Contents

1 Introduction

This vignette shows how to reproduce the analysis described by Childs, Bach, Franken et al. (2019): Non-parametric analysis of thermal proteome profiles reveals novel drug-binding proteins using the NPARC package.

2 Preparation

Load necessary packages.

library(dplyr)
library(magrittr)
library(ggplot2)
library(broom)
library(knitr)
library(NPARC)

3 Data import

First, we load data from a staurosporine TPP experiment (Savitski et al. 2014). The necessary ETL (extract, transform, load) steps have already been conducted, including download from the supplements of the respective publication and conversion into tidy format.

data("stauro_TPP_data_tidy")

Before applying any further transformations and filters we create a copy of the imported data.

df <- stauro_TPP_data_tidy

Let’s perform a first check of the imported data:

df %>% 
  mutate(compoundConcentration = factor(compoundConcentration), 
         replicate = factor(replicate), 
         dataset = factor(dataset)) %>% 
  summary()
##           dataset         uniqueID          relAbundance     temperature  
##  Staurosporine:307080   Length:307080      Min.   :  0.00   Min.   :40.0  
##                         Class :character   1st Qu.:  0.17   1st Qu.:46.0  
##                         Mode  :character   Median :  0.57   Median :53.5  
##                                            Mean   :  0.58   Mean   :53.5  
##                                            3rd Qu.:  0.95   3rd Qu.:61.0  
##                                            Max.   :394.98   Max.   :67.0  
##                                            NA's   :70990                  
##  compoundConcentration replicate  uniquePeptideMatches
##  0 :153540             1:153540   Min.   :  0.00      
##  20:153540             2:153540   1st Qu.:  2.00      
##                                   Median :  6.00      
##                                   Mean   : 10.36      
##                                   3rd Qu.: 13.00      
##                                   Max.   :351.00      
##                                   NA's   :63400

The displayed data contains the following columns:

4 Data preprocessing and exploration

The imported data contains 307080 rows with entries for 7677 proteins.

First, we remove all abundances that were not found with at least one unique peptide, or for which a missing value was recorded.

df %<>% filter(uniquePeptideMatches >= 1)
df %<>% filter(!is.na(relAbundance))

Next, we ensure that the dataset only contains proteins reproducibly observed with full melting curves in both replicates and treatment groups per dataset. A full melting curve is defined by the presence of measurements at all 10 temperatures for the given experimental group.

# Count full curves per protein
df %<>%
  group_by(dataset, uniqueID) %>%
  mutate(n = n()) %>%
  group_by(dataset) %>%
  mutate(max_n = max(n)) %>% 
  ungroup

table(distinct(df, uniqueID, n)$n)
## 
##   10   20   30   40 
##  992  809  993 4505

We see that the majority of proteins contain 40 measurements. This corresponds to two full replicate curves per experimental group. We will focus on these in the current analysis.

# Filter for full curves per protein:
df %<>% 
  filter(n == max_n) %>%
  dplyr::select(-n, -max_n)

The final data contains 180200 rows with entries for 4505 proteins. This number coincides with the value reported in Table 1 of the corresponding publication (Childs et al. 2019).

5 Illustrative example

We first illustrate the principles of nonparametric analysis of response curves (NPARC) on an example protein (STK4) from the staurosporine dataset. The same protein is shown in Figures 1 and 2 of the paper.

5.1 Select data

We first select all entries belonging to the desired protein and dataset:

stk4 <- filter(df, uniqueID == "STK4_IPI00011488")

The table stk4 has 40 rows with measurements of four experimental groups. They consist of two treatment groups (vehicle: \(0~\mu M\) staurosporine, treatment: \(20~\mu M\) staurosporine) with two replicates each. Let us look at the treatment group of replicate 1 for an example:

stk4 %>% filter(compoundConcentration == 20, replicate == 1) %>% 
  dplyr::select(-dataset) %>% kable(digits = 2)
uniqueID relAbundance temperature compoundConcentration replicate uniquePeptideMatches
STK4_IPI00011488 1.00 40 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 1.03 43 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 1.06 46 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 1.03 49 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 0.92 52 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 0.93 55 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 0.78 58 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 0.44 61 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 0.21 64 20 1 8
STK4_IPI00011488 0.12 67 20 1 8

To obtain a first impression of the measurements in each experimental group, we generate a plot of the measurements:

stk4_plot_orig <- ggplot(stk4, aes(x = temperature, y = relAbundance)) +
  geom_point(aes(shape = factor(replicate), color = factor(compoundConcentration)), size = 2) +
  theme_bw() +
  ggtitle("STK4") +
  scale_color_manual("staurosporine (mu M)", values = c("#808080", "#da7f2d")) +
  scale_shape_manual("replicate", values = c(19, 17))

print(stk4_plot_orig)

We will show how to add the fitted curves to this plot in the following steps.

