Literature DB >> 16054254

An eco-informatics tool for microbial community studies: supervised classification of Amplicon Length Heterogeneity (ALH) profiles of 16S rRNA.

Chengyong Yang1, DeEtta Mills, Kalai Mathee, Yong Wang, Krish Jayachandran, Masoumeh Sikaroodi, Patrick Gillevet, Jim Entry, Giri Narasimhan.   

Abstract

Support vector machines (SVM) and K-nearest neighbors (KNN) are two computational machine learning tools that perform supervised classification. This paper presents a novel application of such supervised analytical tools for microbial community profiling and to distinguish patterning among ecosystems. Amplicon length heterogeneity (ALH) profiles from several hypervariable regions of 16S rRNA gene of eubacterial communities from Idaho agricultural soil samples and from Chesapeake Bay marsh sediments were separately analyzed. The profiles from all available hypervariable regions were concatenated to obtain a combined profile, which was then provided to the SVM and KNN classifiers. Each profile was labeled with information about the location or time of its sampling. We hypothesized that after a learning phase using feature vectors from labeled ALH profiles, both these classifiers would have the capacity to predict the labels of previously unseen samples. The resulting classifiers were able to predict the labels of the Idaho soil samples with high accuracy. The classifiers were less accurate for the classification of the Chesapeake Bay sediments suggesting greater similarity within the Bay's microbial community patterns in the sampled sites. The profiles obtained from the V1+V2 region were more informative than that obtained from any other single region. However, combining them with profiles from the V1 region (with or without the profiles from the V3 region) resulted in the most accurate classification of the samples. The addition of profiles from the V 9 region appeared to confound the classifiers. Our results show that SVM and KNN classifiers can be effectively applied to distinguish between eubacterial community patterns from different ecosystems based only on their ALH profiles.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16054254     DOI: 10.1016/j.mimet.2005.06.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Microbiol Methods        ISSN: 0167-7012            Impact factor:   2.363


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