Quality control metrics for ATAC-seq data including fragment size distribution, TSS enrichment, FRiP, and library complexity. Use when assessing ATAC-seq library quality before or after peak calling to identify problematic samples.
Install with the open skills CLI (global, non-interactive — available in every Claude Code session):
npx skills add FreedomIntelligence/OpenClaw-Medical-Skills --skill "bio-atac-seq-atac-qc" -g -a claude-code -yOr manually — clone and copy the skill directory (SKILL.md + companion files):
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/FreedomIntelligence/OpenClaw-Medical-Skills /tmp/OpenClaw-Medical-Skills && cp -r /tmp/OpenClaw-Medical-Skills/skills/bio-atac-seq-atac-qc ~/.claude/skills/bio-atac-seq-atac-qcThis skill is a directory: SKILL.md is the entry point; the files below ship with it.
---
name: bio-atac-seq-atac-qc
description: Quality control metrics for ATAC-seq data including fragment size distribution, TSS enrichment, FRiP, and library complexity. Use when assessing ATAC-seq library quality before or after peak calling to identify problematic samples.
tool_type: mixed
primary_tool: deeptools
---
## Version Compatibility
Reference examples tested with: bedtools 2.31+, deepTools 3.5+, numpy 1.26+, pandas 2.2+, picard 3.1+, pyBigWig 0.3+, pysam 0.22+, samtools 1.19+
Before using code patterns, verify installed versions match. If versions differ:
- Python: `pip show <package>` then `help(module.function)` to check signatures
- R: `packageVersion('<pkg>')` then `?function_name` to verify parameters
- CLI: `<tool> --version` then `<tool> --help` to confirm flags
If code throws ImportError, AttributeError, or TypeError, introspect the installed
package and adapt the example to match the actual API rather than retrying.
# ATAC-seq Quality Control
**"Check the quality of my ATAC-seq library"** → Evaluate fragment size distribution (nucleosome periodicity), TSS enrichment, FRiP, and library complexity to assess chromatin accessibility experiment quality.
- CLI: `deeptools bamPEFragmentSize`, `picard CollectInsertSizeMetrics`
- Python: `pysam` for custom fragment analysis
## Fragment Size Distribution
**Goal:** Assess ATAC-seq library quality by visualizing the characteristic nucleosome periodicity in fragment sizes.
**Approach:** Extract insert sizes from the BAM file using Picard or samtools, producing a distribution that should show NFR (<100 bp) and mono-nucleosome (~200 bp) peaks.
```bash
# Using Picard
java -jar picard.jar CollectInsertSizeMetrics \
I=sample.bam \
O=insert_sizes.txt \
H=insert_sizes.pdf \
M=0.5
# Using samtools
samtools view -f 66 sample.bam | \
awk '{print sqrt($9^2)}' | \
sort | uniq -c | \
awk '{print $2"\t"$1}' > fragment_sizes.txt
```
## TSS Enrichment Score
**Goal:** Quantify signal enrichment at transcription start sites as a key ATAC-seq quality metric.
**Approach:** Create a TSS BED file, compute a signal matrix around TSS positions using deepTools, then plot the enrichment profile.
```bash
# Using deepTools
# 1. Create TSS BED file (from GTF)
awk '$3=="transcript" {print $1"\t"$4-1"\t"$4"\t"$14"\t"0"\t"$7}' genes.gtf | \
tr -d '";' | sort -k1,1 -k2,2n > tss.bed
# 2. Compute matrix around TSS
computeMatrix reference-point \
-S sample.bw \
-R tss.bed \
-a 2000 -b 2000 \
-o tss_matrix.gz
# 3. Plot TSS enrichment
plotProfile -m tss_matrix.gz \
-o tss_enrichment.png \
--perGroup
```
## Calculate TSS Enrichment Score
**Goal:** Compute a numeric TSS enrichment score from a bigWig signal track.
**Approach:** Sample signal values in windows around TSS positions, average across all TSSs, then divide center signal by flanking background.
```python
import numpy as np
import pyBigWig
def calculate_tss_enrichment(bigwig_file, tss_bed, flank=2000):
'''Calculate TSS enrichment score.'''
bw = pyBigWig.open(bigwig_file)
signals = []
for line in open(tss_bed):
fields = line.strip().split('\t')
chrom, tss = fields[0], int(fields[1])
strand = fields[5] if len(fields) > 5 else '+'
try:
vals = bw.values(chrom, max(0, tss - flank), tss + flank)
if strand == '-':
vals = vals[::-1]
signals.append(vals)
except:
continue
avg_signal = np.nanmean(signals, axis=0)
# TSS enrichment = signal at TSS / background
background = np.nanmean([avg_signal[:100], avg_signal[-100:]])
tss_signal = np.nanmean(avg_signal[flank-50:flank+50])
enrichment = tss_signal / background if background > 0 else 0
return enrichment, avg_signal
enrichment, signal = calculate_tss_enrichment('sample.bw', 'tss.bed')
print(f'TSS Enrichment Score: {enrichment:.2f}')
```
## FRiP (Fraction of Reads in Peaks)
```bash
# Total reads
total=$(samtools view -c -F 4 sample.bam)
# Reads in peaks
in_peaks=$(bedtools intersect -a sample.bam -b peaks.narrowPeak -u | \
samtools view -c)
# FRiP
frip=$(echo "scale=4; $in_peaks / $total" | bc)
echo "FRiP: $frip"
# Good FRiP for ATAC-seq: >0.2 (20%)
```
## Mitochondrial Read Fraction
```bash
# Mitochondrial reads
mt_reads=$(samtools view -c sample.bam chrM)
total_reads=$(samtools view -c sample.bam)
mt_frac=$(echo "scale=4; $mt_reads / $total_reads" | bc)
echo "Mitochondrial fraction: $mt_frac"
# Ideal: <20%, concerning: >50%
```
## Library Complexity (NRF, PBC1, PBC2)
**Goal:** Measure library complexity to detect over-amplification or low-diversity libraries.
**Approach:** Calculate NRF (unique/total reads), PBC1 (1-read locations / all locations), and PBC2 (1-read / 2-read locations) using Picard or custom counting.