5.2 Define function for model fitting

To assess whether there is a significant difference between both treatment groups, we will fit a null model and an alternative models to the data. The null model fits a sigmoid melting curve through all data points irrespective of experimental condition. The alternative model fits separate melting curves per experimental group .

5.3 Fit and plot null models

We use the NPARC package function fitSingleSigmoid to fit the null model:

nullFit <- NPARC:::fitSingleSigmoid(x = stk4$temperature, y = stk4$relAbundance)

The function returns an object of class nls:

summary(nullFit)
## 
## Formula: y ~ (1 - Pl)/(1 + exp((b - a/x))) + Pl
## 
## Parameters:
##    Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|)   
## Pl   0.0000     0.1795   0.000  1.00000   
## a  692.6739   226.9107   3.053  0.00419 **
## b   12.5048     4.4989   2.780  0.00851 **
## ---
## Signif. codes:  0 '***' 0.001 '**' 0.01 '*' 0.05 '.' 0.1 ' ' 1
## 
## Residual standard error: 0.1814 on 37 degrees of freedom
## 
## Algorithm "port", convergence message: relative convergence (4)

The function augment from the broom package provides a convenient way to obtain the predictions and residuals at each temperature in tabular format. By appending the returned predictions and residuals to our measurements, we ensure that relevant data is collected in the same table and can be added to the plot for visualization. The residuals will be needed later for construction of the test statistic:

nullPredictions <- broom::augment(nullFit)

Let us look at the values returned by augment at two consecutive temperatures. Note that, while the predictions will be the same for each experiment at a given temperature, the residuals will differ because they were computed by comparing the predictions to the actual measurements:

nullPredictions %>% filter(x %in% c(46, 49)) %>% kable()
x y .fitted .resid
46 1.0591140 0.9278000 0.1313139
49 1.0333794 0.8363683 0.1970111
46 0.9449568 0.9278000 0.0171568
49 0.9187253 0.8363683 0.0823571
46 0.8661451 0.9278000 -0.0616550
49 0.7139894 0.8363683 -0.1223788
46 0.8717407 0.9278000 -0.0560594
49 0.7068211 0.8363683 -0.1295471

Now we can append these values to our data frame and show the predicted curve in the plot:

stk4$nullPrediction <- nullPredictions$.fitted
stk4$nullResiduals <- nullPredictions$.resid

stk4_plot <- stk4_plot_orig + geom_line(data = stk4, aes(y = nullPrediction))

print(stk4_plot)

5.4 Fit and plot alternative models

Next we fit the alternative model. Again, we compute the predicted values and the corresponding residuals by the broom::augment() function. To take the compound concentration as a factor into account, we iterate over both concentrations and fit separate models to each subset. We implement this by first grouping the data using the function dplyr::group_by(), and starting the model fitting by dplyr::do().

alternativePredictions <- stk4 %>%
# Fit separate curves per treatment group:
  group_by(compoundConcentration) %>%
  do({
    fit = NPARC:::fitSingleSigmoid(x = .$temperature, y = .$relAbundance, start=c(Pl = 0, a = 550, b = 10))
    broom::augment(fit)
  }) %>%
  ungroup %>%
  # Rename columns for merge to data frame:
  dplyr::rename(alternativePrediction = .fitted,
                alternativeResiduals = .resid,
                temperature = x,
                relAbundance = y)

Add the predicted values and corresponding residuals to our data frame:

stk4 <- stk4 %>%
  left_join(alternativePredictions, 
            by = c("relAbundance", "temperature", 
                   "compoundConcentration")) %>%
  distinct()
## Warning in left_join(., alternativePredictions, by = c("relAbundance", "temperature", : Detected an unexpected many-to-many relationship between `x` and `y`.
## ℹ Row 1 of `x` matches multiple rows in `y`.
## ℹ Row 21 of `y` matches multiple rows in `x`.
## ℹ If a many-to-many relationship is expected, set `relationship =
##   "many-to-many"` to silence this warning.

