scanpy
Über
Scanpy bietet ein umfassendes Python-Toolkit für standardisierte Einzelzell-RNA-Seq-Analysepipelines, einschließlich QC, Normalisierung, Dimensionsreduktion, Clustering und Visualisierung. Es eignet sich am besten für explorative Analysen mit etablierten Workflows und nutzt AnnData als zugrundeliegende Datenstruktur. Für spezielle Anforderungen wie Deep-Learning-Modelle sollten Entwickler stattdessen scvi-tools verwenden.
Schnellinstallation
Claude Code
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Dokumentation
Scanpy: Single-Cell Analysis
Overview
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. Current stable release: scanpy 1.12.x (January 2026).
Installation
Requires Python 3.12+ (scanpy 1.12 dropped Python ≤3.11) and anndata ≥0.10.
uv pip install "scanpy[leiden]"
The [leiden] extra installs python-igraph and leidenalg, required for Leiden clustering. For reproducible environments, pin a version: uv pip install "scanpy[leiden]==1.12.1".
For large or out-of-core datasets, many functions support Dask arrays (experimental):
uv pip install "scanpy[leiden]" dask
See the Using dask with Scanpy tutorial. For GPU-accelerated scanpy-like operations, use rapids-singlecell as a separate package.
For AnnData structure and I/O details, use the anndata skill. For probabilistic models and batch correction, use scvi-tools.
When to Use This Skill
This skill should be used when:
- Analyzing single-cell RNA-seq data (.h5ad, 10X, CSV formats)
- Performing quality control on scRNA-seq datasets
- Creating UMAP, t-SNE, or PCA visualizations
- Identifying cell clusters and finding marker genes
- Annotating cell types based on gene expression
- Conducting trajectory inference or pseudotime analysis
- Generating publication-quality single-cell plots
Quick Start
Basic Import and Setup
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/'
sc.settings.autosave = True # Preferred over per-plot save= (deprecated in scanpy 1.12)
Loading Data
# 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')
Understanding AnnData Structure
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
Standard Analysis Workflow
1. Quality Control
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
Doublet detection (optional, on raw counts before normalization):
sc.pp.scrublet(adata) # Core API since scanpy 1.10 (was scanpy.external.pp)
adata = adata[~adata.obs['predicted_doublet'], :].copy()
Use the QC script for automated analysis (run from the skill directory or pass the full path):
python skills/scanpy/scripts/qc_analysis.py input_file.h5ad --output filtered.h5ad
2. Normalization and Preprocessing
# 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)
3. Dimensionality Reduction
# 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)
4. Clustering
# 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}')
5. Marker Gene Identification
Use rank_genes_groups for exploratory cluster markers only. Per-cell statistical tests inflate p-values because cells are not independent observations. For rigorous differential expression between conditions or samples, pseudobulk first (see below) and use pydeseq2 or similar tools.
# Find marker genes for each cluster (exploratory)
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')
6. Cell Type Annotation
# 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')
7. Save Results
# 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')
Common Tasks
Creating Publication-Quality Plots
Prefer sc.settings.autosave and sc.settings.figdir for saving figures. The per-plot save= parameter is deprecated in scanpy 1.12.
# Set high-quality defaults
sc.settings.set_figure_params(dpi=300, frameon=False, figsize=(5, 5))
sc.settings.file_format_figs = 'pdf'
sc.settings.figdir = './figures/'
sc.settings.autosave = True
# UMAP with custom styling (saved as figures/umap.pdf via autosave)
sc.pl.umap(adata, color='cell_type',
palette='Set2',
legend_loc='on data',
legend_fontsize=12,
legend_fontoutline=2,
frameon=False)
# Heatmap of marker genes
sc.pl.heatmap(adata, var_names=genes, groupby='cell_type',
swap_axes=True, show_gene_labels=True)
# Dot plot
sc.pl.dotplot(adata, var_names=genes, groupby='cell_type')
Refer to references/plotting_guide.md for comprehensive visualization examples.
