VCF+tabix Track Format

Variant Call Format (VCF) is a flexible and extendable line-oriented text format developed by the 1000 Genomes Project for releases of single nucleotide variants, indels, copy number variants and structural variants discovered by the project. When a VCF file is compressed and indexed using tabix, and made web-accessible, the Genome Browser is able to fetch only the portions of the file necessary to display items in the viewed region. This makes it possible to display variants from files that are so large that the connection to UCSC would time out when attempting to upload the whole file to UCSC. Both the VCF file and its tabix index file remain on your web-accessible server (http, https, or ftp), not on the UCSC server. UCSC temporarily caches the accessed portions of the files to speed up interactive display. If you do not have access to a web-accessible server and need hosting space for your VCF files, please see the Hosting section of the Track Hub Help documentation.

The UCSC tools support VCF versions 3.3 and greater.

Generating a VCF track

The typical workflow for generating a VCF custom track is this:

  1. If you haven't done so already, download and build the tabix and bgzip programs. Test your installation by running tabix with no command-line arguments; it should print a brief usage message. For help with tabix, please contact the samtools-help mailing list (tabix is part of the samtools project).
  2. Create VCF or convert another format to VCF. Items must be sorted by genomic position.
  3. Compress your .vcf file using the bgzip program:
    bgzip my.vcf
    For more information about the bgzip command, run it with no arguments to display the usage message.
  4. Create a tabix index file for the bgzip-compressed VCF (.vcf.gz):
    tabix -p vcf my.vcf.gz
    The tabix command appends .tbi to the my.vcf.gz filename, creating a binary index file named my.vcf.gz.tbi with which genomic coordinates can quickly be translated into file offsets in my.vcf.gz.
  5. Move both the compressed VCF file (my.vcf.gz) and tabix index file (my.vcf.gz.tbi) to an http, https, or ftp location.
  6. Construct a custom track using a single track line. The basic version of the track line will look something like this:
    track type=vcfTabix name="My VCF" bigDataUrl=http://myorg.edu/mylab/my.vcf.gz
    Again, in addition to http://myorg.edu/mylab/my.vcf.gz, the associated index file http://myorg.edu/mylab/my.vcf.gz.tbi must also be available at the same location.
  7. Paste the custom track line into the text box in the custom track management page, click "submit" and view in the Genome Browser.

Parameters for VCF custom track definition lines

All options are placed in a single line separated by spaces (lines are broken only for readability here):

track type=vcfTabix bigDataUrl=http://...
    hapClusterEnabled=true|false
    hapClusterColorBy=altOnly|refAlt|base
    hapClusterTreeAngle=triangle|rectangle
    hapClusterHeight=N
    applyMinQual=true|false minQual=Q
    minFreq=F
    name=track_label
    description=center_label 
    visibility=display_mode
    priority=priority
    db=db maxWindowToDraw=N 
    chromosomes=chr1,chr2,... 

Note if you copy/paste the above example, you must remove the line breaks. Click here for a text version that you can paste without editing.

The track type and bigDataUrl are REQUIRED:

type=vcfTabix bigDataUrl=http://myorg.edu/mylab/my.vcf.gz 

The remaining settings are OPTIONAL. Some are specific to VCF:

hapClusterEnabled   true|false              # if file has phased genotypes, sort by local similarity
hapClusterColorBy   altOnly|refAlt|base     # coloring scheme, default altOnly, conditional on hapClusterEnabled
hapClusterTreeAngle triangle|rectangle      # draw leaves as < or [, default <, conditional on hapClusterEnabled
hapClusterHeight    N                       # height of track in pixels, default 128, conditional on hapClusterEnabled
applyMinQual        true|false              # if true, don't display items with QUAL < minQual; default false
minQual             Q                       # minimum value of Q column to display item, conditional on applyMinQual
minFreq             F                       # minimum minor allele frequency to display item; default 0.0 

Other optional settings are not specific to VCF, but relevant:

name            track label                 # default is "User Track"
description     center label                # default is "User Supplied Track"
visibility      squish|pack|full|dense|hide # default is hide (will also take numeric values 4|3|2|1|0)
priority        N                           # default is 100
db              genome database             # e.g. hg19 for Human Feb. 2009 (GRCh37)
maxWindowToDraw N                           # don't display track when viewing more than N bases
chromosomes     chr1,chr2,...               # track contains data only on listed reference assembly sequences 
The VCF track configuration help page describes the VCF track configuration page options.