Add the curves predicted by the alternative model to the plot. Conceptually, it corresponds to the plot shown in Figures 2 (A)/(B) of the paper.

stk4_plot <- stk4_plot +
  geom_line(data = distinct(stk4, temperature, compoundConcentration, alternativePrediction), 
            aes(y = alternativePrediction, color = factor(compoundConcentration)))

print(stk4_plot)

This plot summarizes Figures 2(A) and 2(B) in the corresponding publication (Childs et al. 2019).

5.5 Compute RSS values

In order to quantify the improvement in goodness-of-fit of the alternative model relative to the null model, we compute the sum of squared residuals (RSS):

rssPerModel <- stk4 %>%
  summarise(rssNull = sum(nullResiduals^2),
            rssAlternative = sum(alternativeResiduals^2))

kable(rssPerModel, digits = 4)
rssNull rssAlternative
1.2181 0.0831

These values will be used to construct the \(F\)-statistic according to

\[\begin{equation} \label{eq:f_stat} {F} = \frac{{d}_{2}}{{d}_{1}} \cdot \frac{{RSS}^{0} - {RSS}^{1}}{{RSS}^{1}}. \end{equation}\]

To compute this statistic and to derive a p-value, we need the degrees of freedom \({d}_{1}\) and \({d}_{2}\). As described in the paper, they cannot be analytically derived due to the correlated nature of the measurements. The paper describes how to estimate these values from the RSS-values of all proteins in the dataset. In the following Section, we illustrate how to repeat the model fitting for all proteins of a dataset and how to perform hypothesis testing on these models.

6 Extend the analysis to all proteins

This section describes the different steps of the NPARC workflow for model fitting and hyothesis testing. Note that the package also provides a function runNPARC() that performs all of the following steps with one single function call.

6.1 Start fitting

In order to analyze all datasets as described in the paper, we fit null and alternative models to all proteins using the package function NPARCfit:

BPPARAM <- BiocParallel::SerialParam(progressbar = FALSE)
fits <- NPARCfit(x = df$temperature, 
                 y = df$relAbundance, 
                 id = df$uniqueID, 
                 groupsNull = NULL, 
                 groupsAlt = df$compoundConcentration, 
                 BPPARAM = BPPARAM,
                 returnModels = FALSE)
## Starting model fitting...
## ... complete
## Elapsed time: 39.87 secs
## Flagging successful model fits...
## ... complete.
## Evaluating model fits...
## Evaluating models ...
## ... complete.
## Computing model predictions and residuals ...
## ... complete.
## Starting model fitting...
## ... complete
## Elapsed time: 1.01 mins
## Flagging successful model fits...
## ... complete.
## Evaluating model fits...
## Evaluating models ...
## ... complete.
## Computing model predictions and residuals ...
## ... complete.
str(fits, 1)
## List of 2
##  $ predictions: tibble [359,959 × 7] (S3: tbl_df/tbl/data.frame)
##  $ metrics    : tibble [13,515 × 15] (S3: tbl_df/tbl/data.frame)

The returned object fits contains two tables. The table metrics contains the fitted parameters and goodness-of-fit measures for the null and alternative models per protein and group. The table predictions contains the corresponding predicted values and residuals per model.

