Getting started with SimBu

Alexander Dietrich

Installation

To install the developmental version of the package, run:

install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("omnideconv/SimBu")

To install from Bioconductor:

if (!require("BiocManager", quietly = TRUE)) {
  install.packages("BiocManager")
}

BiocManager::install("SimBu")
library(SimBu)

Introduction

As complex tissues are typically composed of various cell types, deconvolution tools have been developed to computationally infer their cellular composition from bulk RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data. To comprehensively assess deconvolution performance, gold-standard datasets are indispensable. Gold-standard, experimental techniques like flow cytometry or immunohistochemistry are resource-intensive and cannot be systematically applied to the numerous cell types and tissues profiled with high-throughput transcriptomics. The simulation of ‘pseudo-bulk’ data, generated by aggregating single-cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) expression profiles in pre-defined proportions, offers a scalable and cost-effective alternative. This makes it feasible to create in silico gold standards that allow fine-grained control of cell-type fractions not conceivable in an experimental setup. However, at present, no simulation software for generating pseudo-bulk RNA-seq data exists.
SimBu was developed to simulate pseudo-bulk samples based on various simulation scenarios, designed to test specific features of deconvolution methods. A unique feature of SimBu is the modelling of cell-type-specific mRNA bias using experimentally-derived or data-driven scaling factors. Here, we show that SimBu can generate realistic pseudo-bulk data, recapitulating the biological and statistical features of real RNA-seq data. Finally, we illustrate the impact of mRNA bias on the evaluation of deconvolution tools and provide recommendations for the selection of suitable methods for estimating mRNA content.

Getting started

This chapter covers all you need to know to quickly simulate some pseudo-bulk samples!

This package can simulate samples from local or public data. This vignette will work with artificially generated data as it serves as an overview for the features implemented in SimBu. For the public data integration using sfaira (Fischer et al. 2020), please refer to the “Public Data Integration” vignette.

We will create some toy data to use for our simulations; two matrices with 300 cells each and 1000 genes/features. One represents raw count data, while the other matrix represents scaled TPM-like data. We will assign these cells to some immune cell types.

counts <- Matrix::Matrix(matrix(stats::rpois(3e5, 5), ncol = 300), sparse = TRUE)
tpm <- Matrix::Matrix(matrix(stats::rpois(3e5, 5), ncol = 300), sparse = TRUE)
tpm <- Matrix::t(1e6 * Matrix::t(tpm) / Matrix::colSums(tpm))
colnames(counts) <- paste0("cell_", rep(1:300))
colnames(tpm) <- paste0("cell_", rep(1:300))
rownames(counts) <- paste0("gene_", rep(1:1000))
rownames(tpm) <- paste0("gene_", rep(1:1000))
annotation <- data.frame(
  "ID" = paste0("cell_", rep(1:300)),
  "cell_type" = c(
    rep("T cells CD4", 50),
    rep("T cells CD8", 50),
    rep("Macrophages", 100),
    rep("NK cells", 10),
    rep("B cells", 70),
    rep("Monocytes", 20)
  )
)

Creating a dataset

SimBu uses the SummarizedExperiment class as storage for count data as well as annotation data. Currently it is possible to store two matrices at the same time: raw counts and TPM-like data (this can also be some other scaled count matrix, such as RPKM, but we recommend to use TPMs). These two matrices have to have the same dimensions and have to contain the same genes and cells. Providing the raw count data is mandatory!
SimBu scales the matrix that is added via the tpm_matrix slot by default to 1e6 per cell, if you do not want this, you can switch it off by setting the scale_tpm parameter to FALSE. Additionally, the cell type annotation of the cells has to be given in a dataframe, which has to include the two columns ID and cell_type. If additional columns from this annotation should be transferred to the dataset, simply give the names of them in the additional_cols parameter.

To generate a dataset that can be used in SimBu, you can use the dataset() method; other methods exist as well, which are covered in the “Inputs & Outputs” vignette.

ds <- SimBu::dataset(
  annotation = annotation,
  count_matrix = counts,
  tpm_matrix = tpm,
  name = "test_dataset"
)
#> Filtering genes...
#> Created dataset.