Example #1

In this example, you will create a custom track for an indexed VCF file that is already on a public server — variant calls generated by the 1000 Genomes Project. The line breaks inserted here for readability must be removed before submitting the track line:

browser position chr21:33,034,804-33,037,719
track type=vcfTabix name="VCF Example One" description="VCF Ex. 1: 1000 Genomes phase 1 interim SNVs"
    chromosomes=chr21 maxWindowToDraw=200000
    db=hg19 visibility=pack
    bigDataUrl=http://genome.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/help/examples/vcfExample.vcf.gz 

The "browser" line above is used to view a small region of chromosome 21 with variants from the .vcf.gz file.

Note if you copy/paste the above example, you must remove the line breaks (or, click here for a text version that you can paste without editing).

Paste the "browser" line and "track" line into the custom track management page for the human assembly hg19 (Feb. 2009), then click the "submit" button. On the following page, click the "chr21" link in the custom track listing to view the VCF track in the Genome Browser.

Example #2

In this example, you will create compressed, indexed VCF from an existing VCF text file. First, save this VCF file -- vcfExampleTwo.vcf -- to your machine. Perform steps 1 and 3-7 in the workflow described above, but substitute vcfExampleTwo.vcf for my.vcf. On the custom track management page, click the "add custom tracks" button if necessary and make sure that the genome is set to "Human" and the assembly is set to "Feb. 2009 (hg19) " before pasting the track line and submitting. Remember to remove the line breaks that have been added to the track line for readability (or, click here for a text version that you can paste without editing):

track type=vcfTabix name="VCF Example Two" bigDataUrl=http://myorg.edu/mylab/vcfExampleTwo.vcf.gz
    description="VCF Ex. 2: More variants from 1000 Genomes" visibility=pack db=hg19 chromosomes=chr21

browser position chr21:33,034,804-33,037,719
browser pack snp132Common

Example #3

In this example, you will load a hub that has VCF data described in a hub's trackDb.txt file. First, navigate to the Basic Hub Quick Start Guide and review an introduction to hubs.

Visualizing VCF files in hubs involves creating three text files: hub.txt, genomes.txt, and trackDb.txt. The browser is passed a URL to the top-level hub.txt file that points to the related genomes.txt and trackDb.txt files. The trackDb.txt file contains stanzas for each track that outlines the details and type of each track to display, such as these lines for a VCF file located at the bigDataUrl location:

track vcf1
bigDataUrl http://hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu/gbdb/hg19/1000Genomes/ALL.chr21.integrated_phase1_v3.20101123.snps_indels_svs.genotypes.vcf.gz
#Note: there is a corresponding fileName.vcf.gz.tbi in the same above directory
shortLabel chr21 VCF example
longLabel This chr21 VCF file is an example from the 1000 Genomes Phase 1 Integrated Variant Calls Track
type vcfTabix
visibility dense 

Here is a direct link to the trackDb.txt file to see more information about this example hub, and below is a direct link to visualize the hub in the browser, where this example VCF file displays in dense mode alongside the other tracks in this hub. You can find more Track Hub VCF display options on the Track Database (trackDb) Definition Document page.

http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgTracks?db=hg19&hubUrl=http://genome.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/help/examples/hubDirectory/hub.txt 

Sharing Your Data with Others

If you would like to share your VCF data track with a colleague, learn how to create a URL by looking at Example 11 on the custom tracks page.