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single-cell-rna-qc

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Single-Cell RNA-seq Quality Control

Automated QC workflow for single-cell RNA-seq data following scverse best practices.

When to Use This Skill

Use when users:

  • Request quality control or QC on single-cell RNA-seq data
  • Want to filter low-quality cells or assess data quality
  • Need QC visualizations or metrics
  • Ask to follow scverse/scanpy best practices
  • Request MAD-based filtering or outlier detection

Supported input formats:

  • .h5ad files (AnnData format from scanpy/Python workflows)
  • .h5 files (10X Genomics Cell Ranger output)

Default recommendation: Use Approach 1 (complete pipeline) unless the user has specific custom requirements or explicitly requests non-standard filtering logic.

Approach 1: Complete QC Pipeline (Recommended for Standard Workflows)

For standard QC following scverse best practices, use the convenience script scripts/qc_analysis.py:

python3 scripts/qc_analysis.py input.h5ad
# or for 10X Genomics .h5 files:
python3 scripts/qc_analysis.py raw_feature_bc_matrix.h5

The script automatically detects the file format and loads it appropriately.

When to use this approach:

  • Standard QC workflow with adjustable thresholds (all cells filtered the same way)
  • Batch processing multiple datasets
  • Quick exploratory analysis
  • User wants the "just works" solution

Requirements: anndata, scanpy, scipy, matplotlib, seaborn, numpy

Parameters:

Customize filtering thresholds and gene patterns using command-line parameters:

  • --output-dir - Output directory
  • --mad-counts, --mad-genes, --mad-mt - MAD thresholds for counts/genes/MT%
  • --mt-threshold - Hard mitochondrial % cutoff
  • --min-cells - Gene filtering threshold
  • --mt-pattern, --ribo-pattern, --hb-pattern - Gene name patterns for different species

Use --help to see current default values.

Outputs:

All files are saved to <input_basename>_qc_results/ directory by default (or to the directory specified by --output-dir):

  • qc_metrics_before_filtering.png - Pre-filtering visualizations
  • qc_filtering_thresholds.png - MAD-based threshold overlays
  • qc_metrics_after_filtering.png - Post-filtering quality metrics
  • <input_basename>_filtered.h5ad - Clean, filtered dataset ready for downstream analysis
  • <input_basename>_with_qc.h5ad - Original data with QC annotations preserved

If copying outputs for user access, copy individual files (not the entire directory) so users can preview them directly.

Workflow Steps

The script performs the following steps:

  1. Calculate QC metrics - Count depth, gene detection, mitochondrial/ribosomal/hemoglobin content
  2. Apply MAD-based filtering - Permissive outlier detection using MAD thresholds for counts/genes/MT%
  3. Filter genes - Remove genes detected in few cells
  4. Generate visualizations - Comprehensive before/after plots with threshold overlays

Approach 2: Modular Building Blocks (For Custom Workflows)

For custom analysis workflows or non-standard requirements, use the modular utility functions from scripts/qc_core.py and scripts/qc_plotting.py:

# Run from scripts/ directory, or add scripts/ to sys.path if needed
import anndata as ad
from qc_core import calculate_qc_metrics, detect_outliers_mad, filter_cells
from qc_plotting import plot_qc_distributions  # Only if visualization needed

adata = ad.read_h5ad('input.h5ad')
calculate_qc_metrics(adata, inplace=True)
# ... custom analysis logic here

When to use this approach:

  • Different workflow needed (skip steps, change order, apply different thresholds to subsets)
  • Conditional logic (e.g., filter neurons differently than other cells)
  • Partial execution (only metrics/visualization, no filtering)
  • Integration with other analysis steps in a larger pipeline
  • Custom filtering criteria beyond what command-line params support

Available utility functions:

From qc_core.py (core QC operations):

  • calculate_qc_metrics(adata, mt_pattern, ribo_pattern, hb_pattern, inplace=True) - Calculate QC metrics and annotate adata
  • detect_outliers_mad(adata, metric, n_mads, verbose=True) - MAD-based outlier detection, returns boolean mask
  • apply_hard_threshold(adata, metric, threshold, operator='>', verbose=True) - Apply hard cutoffs, returns boolean mask
  • filter_cells(adata, mask, inplace=False) - Apply boolean mask to filter cells
  • filter_genes(adata, min_cells=20, min_counts=None, inplace=True) - Filter genes by detection
  • print_qc_summary(adata, label='') - Print summary statistics

From qc_plotting.py (visualization):

  • plot_qc_distributions(adata, output_path, title) - Generate comprehensive QC plots
  • plot_filtering_thresholds(adata, outlier_masks, thresholds, output_path) - Visualize filtering thresholds
  • plot_qc_after_filtering(adata, output_path) - Generate post-filtering plots

Example custom workflows:

Example 1: Only calculate metrics and visualize, don't filter yet

adata = ad.read_h5ad('input.h5ad')
calculate_qc_metrics(adata, inplace=True)
plot_qc_distributions(adata, 'qc_before.png', title='Initial QC')
print_qc_summary(adata, label='Before filtering')