```bash
# Using Picard EstimateLibraryComplexity
java -jar picard.jar EstimateLibraryComplexity \
I=sample.bam \
O=complexity.txt
# Or calculate from BAM
# NRF = unique reads / total reads
# PBC1 = locations with exactly 1 read / locations with >= 1 read
# PBC2 = locations with exactly 1 read / locations with exactly 2 reads
```
```python
import pysam
def calculate_complexity(bam_file):
'''Calculate library complexity metrics.'''
bam = pysam.AlignmentFile(bam_file, 'rb')
positions = {}
total = 0
for read in bam.fetch():
if read.is_unmapped or read.is_secondary:
continue
total += 1
pos = (read.reference_name, read.reference_start)
positions[pos] = positions.get(pos, 0) + 1
distinct = len(positions)
m1 = sum(1 for v in positions.values() if v == 1)
m2 = sum(1 for v in positions.values() if v == 2)
nrf = distinct / total if total > 0 else 0
pbc1 = m1 / distinct if distinct > 0 else 0
pbc2 = m1 / m2 if m2 > 0 else 0
return {'NRF': nrf, 'PBC1': pbc1, 'PBC2': pbc2}
```
## deepTools QC
```bash
# Fingerprint plot (assesses enrichment)
plotFingerprint \
-b sample.bam \
--labels sample \
-o fingerprint.png
# Correlation between replicates
multiBamSummary bins \
-b sample1.bam sample2.bam \
-o results.npz
plotCorrelation \
-in results.npz \
--corMethod pearson \
--whatToPlot heatmap \
-o correlation.png
```
## ATACseqQC (R)
```r
library(ATACseqQC)
library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg38.knownGene)
# Read BAM
bamfile <- 'sample.bam'
# Fragment size distribution
fragSizeDist(bamfile, 'fragment_size.pdf')
# TSS enrichment
tsse <- TSSEscore(bamfile, TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg38.knownGene)
print(paste('TSS Enrichment:', round(tsse$TSSEscore, 2)))
# Nucleosome positioning
nucs <- nucleosomePositioningScore(bamfile, TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg38.knownGene)
```
## Comprehensive QC Report
**Goal:** Generate a single QC summary combining all major ATAC-seq quality metrics.
**Approach:** Run samtools and bedtools commands to collect total reads, mapping rate, mitochondrial fraction, FRiP, and peak count, then write a consolidated report.
```python
import subprocess
import pandas as pd
def atac_qc_report(bam_file, peaks_file, output_prefix):
'''Generate comprehensive ATAC-seq QC report.'''
metrics = {}
# Total reads
result = subprocess.check_output(f'samtools view -c -F 4 {bam_file}', shell=True)
metrics['total_reads'] = int(result.strip())
# Mapped reads
result = subprocess.check_output(f'samtools view -c -F 4 -F 256 {bam_file}', shell=True)
metrics['mapped_reads'] = int(result.strip())
# Mitochondrial reads
result = subprocess.check_output(f'samtools view -c {bam_file} chrM', shell=True)
metrics['mt_reads'] = int(result.strip())
metrics['mt_fraction'] = metrics['mt_reads'] / metrics['total_reads']
# Reads in peaks (FRiP)
result = subprocess.check_output(
f'bedtools intersect -a {bam_file} -b {peaks_file} -u | samtools view -c', shell=True)
metrics['reads_in_peaks'] = int(result.strip())
metrics['frip'] = metrics['reads_in_peaks'] / metrics['total_reads']
# Peak count
result = subprocess.check_output(f'wc -l < {peaks_file}', shell=True)
metrics['peak_count'] = int(result.strip())
# Write report
with open(f'{output_prefix}_qc.txt', 'w') as f:
for k, v in metrics.items():
if isinstance(v, float):
f.write(f'{k}: {v:.4f}\n')
else:
f.write(f'{k}: {v}\n')
return metrics
```
## QC Thresholds
| Metric | Good | Acceptable | Poor |
|--------|------|------------|------|
| TSS Enrichment | >10 | 5-10 | <5 |
| FRiP | >0.3 | 0.1-0.3 | <0.1 |
| MT Fraction | <0.1 | 0.1-0.3 | >0.3 |
| NRF | >0.9 | 0.8-0.9 | <0.8 |
| PBC1 | >0.9 | 0.7-0.9 | <0.7 |
## Related Skills
- atac-seq/atac-peak-calling - Peak calling
- alignment-files/bam-statistics - Alignment QC
- chip-seq/chipseq-visualization - Visualization approaches
Use when facing 2+ independent tasks that can be worked on without shared state or sequential dependencies
Use when encountering any bug, test failure, or unexpected behavior, before proposing fixes
Use when implementing any feature or bugfix, before writing implementation code