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Piphillin: Improved Prediction of Metagenomic Content by Direct Inference from Human Microbiomes

Functional analysis of a clinical microbiome facilitates the elucidation of mechanisms by which microbiome perturbation can cause a phenotypic change in the patient. The direct approach for the analysis of the functional capacity of the microbiome is via shotgun metagenomics. An inexpensive method t...

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Autores principales: Iwai, Shoko, Weinmaier, Thomas, Schmidt, Brian L., Albertson, Donna G., Poloso, Neil J., Dabbagh, Karim, DeSantis, Todd Z.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5098786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27820856
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166104
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author Iwai, Shoko
Weinmaier, Thomas
Schmidt, Brian L.
Albertson, Donna G.
Poloso, Neil J.
Dabbagh, Karim
DeSantis, Todd Z.
author_facet Iwai, Shoko
Weinmaier, Thomas
Schmidt, Brian L.
Albertson, Donna G.
Poloso, Neil J.
Dabbagh, Karim
DeSantis, Todd Z.
author_sort Iwai, Shoko
collection PubMed
description Functional analysis of a clinical microbiome facilitates the elucidation of mechanisms by which microbiome perturbation can cause a phenotypic change in the patient. The direct approach for the analysis of the functional capacity of the microbiome is via shotgun metagenomics. An inexpensive method to estimate the functional capacity of a microbial community is through collecting 16S rRNA gene profiles then indirectly inferring the abundance of functional genes. This inference approach has been implemented in the PICRUSt and Tax4Fun software tools. However, those tools have important limitations since they rely on outdated functional databases and uncertain phylogenetic trees and require very specific data pre-processing protocols. Here we introduce Piphillin, a straightforward algorithm independent of any proposed phylogenetic tree, leveraging contemporary functional databases and not obliged to any singular data pre-processing protocol. When all three inference tools were evaluated against actual shotgun metagenomics, Piphillin was superior in predicting gene composition in human clinical samples compared to both PICRUSt and Tax4Fun (p<0.01 and p<0.001, respectively) and Piphillin’s ability to predict disease associations with specific gene orthologs exhibited a 15% increase in balanced accuracy compared to PICRUSt. From laboratory animal samples, no performance advantage was observed for any one of the tools over the others and for environmental samples all produced unsatisfactory predictions. Our results demonstrate that functional inference using the direct method implemented in Piphillin is preferable for clinical biospecimens. Piphillin is publicly available for academic use at http://secondgenome.com/Piphillin.
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spelling pubmed-50987862016-11-15 Piphillin: Improved Prediction of Metagenomic Content by Direct Inference from Human Microbiomes Iwai, Shoko Weinmaier, Thomas Schmidt, Brian L. Albertson, Donna G. Poloso, Neil J. Dabbagh, Karim DeSantis, Todd Z. PLoS One Research Article Functional analysis of a clinical microbiome facilitates the elucidation of mechanisms by which microbiome perturbation can cause a phenotypic change in the patient. The direct approach for the analysis of the functional capacity of the microbiome is via shotgun metagenomics. An inexpensive method to estimate the functional capacity of a microbial community is through collecting 16S rRNA gene profiles then indirectly inferring the abundance of functional genes. This inference approach has been implemented in the PICRUSt and Tax4Fun software tools. However, those tools have important limitations since they rely on outdated functional databases and uncertain phylogenetic trees and require very specific data pre-processing protocols. Here we introduce Piphillin, a straightforward algorithm independent of any proposed phylogenetic tree, leveraging contemporary functional databases and not obliged to any singular data pre-processing protocol. When all three inference tools were evaluated against actual shotgun metagenomics, Piphillin was superior in predicting gene composition in human clinical samples compared to both PICRUSt and Tax4Fun (p<0.01 and p<0.001, respectively) and Piphillin’s ability to predict disease associations with specific gene orthologs exhibited a 15% increase in balanced accuracy compared to PICRUSt. From laboratory animal samples, no performance advantage was observed for any one of the tools over the others and for environmental samples all produced unsatisfactory predictions. Our results demonstrate that functional inference using the direct method implemented in Piphillin is preferable for clinical biospecimens. Piphillin is publicly available for academic use at http://secondgenome.com/Piphillin. Public Library of Science 2016-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC5098786/ /pubmed/27820856 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166104 Text en © 2016 Iwai et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Iwai, Shoko
Weinmaier, Thomas
Schmidt, Brian L.
Albertson, Donna G.
Poloso, Neil J.
Dabbagh, Karim
DeSantis, Todd Z.
Piphillin: Improved Prediction of Metagenomic Content by Direct Inference from Human Microbiomes
title Piphillin: Improved Prediction of Metagenomic Content by Direct Inference from Human Microbiomes
title_full Piphillin: Improved Prediction of Metagenomic Content by Direct Inference from Human Microbiomes
title_fullStr Piphillin: Improved Prediction of Metagenomic Content by Direct Inference from Human Microbiomes
title_full_unstemmed Piphillin: Improved Prediction of Metagenomic Content by Direct Inference from Human Microbiomes
title_short Piphillin: Improved Prediction of Metagenomic Content by Direct Inference from Human Microbiomes
title_sort piphillin: improved prediction of metagenomic content by direct inference from human microbiomes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5098786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27820856
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166104
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