| Literature DB >> 31779604 |
M Shaffer1, K Thurimella1, K Quinn2, K Doenges2, X Zhang2,3, S Bokatzian2, N Reisdorph2, C A Lozupone4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Untargeted metabolomics of host-associated samples has yielded insights into mechanisms by which microbes modulate health. However, data interpretation is challenged by the complexity of origins of the small molecules measured, which can come from the host, microbes that live within the host, or from other exposures such as diet or the environment.Entities:
Keywords: Data-integration; Metabolome; Microbiome
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31779604 PMCID: PMC6883642 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-019-3176-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Fig. 1The data flow of AMON. This schematic shows the flow of data through the AMON tool. The required input is a list of KEGG orthology (KO) identifiers which will be used with the KEGG database to determine the possible metabolites produced. This information is output to the user along with a pathway enrichment analysis to show functionality in the produced metabolite and a KEGG mapper file for visualization of metabolite origin in KEGG pathways
Fig. 2The results of a case study running AMON with 16S rRNA sequencing data from stool and PICRUSt to predict the metagenome along with the KEGG human genome and an LC/MS untargeted metabolome. a A flow diagram showing how much data is lost between parts of analyses at all data levels. b A Venn diagram showing overlaps in compound sets. The red circle shows compounds detected with untargeted LC/MS with an annotated KEGG compound ID. The green and purple circles show compounds that the metabolic network tells us could have been produced by the bacteria present in the microbiome and the host respectively
Fig. 3Enrichment of pathways and a single enriched pathway colored with metabolite origin. a A heatmap showing the p-values associated with a pathway enrichment analysis with KEGG pathways. The first column is p-values for enrichment of KEGG pathways in compounds that were detected via untargeted LC/MS of plasma and we predict could be generated by members of the fecal microbiome. The second column is the same but for compounds that we predicted could have been generated by the human host. b This pathway map is colored by putative origin of the compound, which are circles, and presence of the reaction, which are rectangles. Dark blue is a compound or gene with a bacterial origin, yellow is a compound or gene with a human origin, orange outlined compounds are detected in the metabolomics. Circles or rectangles could be of human or bacterial origin