Multi-omic modelling of inflammatory bowel disease with regularized canonical correlation analysis

被引:9
|
作者
Revilla, Lluis [1 ,2 ]
Mayorgas, Aida [2 ]
Corraliza, Ana M. [2 ]
Masamunt, Maria C. [2 ]
Metwaly, Amira [3 ]
Haller, Dirk [3 ,4 ]
Tristan, Eva [1 ,5 ]
Carrasco, Anna [1 ,5 ]
Esteve, Maria [1 ,5 ]
Panes, Julian [1 ,2 ]
Ricart, Elena [1 ,2 ]
Lozano, Juan J. [1 ]
Salas, Azucena [2 ]
机构
[1] Ctr Invest Biomed Red Enfermedades Hepat & Digest, Barcelona, Spain
[2] Hosp Clin Barcelona, Dept Gastroenterol, IDIBAPS, Barcelona, Spain
[3] Tech Univ Munich, Chair Nutr & Immunol, Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
[4] Tech Univ Munich, ZIEL Inst Food & Hlth, Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
[5] Hosp Univ Mutua Terrassa, Dept Gastroenterol, Barcelona, Spain
来源
PLOS ONE | 2021年 / 16卷 / 02期
关键词
INTEGRATED ANALYSIS; GUT MICROBIOME; SEQUENCES;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0246367
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Background Personalized medicine requires finding relationships between variables that influence a patient's phenotype and predicting an outcome. Sparse generalized canonical correlation analysis identifies relationships between different groups of variables. This method requires establishing a model of the expected interaction between those variables. Describing these interactions is challenging when the relationship is unknown or when there is no pre-established hypothesis. Thus, our aim was to develop a method to find the relationships between microbiome and host transcriptome data and the relevant clinical variables in a complex disease, such as Crohn's disease. Results We present here a method to identify interactions based on canonical correlation analysis. We show that the model is the most important factor to identify relationships between blocks using a dataset of Crohn's disease patients with longitudinal sampling. First the analysis was tested in two previously published datasets: a glioma and a Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis dataset where we describe how to select the optimum parameters. Using such parameters, we analyzed our Crohn's disease data set. We selected the model with the highest inner average variance explained to identify relationships between transcriptome, gut microbiome and clinically relevant variables. Adding the clinically relevant variables improved the average variance explained by the model compared to multiple co-inertia analysis. Conclusions The methodology described herein provides a general framework for identifying interactions between sets of omic data and clinically relevant variables. Following this method, we found genes and microorganisms that were related to each other independently of the model, while others were specific to the model used. Thus, model selection proved crucial to finding the existing relationships in multi-omics datasets.
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收藏
页数:21
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