!