fits$metrics %>% 
  mutate(modelType = factor(modelType), nCoeffs = factor(nCoeffs), nFitted = factor(nFitted), group = factor((group))) %>% 
  summary
##        modelType         id                  tm               a          
##  alternative:9010   Length:13515       Min.   : 43.56   Min.   :    0.0  
##  null       :4505   Class :character   1st Qu.: 50.20   1st Qu.:  836.8  
##                     Mode  :character   Median : 52.85   Median : 1102.8  
##                                        Mean   : 54.09   Mean   : 1426.6  
##                                        3rd Qu.: 56.29   3rd Qu.: 1488.8  
##                                        Max.   :298.81   Max.   :15000.0  
##                                        NA's   :794      NA's   :19       
##        b                   pl               aumc          resid_sd       
##  Min.   :  0.00001   Min.   :0.00000   Min.   : 4.87   Min.   :0.007522  
##  1st Qu.: 16.11794   1st Qu.:0.05282   1st Qu.:11.56   1st Qu.:0.035037  
##  Median : 21.43936   Median :0.07973   Median :14.45   Median :0.049778  
##  Mean   : 26.94484   Mean   :0.14092   Mean   :15.03   Mean   :0.064075  
##  3rd Qu.: 28.39752   3rd Qu.:0.14430   3rd Qu.:18.06   3rd Qu.:0.074608  
##  Max.   :250.00000   Max.   :1.50000   Max.   :37.42   Max.   :1.896479  
##  NA's   :19          NA's   :19        NA's   :19      NA's   :19        
##       rss               loglik           tm_sd           nCoeffs     
##  Min.   : 0.00113   Min.   :-70.47   Min.   :0.000e+00   3   :13496  
##  1st Qu.: 0.02921   1st Qu.: 27.32   1st Qu.:0.000e+00   NA's:   19  
##  Median : 0.06359   Median : 37.22   Median :0.000e+00               
##  Mean   : 0.19822   Mean   : 40.01   Mean   :8.468e+11               
##  3rd Qu.: 0.15060   3rd Qu.: 49.53   3rd Qu.:1.000e+00               
##  Max.   :79.39804   Max.   :123.31   Max.   :4.718e+15               
##  NA's   :19         NA's   :19       NA's   :794                     
##  nFitted        conv          group     
##  20  :8995   Mode :logical   0   :4505  
##  40  :4501   FALSE:19        20  :4505  
##  NA's:  19   TRUE :13496     NA's:4505  
##                                         
##                                         
##                                         
## 
fits$predictions %>% 
  mutate(modelType = factor(modelType), group = factor((group))) %>% 
  summary
##        modelType           id                  x              y         
##  alternative:179915   Length:359959      Min.   :40.0   Min.   :0.0000  
##  null       :180044   Class :character   1st Qu.:46.0   1st Qu.:0.1563  
##                       Mode  :character   Median :53.5   Median :0.5780  
##                                          Mean   :53.5   Mean   :0.5642  
##                                          3rd Qu.:61.0   3rd Qu.:0.9570  
##                                          Max.   :67.0   Max.   :8.2379  
##                                          NA's   :19     NA's   :19      
##     .fitted            .resid           group       
##  Min.   :0.01099   Min.   :-1.156426   0   : 89891  
##  1st Qu.:0.15950   1st Qu.:-0.025278   20  : 90024  
##  Median :0.58415   Median : 0.000310   NA's:180044  
##  Mean   :0.55990   Mean   : 0.004323                
##  3rd Qu.:0.96261   3rd Qu.: 0.028101                
##  Max.   :1.50000   Max.   : 7.240277                
##  NA's   :19        NA's   :19

6.2 Check example

The results of the STK4 example from earlier can be selected from this object as follows.

First, we check the RSS values of the null and alterantive models:

stk4Metrics <- filter(fits$metrics, id == "STK4_IPI00011488")

rssNull <- filter(stk4Metrics, modelType == "null")$rss
rssAlt <- sum(filter(stk4Metrics, modelType == "alternative")$rss) # Summarize over both experimental groups

rssNull
## [1] 1.218132
rssAlt
## [1] 0.08314745

Next, we plot the predicted curves per model and experimental group:

stk4Predictions <- filter(fits$predictions, modelType == "alternative", id == "STK4_IPI00011488")

stk4_plot_orig +
  geom_line(data = filter(stk4Predictions, modelType == "alternative"), 
            aes(x = x, y = .fitted, color = factor(group))) +
    geom_line(data = filter(stk4Predictions, modelType == "null"), 
            aes(x = x, y = .fitted))

7 Compute test statistics

7.1 Why we need to estimate the degrees of freedom

In order to compute \(F\)-statistics per protein and dataset according to Equation (\(\ref{eq:f_stat}\)), we need to know the degrees of freedom of the corresponding null distribution. If we could assume independent and identically distributed (iid) residuals, we could compute them from the number of fitted values and model parameters. In the following, we will show why this simple equation is not appropriate for the curve data we are working with.

