Litcius/Paper detail

Linear and nonlinear correlation estimators unveil undescribed taxa interactions in microbiome data

Lin Huang, Merete Eggesbø, Shyamal Peddada

2022Nature Communications155 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

It is well-known that human gut microbiota form an ecosystem where microbes interact with each other. Due to complex underlying interactions, some microbes may correlate nonlinearly. There are no measures in the microbiome literature we know of that quantify these nonlinear relationships. Here, we develop a methodology called Sparse Estimation of Correlations among Microbiomes (SECOM) for estimating linear and nonlinear relationships among microbes while maintaining the sparsity. SECOM accounts for both sample and taxon-specific biases in its model. Its statistical properties are evaluated analytically and by comprehensive simulation studies. We test SECOM in two real data sets, namely, forehead and palm microbiome data from college-age adults, and Norwegian infant gut microbiome data. Given that forehead and palm are related to skin, as desired, SECOM discovers each genus to be highly correlated between the two sites, but that is not the case with any of the competing methods. It is well-known that infant gut evolves as the child grows. Using SECOM, for the first time in the literature, we characterize temporal changes in correlations among bacterial families during a baby's first year after birth.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeBiologyTaxonNorwegianEstimatorGut microbiomeLinear modelComputational biologyEvolutionary biologyEcologyComputer scienceBioinformaticsStatisticsMachine learningMathematicsLinguisticsPhilosophyGut microbiota and healthSensory Analysis and Statistical MethodsBayesian Methods and Mixture Models
Linear and nonlinear correlation estimators unveil undescribed taxa interactions in microbiome data | Litcius