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1.
Anal Chem ; 95(33): 12505-12513, 2023 08 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37557184

RESUMO

Metabolic pathways are regarded as functional and basic components of the biological system. In metabolomics, metabolite set enrichment analysis (MSEA) is often used to identify the altered metabolic pathways (metabolite sets) associated with phenotypes of interest (POI), e.g., disease. However, in most studies, MSEA suffers from the limitation of low metabolite coverage. Random walk (RW)-based algorithms can be used to propagate the perturbation of detected metabolites to the undetected metabolites through a metabolite network model prior to MSEA. Nevertheless, most of the existing RW-based algorithms run on a general metabolite network constructed based on public databases, such as KEGG, without taking into consideration the potential influence of POI on the metabolite network, which may reduce the phenotypic specificities of the MSEA results. To solve this problem, a novel pathway analysis strategy, namely, differential correlation-informed MSEA (dci-MSEA), is proposed in this paper. Statistically, differential correlations between metabolites are used to evaluate the influence of POI on the metabolite network, so that a phenotype-specific metabolite network is constructed for RW-based propagation. The experimental results show that dci-MSEA outperforms the conventional RW-based MSEA in identifying the altered metabolic pathways associated with colorectal cancer. In addition, by incorporating the individual-specific metabolite network, the dci-MSEA strategy is easily extended to disease heterogeneity analysis. Here, dci-MSEA was used to decipher the heterogeneity of colorectal cancer. The present results highlight the clustering of colorectal cancer samples with their cluster-specific selection of differential pathways and demonstrate the feasibility of dci-MSEA in heterogeneity analysis. Taken together, the proposed dci-MSEA may provide insights into disease mechanisms and determination of disease heterogeneity.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Colorretais , Metabolômica , Humanos , Metabolômica/métodos , Redes e Vias Metabólicas , Algoritmos , Fenótipo
2.
Anal Chem ; 95(18): 7220-7228, 2023 05 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37115661

RESUMO

For a large-scale metabolomics study, sample collection, preparation, and analysis may last several days, months, or even (intermittently) over years. This may lead to apparent batch effects in the acquired metabolomics data due to variability in instrument status, environmental conditions, or experimental operators. Batch effects may confound the true biological relationships among metabolites and thus obscure real metabolic changes. At present, most of the commonly used batch effect correction (BEC) methods are based on quality control (QC) samples, which require sufficient and stable QC samples. However, the quality of the QC samples may deteriorate if the experiment lasts for a long time. Alternatively, isotope-labeled internal standards have been used, but they generally do not provide good coverage of the metabolome. On the other hand, BEC can also be conducted through a data-driven method, in which no QC sample is needed. Here, we propose a novel data-driven BEC method, namely, CordBat, to achieve concordance between each batch of samples. In the proposed CordBat method, a reference batch is first selected from all batches of data, and the remaining batches are referred to as "other batches." The reference batch serves as the baseline for the batch adjustment by providing a coordinate of correlation between metabolites. Next, a Gaussian graphical model is built on the combined dataset of reference and other batches, and finally, BEC is achieved by optimizing the correction coefficients in the other batches so that the correlation between metabolites of each batch and their combinations are in concordance with that of the reference batch. Three real-world metabolomics datasets are used to evaluate the performance of CordBat by comparing it with five commonly used BEC methods. The present experimental results showed the effectiveness of CordBat in batch effect removal and the concordance of correlation between metabolites after BEC. CordBat was found to be comparable to the QC-based methods and achieved better performance in the preservation of biological effects. The proposed CordBat method may serve as an alternative BEC method for large-scale metabolomics that lack proper QC samples.


Assuntos
Metaboloma , Metabolômica , Espectrometria de Massas/métodos , Controle de Qualidade , Metabolômica/métodos
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