First, we compute the test statistics and p-values with theoretical degrees of freedom. These would be true for the case of iid residuals:

modelMetrics <- fits$metrics 
fStats <- NPARCtest(modelMetrics, dfType = "theoretical")

Let us take a look at the computed degrees of freedom:

fStats %>% 
  filter(!is.na(pAdj)) %>%
  distinct(nFittedNull, nFittedAlt, nCoeffsNull, nCoeffsAlt, df1, df2) %>%
  kable()
nFittedNull nFittedAlt nCoeffsNull nCoeffsAlt df1 df2
40 40 3 6 3 34

We plot the \(F\)-statistics against the theoretical \(F\)-distribution to check how well the null distribution is approximated now:

ggplot(filter(fStats, !is.na(pAdj))) +
  geom_density(aes(x = fStat), fill = "steelblue", alpha = 0.5) +
  geom_line(aes(x = fStat, y = df(fStat, df1 = df1, df2 = df2)), color = "darkred", size = 1.5) +
  theme_bw() +
  # Zoom in to small values to increase resolution for the proteins under H0:
  xlim(c(0, 10))
## Warning: Using `size` aesthetic for lines was deprecated in ggplot2 3.4.0.
## ℹ Please use `linewidth` instead.
## This warning is displayed once every 8 hours.
## Call `lifecycle::last_lifecycle_warnings()` to see where this warning was
## generated.
## Warning: Removed 179 rows containing non-finite outside the scale range
## (`stat_density()`).
## Warning: Removed 179 rows containing missing values or values outside the scale range
## (`geom_line()`).

The densities of the theoretical \(F\)-distribution (red) do not fit the observed values (blue) very well. While the theoretical distribution tends to overestimate the number of proteins with test statistics smaller than 2.5, it appears to underestimate the amount of proteins with larger values. This would imply that even for highly specific drugs, we observe many more significant differences than we would expect by chance. This hints at an anti-conservative behaviour of our test with the calculated degree of freedom parameters. This is reflected in the p-value distributions. If the distribution assumptions were met, we would expect the null cases to follow a uniform distribution, with a peak on the left for the non-null cases. Instead, we observe a tendency to obtain fewer values than expected in the middle range (around 0.5), but distinct peaks to the left.

ggplot(filter(fStats, !is.na(pAdj))) +
  geom_histogram(aes(x = pVal, y = ..density..), fill = "steelblue", alpha = 0.5, boundary = 0, bins = 30) +
  geom_line(aes(x = pVal, y = dunif(pVal)), color = "darkred", size = 1.5) +
  theme_bw()
## Warning: The dot-dot notation (`..density..`) was deprecated in ggplot2 3.4.0.
## ℹ Please use `after_stat(density)` instead.
## This warning is displayed once every 8 hours.
## Call `lifecycle::last_lifecycle_warnings()` to see where this warning was
## generated.

7.2 How to estimate the degrees of freedom

In the paper, we describe an alternative way to estimate the degrees of freedom by fitting \(\chi^2\) distributions to the numerator and denominator across all proteins in a dataset. To enable fitting of the distributions, we first need to re-scale the variables by a scaling factor. Because the scaling factors are characteristic for each dataset (it depends on the variances of the residuals in the respective dataset), we estimate them from the data according to:

\[\begin{align} \label{eq:scale-param} \sigma_0^2 &= \frac{1}{2} \frac{V}{M}, \end{align}\]

where \(V\) is the variance of the distribution, and \(M\) is the mean of the distribution.

The following functin estimates \(V\) and \(M\) from the empirical distributions of the RSS differences \(({RSS}^1 - {RSS}^0)\). To increase robustness, it estimate \(M\) and \(V\) by their D-estimates Marazzi (2002) (median and median absolute deviation). It then scales the numerator and denominator of the \(F\)-statistic by these scaling factors and estimate the degree of freedom parameters by fitting unscaled \(\chi^2\) distributions. Finally, it fits the degrees of freedom parameters numerically, computes the test statistics according to Equation (\(\ref{eq:f_stat}\)) and derives p-values.

modelMetrics <- fits$metrics 
fStats <- NPARCtest(modelMetrics, dfType = "empirical")

We plot the \(F\)-statistics against the theoretical \(F\)-distribution to check how well the null distribution is approximated now:

ggplot(filter(fStats, !is.na(pAdj))) +
  geom_density(aes(x = fStat), fill = "steelblue", alpha = 0.5) +
  geom_line(aes(x = fStat, y = df(fStat, df1 = df1, df2 = df2)), color = "darkred", size = 1.5) +
  theme_bw() +
  # Zoom in to small values to increase resolution for the proteins under H0:
  xlim(c(0, 10))
## Warning: Removed 112 rows containing non-finite outside the scale range
## (`stat_density()`).
## Warning: Removed 112 rows containing missing values or values outside the scale range
## (`geom_line()`).