SimBu offers basic filtering options for your dataset, which you can apply during dataset generation:

Simulate pseudo bulk datasets

We are now ready to simulate the first pseudo bulk samples with the created dataset:

simulation <- SimBu::simulate_bulk(
  data = ds,
  scenario = "random",
  scaling_factor = "NONE",
  ncells = 100,
  nsamples = 10,
  BPPARAM = BiocParallel::MulticoreParam(workers = 4), # this will use 4 threads to run the simulation
  run_parallel = TRUE
) # multi-threading to TRUE
#> Using parallel generation of simulations.
#> Finished simulation.

ncells sets the number of cells in each sample, while nsamples sets the total amount of simulated samples.
If you want to simulate a specific sequencing depth in your simulations, you can use the total_read_counts parameter to do so. Note that this parameter is only applied on the counts matrix (if supplied), as TPMs will be scaled to 1e6 by default.

SimBu can add mRNA bias by using different scaling factors to the simulations using the scaling_factor parameter. A detailed explanation can be found in the “Scaling factor” vignette.

Currently there are 6 scenarios implemented in the package:

pure_scenario_dataframe <- data.frame(
  "B cells" = c(0.2, 0.1, 0.5, 0.3),
  "T cells" = c(0.3, 0.8, 0.2, 0.5),
  "NK cells" = c(0.5, 0.1, 0.3, 0.2),
  row.names = c("sample1", "sample2", "sample3", "sample4")
)
pure_scenario_dataframe
#>         B.cells T.cells NK.cells
#> sample1     0.2     0.3      0.5
#> sample2     0.1     0.8      0.1
#> sample3     0.5     0.2      0.3
#> sample4     0.3     0.5      0.2

Results

The simulation object contains three named entries:

utils::head(SummarizedExperiment::assays(simulation$bulk)[["bulk_counts"]])
#> 6 x 10 sparse Matrix of class "dgCMatrix"
#>   [[ suppressing 10 column names 'random_sample1', 'random_sample2', 'random_sample3' ... ]]
#>                                               
#> gene_1 508 520 474 524 533 501 514 531 524 466
#> gene_2 473 533 522 477 531 495 495 476 525 541
#> gene_3 486 488 532 549 526 487 476 515 503 475
#> gene_4 458 495 480 482 489 475 496 487 501 471
#> gene_5 479 438 516 530 492 492 548 518 524 473
#> gene_6 489 461 478 528 485 512 510 452 486 485
utils::head(SummarizedExperiment::assays(simulation$bulk)[["bulk_tpm"]])
#> 6 x 10 sparse Matrix of class "dgCMatrix"
#>   [[ suppressing 10 column names 'random_sample1', 'random_sample2', 'random_sample3' ... ]]
#>                                                                             
#> gene_1 1174.6444  934.4336 1057.4891 1046.9949  942.7935  906.4465 1030.0464
#> gene_2 1036.8505  961.6204  920.8503  935.0213  931.3851  956.6091 1058.5024
#> gene_3 1027.3534  993.3263 1000.9960 1016.9234  985.4467 1034.3472 1027.4232
#> gene_4 1051.8935  994.3580  981.7579 1048.1780 1005.1406  957.4525  934.7561
#> gene_5  998.7359 1090.0937 1002.4311  976.0339 1017.1903 1049.4949 1026.6172
#> gene_6  967.0802 1089.8292 1080.8249 1046.0479  935.3253  982.9989  946.8574
#>                                     
#> gene_1  967.9303  926.6836 1024.3089
#> gene_2 1023.7334 1085.9944  988.8375
#> gene_3 1040.1744 1015.5573  872.8959
#> gene_4  961.5284 1007.2360  980.2304
#> gene_5 1017.1333  925.9651 1002.4196
#> gene_6  919.3679  965.7744  984.7871

If only a single matrix was given to the dataset initially, only one assay is filled.

It is also possible to merge simulations:

simulation2 <- SimBu::simulate_bulk(
  data = ds,
  scenario = "even",
  scaling_factor = "NONE",
  ncells = 1000,
  nsamples = 10,
  BPPARAM = BiocParallel::MulticoreParam(workers = 4),
  run_parallel = TRUE
)
#> Using parallel generation of simulations.
#> Finished simulation.
merged_simulations <- SimBu::merge_simulations(list(simulation, simulation2))

Finally here is a barplot of the resulting simulation:

SimBu::plot_simulation(simulation = merged_simulations)
#> Warning: `aes_string()` was deprecated in ggplot2 3.0.0.
#> ℹ Please use tidy evaluation idioms with `aes()`.
#> ℹ See also `vignette("ggplot2-in-packages")` for more information.
#> ℹ The deprecated feature was likely used in the SimBu package.
#>   Please report the issue at <https://github.com/omnideconv/SimBu/issues>.
#> This warning is displayed once every 8 hours.
#> Call `lifecycle::last_lifecycle_warnings()` to see where this warning was
#> generated.