Example 2: Apply only MT% filtering, keep other metrics permissive

adata = ad.read_h5ad('input.h5ad')
calculate_qc_metrics(adata, inplace=True)

# Only filter high MT% cells
high_mt = apply_hard_threshold(adata, 'pct_counts_mt', 10, operator='>')
adata_filtered = filter_cells(adata, ~high_mt)
adata_filtered.write('filtered.h5ad')

Example 3: Different thresholds for different subsets

adata = ad.read_h5ad('input.h5ad')
calculate_qc_metrics(adata, inplace=True)

# Apply type-specific QC (assumes cell_type metadata exists)
neurons = adata.obs['cell_type'] == 'neuron'
other_cells = ~neurons

# Neurons tolerate higher MT%, other cells use stricter threshold
neuron_qc = apply_hard_threshold(adata[neurons], 'pct_counts_mt', 15, operator='>')
other_qc = apply_hard_threshold(adata[other_cells], 'pct_counts_mt', 8, operator='>')

Best Practices

  1. Be permissive with filtering - Default thresholds intentionally retain most cells to avoid losing rare populations
  2. Inspect visualizations - Always review before/after plots to ensure filtering makes biological sense
  3. Consider dataset-specific factors - Some tissues naturally have higher mitochondrial content (e.g., neurons, cardiomyocytes)
  4. Check gene annotations - Mitochondrial gene prefixes vary by species (mt- for mouse, MT- for human)
  5. Iterate if needed - QC parameters may need adjustment based on the specific experiment or tissue type

Reference Materials

For detailed QC methodology, parameter rationale, and troubleshooting guidance, see references/scverse_qc_guidelines.md. This reference provides:

  • Detailed explanations of each QC metric and why it matters
  • Rationale for MAD-based thresholds and why they're better than fixed cutoffs
  • Guidelines for interpreting QC visualizations (histograms, violin plots, scatter plots)
  • Species-specific considerations for gene annotations
  • When and how to adjust filtering parameters
  • Advanced QC considerations (ambient RNA correction, doublet detection)

Load this reference when users need deeper understanding of the methodology or when troubleshooting QC issues.

Next Steps After QC

Typical downstream analysis steps:

  • Ambient RNA correction (SoupX, CellBender)
  • Doublet detection (scDblFinder)
  • Normalization (log-normalize, scran)
  • Feature selection and dimensionality reduction
  • Clustering and cell type annotation

Source

git clone https://github.com/anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins/blob/main/bio-research/skills/single-cell-rna-qc/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Automated quality control for single-cell RNA-seq data following scverse best practices. Supports .h5ad and .h5 inputs, uses MAD-based filtering and rich visualizations to assess data quality. Default workflow (Approach 1) provides a complete QC pipeline with pre/post metrics and filtered outputs.

How This Skill Works

The workflow detects the input format, loads the data, and computes QC metrics such as counts, genes detected, and mitochondrial/ribosomal/hemoglobin content. It then applies MAD-based outlier filtering, filters genes, and generates comprehensive visualizations before saving the filtered dataset and QC annotations to disk. Users can run either the complete script (qc_analysis.py) or modular building blocks (qc_core.py, qc_plotting.py) for custom workflows.

When to Use It

  • Request quality control or QC on single-cell RNA-seq data
  • Filter low-quality cells based on QC metrics
  • Assess data quality with pre- and post-filtering metrics and visuals
  • Want comprehensive QC visualizations aligned with scverse/scanpy best practices
  • Need MAD-based filtering or outlier detection as part of QC

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Prepare input.h5ad or raw_feature_bc_matrix.h5
  2. Step 2: Run the QC script (e.g., python3 scripts/qc_analysis.py input.h5ad or raw_feature_bc_matrix.h5)
  3. Step 3: Inspect outputs in <input_basename>_qc_results/ (e.g., qc_metrics_before_filtering.png, <input_basename>_filtered.h5ad)

Best Practices

  • Use Approach 1 for standard QC workflows unless custom requirements exist
  • Prepare input as .h5ad or 10X .h5 file and let the script auto-detect format
  • Tune MAD thresholds with --mad-counts, --mad-genes, --mad-mt and set --mt-threshold as needed
  • Review pre-filtering and post-filtering metrics and threshold overlays
  • When sharing results, copy individual outputs (e.g., qc_metrics_before_filtering.png) from the _qc_results folder for quick previews

Example Use Cases

  • QC a new scRNA-seq dataset before clustering to decide on filtering criteria
  • Identify and remove cells with high mitochondrial content using MAD-based filters
  • Compare QC metrics across batches to detect technical biases
  • Apply MAD-based outlier detection to obtain a clean expression matrix for downstream analysis
  • Generate annotated AnnData objects (<basename>_filtered.h5ad and <basename>_with_qc.h5ad) for sharing with collaborators

Frequently Asked Questions

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