Also check the p-value histograms. We expect the null cases to follow a uniform distribution, with a peak on the left for the non-null cases:

ggplot(filter(fStats, !is.na(pAdj))) +
  geom_histogram(aes(x = pVal, y = ..density..), fill = "steelblue", alpha = 0.5, boundary = 0, bins = 30) +
  geom_line(aes(x = pVal, y = dunif(pVal)), color = "darkred", size = 1.5) +
  theme_bw()

The \(F\)-statistics and p-values approximate the expected distributions substantially closer when based on the estimated degrees of freedom than when based on the theoretical degrees of freedom.

8 Detect significantly shifted proteins

Finally, we can select proteins that are significantly shifted by putting a threshold on the Benjamini-Hochberg corrected p-values.

topHits <- fStats %>% 
  filter(pAdj <= 0.01) %>%
  dplyr::select(id, fStat, pVal, pAdj) %>%
  arrange(-fStat)

The table topHits contains 78 proteins with Benjamini-Hochberg corrected p-values \(\leq 0.01\).

Let us look at the targets detected in each dataset. The same proteins are shown in Fig. S3, S4, S6, and S7 of the paper.

knitr::kable(topHits)
id fStat pVal pAdj
CDK5_IPI00023530 368.46185 0.0000000 0.0000000
MAP2K2_IPI00003783 147.98256 0.0000000 0.0000000
CSK_IPI00013212 138.19579 0.0000000 0.0000000
PMPCA_IPI00166749 136.69459 0.0000000 0.0000000
AURKA_IPI00298940 130.71508 0.0000000 0.0000000
FECH_IPI00554589 128.21632 0.0000000 0.0000000
IRAK4_IPI00007641 121.84208 0.0000000 0.0000000
CAMKK2_IPI00290239 116.29233 0.0000000 0.0000000
PAK4_IPI00014068 112.96256 0.0000000 0.0000000
STK4_IPI00011488 102.04888 0.0000000 0.0000000
STK38_IPI00027251 99.35814 0.0000000 0.0000000
PDPK1_IPI00002538 96.58800 0.0000000 0.0000000
GSK3B_IPI00216190 92.72263 0.0000000 0.0000001
ADRBK1_IPI00012497 82.15166 0.0000000 0.0000002
BMP2K_IPI00337426 74.39726 0.0000000 0.0000003
FER_IPI00029263 70.16490 0.0000000 0.0000005
MAP2K1_IPI00219604 62.04256 0.0000000 0.0000012
MAP2K7_IPI00302112 59.56410 0.0000000 0.0000016
MAP4K2_IPI00149094 57.19256 0.0000000 0.0000021
MAPK12_IPI00296283 55.57916 0.0000000 0.0000025
PRKCE_IPI00024539 54.37380 0.0000000 0.0000027
ADK_IPI00290279 54.31285 0.0000000 0.0000027
STK3_IPI00411984 53.12784 0.0000000 0.0000030
MAPK8_IPI00220306 49.96233 0.0000000 0.0000044
MAPKAPK5_IPI00160672 49.94233 0.0000000 0.0000044
PKN1_IPI00412672 49.84389 0.0000000 0.0000044
PTK2_IPI00413961 49.16822 0.0000000 0.0000045