More features

Simulate using a whitelist (and blacklist) of cell-types

Sometimes, you are only interested in specific cell-types (for example T cells), but the dataset you are using has too many other cell-types; you can handle this issue during simulation using the whitelist parameter:

simulation <- SimBu::simulate_bulk(
  data = ds,
  scenario = "random",
  scaling_factor = "NONE",
  ncells = 1000,
  nsamples = 20,
  BPPARAM = BiocParallel::MulticoreParam(workers = 4),
  run_parallel = TRUE,
  whitelist = c("T cells CD4", "T cells CD8")
)
#> Using parallel generation of simulations.
#> Finished simulation.
SimBu::plot_simulation(simulation = simulation)

In the same way, you can also provide a blacklist parameter, where you name the cell-types you don’t want to be included in your simulation.

utils::sessionInfo()
#> R version 4.5.1 Patched (2025-08-23 r88802)
#> Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
#> Running under: Ubuntu 24.04.3 LTS
#> 
#> Matrix products: default
#> BLAS:   /home/biocbuild/bbs-3.22-bioc/R/lib/libRblas.so 
#> LAPACK: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/lapack/liblapack.so.3.12.0  LAPACK version 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] stats     graphics  grDevices utils     datasets  methods   base     
#> 
#> other attached packages:
#> [1] SimBu_1.11.0
#> 
#> loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
#>  [1] sass_0.4.10                 generics_0.1.4             
#>  [3] tidyr_1.3.1                 SparseArray_1.9.1          
#>  [5] lattice_0.22-7              digest_0.6.37              
#>  [7] magrittr_2.0.4              RColorBrewer_1.1-3         
#>  [9] evaluate_1.0.5              sparseMatrixStats_1.21.0   
#> [11] grid_4.5.1                  fastmap_1.2.0              
#> [13] jsonlite_2.0.0              Matrix_1.7-4               
#> [15] proxyC_0.5.2                purrr_1.1.0                
#> [17] scales_1.4.0                codetools_0.2-20           
#> [19] jquerylib_0.1.4             abind_1.4-8                
#> [21] cli_3.6.5                   rlang_1.1.6                
#> [23] crayon_1.5.3                XVector_0.49.1             
#> [25] Biobase_2.69.1              withr_3.0.2                
#> [27] cachem_1.1.0                DelayedArray_0.35.3        
#> [29] yaml_2.3.10                 S4Arrays_1.9.1             
#> [31] tools_4.5.1                 parallel_4.5.1             
#> [33] BiocParallel_1.43.4         dplyr_1.1.4                
#> [35] ggplot2_4.0.0               SummarizedExperiment_1.39.2
#> [37] BiocGenerics_0.55.1         vctrs_0.6.5                
#> [39] R6_2.6.1                    matrixStats_1.5.0          
#> [41] stats4_4.5.1                lifecycle_1.0.4            
#> [43] Seqinfo_0.99.2              S4Vectors_0.47.4           
#> [45] IRanges_2.43.5              pkgconfig_2.0.3            
#> [47] gtable_0.3.6                bslib_0.9.0                
#> [49] pillar_1.11.1               data.table_1.17.8          
#> [51] glue_1.8.0                  Rcpp_1.1.0                 
#> [53] xfun_0.53                   tibble_3.3.0               
#> [55] GenomicRanges_1.61.5        tidyselect_1.2.1           
#> [57] dichromat_2.0-0.1           MatrixGenerics_1.21.0      
#> [59] knitr_1.50                  farver_2.1.2               
#> [61] htmltools_0.5.8.1           labeling_0.4.3             
#> [63] rmarkdown_2.30              compiler_4.5.1             
#> [65] S7_0.2.0

References

Fischer, David S., Leander Dony, Martin König, Abdul Moeed, Luke Zappia, Sophie Tritschler, Olle Holmberg, Hananeh Aliee, and Fabian J. Theis. 2020. “Sfaira Accelerates Data and Model Reuse in Single Cell Genomics.” bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.12.16.419036.