From antigravity-awesome-skills
Standard single-cell RNA-seq analysis pipeline. Use for QC, normalization, dimensionality reduction (PCA/UMAP/t-SNE), clustering, differential expression, and visualization. Best for exploratory scRNA-seq analysis with established workflows. For...
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Scanpy is a scalable Python toolkit for analyzing single-cell RNA-seq data, built on AnnData. Apply this skill for complete single-cell workflows including quality control, normalization, dimensionality reduction, clustering, marker gene identification, visualization, and trajectory analysis.
Verifies tests pass on completed feature branch, presents options to merge locally, create GitHub PR, keep as-is or discard; executes choice and cleans up worktree.
Guides root cause investigation for bugs, test failures, unexpected behavior, performance issues, and build failures before proposing fixes.
Writes implementation plans from specs for multi-step tasks, mapping files and breaking into TDD bite-sized steps before coding.
Scanpy is a scalable Python toolkit for analyzing single-cell RNA-seq data, built on AnnData. Apply this skill for complete single-cell workflows including quality control, normalization, dimensionality reduction, clustering, marker gene identification, visualization, and trajectory analysis.
This skill should be used when:
import scanpy as sc
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
# Configure settings
sc.settings.verbosity = 3
sc.settings.set_figure_params(dpi=80, facecolor='white')
sc.settings.figdir = './figures/'
# From 10X Genomics
adata = sc.read_10x_mtx('path/to/data/')
adata = sc.read_10x_h5('path/to/data.h5')
# From h5ad (AnnData format)
adata = sc.read_h5ad('path/to/data.h5ad')
# From CSV
adata = sc.read_csv('path/to/data.csv')
The AnnData object is the core data structure in scanpy:
adata.X # Expression matrix (cells × genes)
adata.obs # Cell metadata (DataFrame)
adata.var # Gene metadata (DataFrame)
adata.uns # Unstructured annotations (dict)
adata.obsm # Multi-dimensional cell data (PCA, UMAP)
adata.raw # Raw data backup
# Access cell and gene names
adata.obs_names # Cell barcodes
adata.var_names # Gene names
Identify and filter low-quality cells and genes:
# Identify mitochondrial genes
adata.var['mt'] = adata.var_names.str.startswith('MT-')
# Calculate QC metrics
sc.pp.calculate_qc_metrics(adata, qc_vars=['mt'], inplace=True)
# Visualize QC metrics
sc.pl.violin(adata, ['n_genes_by_counts', 'total_counts', 'pct_counts_mt'],
jitter=0.4, multi_panel=True)
# Filter cells and genes
sc.pp.filter_cells(adata, min_genes=200)
sc.pp.filter_genes(adata, min_cells=3)
adata = adata[adata.obs.pct_counts_mt < 5, :] # Remove high MT% cells
Use the QC script for automated analysis:
python scripts/qc_analysis.py input_file.h5ad --output filtered.h5ad
# Normalize to 10,000 counts per cell
sc.pp.normalize_total(adata, target_sum=1e4)
# Log-transform
sc.pp.log1p(adata)
# Save raw counts for later
adata.raw = adata
# Identify highly variable genes
sc.pp.highly_variable_genes(adata, n_top_genes=2000)
sc.pl.highly_variable_genes(adata)
# Subset to highly variable genes
adata = adata[:, adata.var.highly_variable]
# Regress out unwanted variation
sc.pp.regress_out(adata, ['total_counts', 'pct_counts_mt'])
# Scale data
sc.pp.scale(adata, max_value=10)
# PCA
sc.tl.pca(adata, svd_solver='arpack')
sc.pl.pca_variance_ratio(adata, log=True) # Check elbow plot
# Compute neighborhood graph
sc.pp.neighbors(adata, n_neighbors=10, n_pcs=40)
# UMAP for visualization
sc.tl.umap(adata)
sc.pl.umap(adata, color='leiden')
# Alternative: t-SNE
sc.tl.tsne(adata)
# Leiden clustering (recommended)
sc.tl.leiden(adata, resolution=0.5)
sc.pl.umap(adata, color='leiden', legend_loc='on data')
# Try multiple resolutions to find optimal granularity
for res in [0.3, 0.5, 0.8, 1.0]:
sc.tl.leiden(adata, resolution=res, key_added=f'leiden_{res}')
# Find marker genes for each cluster
sc.tl.rank_genes_groups(adata, 'leiden', method='wilcoxon')