AAK1_IPI00916402 49.15830 0.0000000 0.0000045
CHEK2_IPI00423156 46.38055 0.0000000 0.0000068
CDK2_IPI00031681 45.12856 0.0000001 0.0000080
MAP2K4_IPI00024674 44.12837 0.0000001 0.0000090
CPOX_IPI00093057 44.08458 0.0000001 0.0000090
PHKG2_IPI00012891 42.86908 0.0000001 0.0000108
TNIK_IPI00514275 42.29693 0.0000001 0.0000115
VRK1_IPI00019640 41.22367 0.0000001 0.0000136
MAPKAPK2_IPI00026054 37.87298 0.0000002 0.0000247
MARK2_IPI00555838 37.65923 0.0000002 0.0000250
CAMK2G_IPI00908444 36.05093 0.0000003 0.0000335
GSK3A_IPI00292228 35.91272 0.0000003 0.0000336
PRKAR2B_IPI00554752 35.67900 0.0000003 0.0000343
RIOK2_IPI00306406 35.15496 0.0000003 0.0000373
PRKACA_IPI00396630 33.77040 0.0000005 0.0000479
RPS6KA3_IPI00020898 33.73234 0.0000005 0.0000479
MAPK3_IPI00018195 33.16277 0.0000005 0.0000529
STK24_IPI00872754 32.09652 0.0000007 0.0000653
MARK3_IPI00183118 29.94626 0.0000011 0.0001043
TTK_IPI00151170 29.36287 0.0000012 0.0001172
MKNK1_IPI00304048 25.93265 0.0000029 0.0002704
PDCD10_IPI00298558 25.71495 0.0000031 0.0002805
OSBPL3_IPI00023555 25.44331 0.0000033 0.0002955
HEBP1_IPI00148063 25.03280 0.0000037 0.0003234
RPS6KA1_IPI00477982 24.25920 0.0000045 0.0003917
PIK3CD_IPI00384817 23.98846 0.0000049 0.0004143
MAP3K2_IPI00513803 23.76949 0.0000052 0.0004322
SGK3_IPI00655852 23.25898 0.0000060 0.0004903
PRKCB_IPI00219628 22.92652 0.0000066 0.0005297
IRAK1_IPI00293652 22.84151 0.0000068 0.0005333
CAMK1D_IPI00170508 22.02269 0.0000086 0.0006662
POLR2K_IPI00023975 21.35818 0.0000105 0.0007995
LYN_IPI00298625 20.57968 0.0000134 0.0009991
CDC42BPA_IPI00903296 20.07543 0.0000157 0.0011481
PRKCQ_IPI00029196 20.03452 0.0000159 0.0011481
ALDH6A1_IPI00024990 19.81305 0.0000170 0.0012127
NEDD4L_IPI00304945 19.67718 0.0000178 0.0012471
CCNB2_IPI00028266 19.40087 0.0000195 0.0013429
PRKCD_IPI00329236 17.76048 0.0000338 0.0022892
PRCP_IPI00399307 17.72393 0.0000342 0.0022892
XPOT_IPI00306290 17.40581 0.0000382 0.0025206
MAPK14_IPI00221141 17.25928 0.0000402 0.0026158
CYCS_IPI00465315 16.00689 0.0000634 0.0040610
STK10_IPI00304742 15.87582 0.0000665 0.0042008
FAM96A_IPI00030985 15.84081 0.0000674 0.0042008
DDX54_IPI00152510 14.02738 0.0001367 0.0084040
RPS6KB1_IPI00216132 13.98276 0.0001392 0.0084421
PCTK2_IPI00376955 13.89177 0.0001445 0.0086444
MAP4K5_IPI00294842 13.80870 0.0001495 0.0088257
LLGL1_IPI00105532 13.54513 0.0001667 0.0097119
NQO2_IPI00219129 13.51108 0.0001690 0.0097240