Trajectory Inference
# 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')
Pseudobulk and Differential Expression Between Conditions
Pseudobulk by sample and cell type, then run proper DE (e.g., pydeseq2) rather than per-cell rank_genes_groups:
# Aggregate counts by sample and cell type (dask-compatible in scanpy 1.12)
pb = sc.get.aggregate(
adata,
by=['sample', 'cell_type'],
func='sum',
layer='counts', # Use raw counts layer if available
)
# Downstream: export pb and use pydeseq2 for condition comparisons
For quick exploratory comparisons within a cluster, rank_genes_groups is acceptable but interpret p-values cautiously:
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'])
Gene Set Scoring
# 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')
Batch Correction
# ComBat batch correction
sc.pp.combat(adata, key='batch')
# Alternative: use Harmony or scVI (separate packages)
Key Parameters to Adjust
Quality Control
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%)
Normalization
target_sum: Target counts per cell (default 1e4)
Feature Selection
n_top_genes: Number of HVGs (typically 2000-3000)min_mean,max_mean,min_disp: HVG selection parameters
Dimensionality Reduction
n_pcs: Number of principal components (check variance ratio plot)n_neighbors: Number of neighbors (typically 10-30)
Clustering
resolution: Clustering granularity (0.4-1.2, higher = more clusters)
Common Pitfalls and Best Practices
- Always save raw counts:
adata.raw = adatabefore filtering genes - Check QC plots carefully: Adjust thresholds based on dataset quality
- Use Leiden clustering:
sc.tl.louvainis deprecated in scanpy 1.12 - Try multiple clustering resolutions: Find optimal granularity
- Validate cell type annotations: Use multiple marker genes
- Use
use_raw=Truefor gene expression plots: Shows normalized counts from.raw - Check PCA variance ratio: Determine optimal number of PCs
- Save intermediate results: Long workflows can fail partway through
- Pseudobulk for DE: Do not treat
rank_genes_groupsp-values as rigorous DE between conditions - Save plots via settings: Use
sc.settings.autosaveinstead of deprecatedsave=on plot functions
Bundled Resources
scripts/qc_analysis.py
Automated quality control script that calculates metrics, generates plots, and filters data:
python skills/scanpy/scripts/qc_analysis.py input.h5ad --output filtered.h5ad \
--mt-threshold 5 --min-genes 200 --min-cells 3
references/standard_workflow.md
Complete step-by-step workflow with detailed explanations and code examples for:
- Data loading and setup
- Quality control with visualization
- Normalization and scaling
- Feature selection
- Dimensionality reduction (PCA, UMAP, t-SNE)
- Clustering (Leiden)
- Doublet detection (scrublet) and pseudobulk aggregation
- Marker gene identification
- Cell type annotation
- Trajectory inference
- Differential expression
Read this reference when performing a complete analysis from scratch.
references/api_reference.md
Quick reference guide for scanpy functions organized by module:
- Reading/writing data (
sc.read_*,adata.write_*) - Preprocessing (
sc.pp.*) - Tools (
sc.tl.*) - Plotting (
sc.pl.*) - AnnData structure and manipulation
- Settings and utilities
Use this for quick lookup of function signatures and common parameters.
references/plotting_guide.md
Comprehensive visualization guide including:
- Quality control plots
- Dimensionality reduction visualizations
- Clustering visualizations
- Marker gene plots (heatmaps, dot plots, violin plots)
- Trajectory and pseudotime plots
- Publication-quality customization
- Multi-panel figures
- Color palettes and styling
Consult this when creating publication-ready figures.
assets/analysis_template.py
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.
Additional Resources
- Official scanpy documentation: https://scanpy.scverse.org/en/stable/
- Scanpy tutorials: https://scanpy.scverse.org/en/stable/tutorials/index.html
- Release notes: https://scanpy.scverse.org/en/stable/release-notes/index.html
- scverse ecosystem: https://scverse.org/ (related tools: squidpy, scvi-tools, cellrank)
- Best practices: Luecken & Theis (2019) "Current best practices in single-cell RNA-seq"
Tips for Effective Analysis
- Start with the template: Use
assets/analysis_template.pyas a starting point - Run QC script first: Use
scripts/qc_analysis.pyfor initial filtering - Consult references as needed: Load workflow and API references into context
- Iterate on clustering: Try multiple resolutions and visualization methods
- Validate biologically: Check marker genes match expected cell types
- Document parameters: Record QC thresholds and analysis settings
- Save checkpoints: Write intermediate results at key steps
GitHub Repository
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