# Visualize results
sc.pl.rank_genes_groups(adata, n_genes=25, sharey=False)
sc.pl.rank_genes_groups_heatmap(adata, n_genes=10)
sc.pl.rank_genes_groups_dotplot(adata, n_genes=5)
# Get results as DataFrame
markers = sc.get.rank_genes_groups_df(adata, group='0')
# Define marker genes for known cell types
marker_genes = ['CD3D', 'CD14', 'MS4A1', 'NKG7', 'FCGR3A']
# Visualize markers
sc.pl.umap(adata, color=marker_genes, use_raw=True)
sc.pl.dotplot(adata, var_names=marker_genes, groupby='leiden')
# Manual annotation
cluster_to_celltype = {
'0': 'CD4 T cells',
'1': 'CD14+ Monocytes',
'2': 'B cells',
'3': 'CD8 T cells',
}
adata.obs['cell_type'] = adata.obs['leiden'].map(cluster_to_celltype)
# Visualize annotated types
sc.pl.umap(adata, color='cell_type', legend_loc='on data')
# Save processed data
adata.write('results/processed_data.h5ad')
# Export metadata
adata.obs.to_csv('results/cell_metadata.csv')
adata.var.to_csv('results/gene_metadata.csv')
# Set high-quality defaults
sc.settings.set_figure_params(dpi=300, frameon=False, figsize=(5, 5))
sc.settings.file_format_figs = 'pdf'
# UMAP with custom styling
sc.pl.umap(adata, color='cell_type',
palette='Set2',
legend_loc='on data',
legend_fontsize=12,
legend_fontoutline=2,
frameon=False,
save='_publication.pdf')
# Heatmap of marker genes
sc.pl.heatmap(adata, var_names=genes, groupby='cell_type',
swap_axes=True, show_gene_labels=True,
save='_markers.pdf')
# Dot plot
sc.pl.dotplot(adata, var_names=genes, groupby='cell_type',
save='_dotplot.pdf')
Refer to references/plotting_guide.md for comprehensive visualization examples.
# PAGA (Partition-based graph abstraction)
sc.tl.paga(adata, groups='leiden')
sc.pl.paga(adata, color='leiden')
# Diffusion pseudotime
adata.uns['iroot'] = np.flatnonzero(adata.obs['leiden'] == '0')[0]
sc.tl.dpt(adata)
sc.pl.umap(adata, color='dpt_pseudotime')
# Compare treated vs control within cell types
adata_subset = adata[adata.obs['cell_type'] == 'T cells']
sc.tl.rank_genes_groups(adata_subset, groupby='condition',
groups=['treated'], reference='control')
sc.pl.rank_genes_groups(adata_subset, groups=['treated'])
# Score cells for gene set expression
gene_set = ['CD3D', 'CD3E', 'CD3G']
sc.tl.score_genes(adata, gene_set, score_name='T_cell_score')
sc.pl.umap(adata, color='T_cell_score')
# ComBat batch correction
sc.pp.combat(adata, key='batch')
# Alternative: use Harmony or scVI (separate packages)
min_genes: Minimum genes per cell (typically 200-500)min_cells: Minimum cells per gene (typically 3-10)pct_counts_mt: Mitochondrial threshold (typically 5-20%)target_sum: Target counts per cell (default 1e4)n_top_genes: Number of HVGs (typically 2000-3000)min_mean, max_mean, min_disp: HVG selection parametersn_pcs: Number of principal components (check variance ratio plot)n_neighbors: Number of neighbors (typically 10-30)resolution: Clustering granularity (0.4-1.2, higher = more clusters)adata.raw = adata before filtering genesuse_raw=True for gene expression plots: Shows original countsAutomated quality control script that calculates metrics, generates plots, and filters data:
python scripts/qc_analysis.py input.h5ad --output filtered.h5ad \
--mt-threshold 5 --min-genes 200 --min-cells 3
Complete step-by-step workflow with detailed explanations and code examples for:
Read this reference when performing a complete analysis from scratch.
Quick reference guide for scanpy functions organized by module:
sc.read_*, adata.write_*)sc.pp.*)sc.tl.*)sc.pl.*)Use this for quick lookup of function signatures and common parameters.
Comprehensive visualization guide including:
Consult this when creating publication-ready figures.
Complete analysis template providing a full workflow from data loading through cell type annotation. Copy and customize this template for new analyses:
cp assets/analysis_template.py my_analysis.py
# Edit parameters and run
python my_analysis.py
The template includes all standard steps with configurable parameters and helpful comments.
assets/analysis_template.py as a starting pointscripts/qc_analysis.py for initial filtering