9 Session info

devtools::session_info()
## ─ Session info ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
##  setting  value
##  version  R Under development (unstable) (2024-10-21 r87258)
##  os       Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS
##  system   x86_64, linux-gnu
##  ui       X11
##  language (EN)
##  collate  C
##  ctype    en_US.UTF-8
##  tz       America/New_York
##  date     2024-10-29
##  pandoc   3.1.3 @ /usr/bin/ (via rmarkdown)
## 
## ─ Packages ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
##  package      * version date (UTC) lib source
##  backports      1.5.0   2024-05-23 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  BiocManager    1.30.25 2024-08-28 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  BiocParallel   1.41.0  2024-10-29 [2] Bioconductor 3.21 (R 4.5.0)
##  BiocStyle    * 2.35.0  2024-10-29 [2] Bioconductor 3.21 (R 4.5.0)
##  bookdown       0.41    2024-10-16 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  broom        * 1.0.7   2024-09-26 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  bslib          0.8.0   2024-07-29 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  cachem         1.1.0   2024-05-16 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  cli            3.6.3   2024-06-21 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  codetools      0.2-20  2024-03-31 [3] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  colorspace     2.1-1   2024-07-26 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  crayon         1.5.3   2024-06-20 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  devtools       2.4.5   2022-10-11 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  digest         0.6.37  2024-08-19 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  dplyr        * 1.1.4   2023-11-17 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  ellipsis       0.3.2   2021-04-29 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  evaluate       1.0.1   2024-10-10 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  fansi          1.0.6   2023-12-08 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  farver         2.1.2   2024-05-13 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  fastmap        1.2.0   2024-05-15 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  fs             1.6.4   2024-04-25 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  generics       0.1.3   2022-07-05 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  ggplot2      * 3.5.1   2024-04-23 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  glue           1.8.0   2024-09-30 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  gtable         0.3.6   2024-10-25 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  highr          0.11    2024-05-26 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  htmltools      0.5.8.1 2024-04-04 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  htmlwidgets    1.6.4   2023-12-06 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  httpuv         1.6.15  2024-03-26 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  jquerylib      0.1.4   2021-04-26 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  jsonlite       1.8.9   2024-09-20 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  knitr        * 1.48    2024-07-07 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  labeling       0.4.3   2023-08-29 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  later          1.3.2   2023-12-06 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  lifecycle      1.0.4   2023-11-07 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  magick         2.8.5   2024-09-20 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  magrittr     * 2.0.3   2022-03-30 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  MASS           7.3-61  2024-06-13 [3] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  memoise        2.0.1   2021-11-26 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  mime           0.12    2021-09-28 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  miniUI         0.1.1.1 2018-05-18 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  munsell        0.5.1   2024-04-01 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  NPARC        * 1.19.0  2024-10-29 [1] Bioconductor 3.21 (R 4.5.0)
##  pillar         1.9.0   2023-03-22 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  pkgbuild       1.4.5   2024-10-28 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  pkgconfig      2.0.3   2019-09-22 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  pkgload        1.4.0   2024-06-28 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  profvis        0.4.0   2024-09-20 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  promises       1.3.0   2024-04-05 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  purrr          1.0.2   2023-08-10 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  R6             2.5.1   2021-08-19 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  Rcpp           1.0.13  2024-07-17 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  remotes        2.5.0   2024-03-17 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  rlang          1.1.4   2024-06-04 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  rmarkdown      2.28    2024-08-17 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  sass           0.4.9   2024-03-15 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  scales         1.3.0   2023-11-28 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  sessioninfo    1.2.2   2021-12-06 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  shiny          1.9.1   2024-08-01 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  tibble         3.2.1   2023-03-20 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  tidyr          1.3.1   2024-01-24 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  tidyselect     1.2.1   2024-03-11 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  tinytex        0.53    2024-09-15 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  urlchecker     1.0.1   2021-11-30 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  usethis        3.0.0   2024-07-29 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  utf8           1.2.4   2023-10-22 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  vctrs          0.6.5   2023-12-01 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  withr          3.0.2   2024-10-28 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  xfun           0.48    2024-10-03 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  xtable         1.8-4   2019-04-21 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
##  yaml           2.3.10  2024-07-26 [2] CRAN (R 4.5.0)
## 
##  [1] /tmp/Rtmp1Sr5ES/Rinst15115275bdcdb9
##  [2] /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.21-bioc/R/site-library
##  [3] /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.21-bioc/R/library
## 
## ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

Bibliography

Childs, Dorothee, Karsten Bach, Holger Franken, Simon Anders, Nils Kurzawa, Marcus Bantscheff, Mikhail Savitski, and Wolfgang Huber. 2019. “Non-Parametric Analysis of Thermal Proteome Profiles Reveals Novel Drug-Binding Proteins.” Molecular & Cellular Proteomics, October. https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.TIR119.001481.
Marazzi, A. 2002. “Bootstrap Tests for Robust Means of Asymmetric Distributions with Unequal Shapes.” Computational Statistics & Data Analysis 39 (4): 503–28.
Savitski, Mikhail M, Friedrich B M Reinhard, Holger Franken, Thilo Werner, Maria Fälth Savitski, Dirk Eberhard, Daniel Martinez Molina, et al. 2014. “Tracking Cancer Drugs in Living Cells by Thermal Profiling of the Proteome.” Science 346 (6205): 1255784.