Author:
Tataru Christine,Peras Marie,Rutherford Erica,Dunlap Kaiti,Yin Xiaochen,Chrisman Brianna S.,DeSantis Todd Z.,Wall Dennis P.,Iwai Shoko,David Maude M.
Abstract
AbstractWhile healthy gut microbiomes are critical to human health, pertinent microbial processes remain largely undefined, partially due to differential bias among profiling techniques. By simultaneously integrating multiple profiling methods, multi-omic analysis can define generalizable microbial processes, and is especially useful in understanding complex conditions such as Autism. Challenges with integrating heterogeneous data produced by multiple profiling methods can be overcome using Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA), a promising natural language processing technique that identifies topics in heterogeneous documents. In this study, we apply LDA to multi-omic microbial data (16S rRNA amplicon, shotgun metagenomic, shotgun metatranscriptomic, and untargeted metabolomic profiling) from the stool of 81 children with and without Autism. We identify topics, or microbial processes, that summarize complex phenomena occurring within gut microbial communities. We then subset stool samples by topic distribution, and identify metabolites, specifically neurotransmitter precursors and fatty acid derivatives, that differ significantly between children with and without Autism. We identify clusters of topics, deemed “cross-omic topics”, which we hypothesize are representative of generalizable microbial processes observable regardless of profiling method. Interpreting topics, we find each represents a particular diet, and we heuristically label each cross-omic topic as: healthy/general function, age-associated function, transcriptional regulation, and opportunistic pathogenesis.
Funder
Larry W. Martin & Joyce B. O’Neill Endowed Fellowship
NBLational Institutes of Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference114 articles.
1. Lord, C. et al. Autism diagnostic observation schedule: A standardized observation of communicative and social behavior. J. Autism Dev. Disord. 19, 185–212 (1989).
2. Organization for Autism Research. 1,000 people surveyed, survey says.... howpublished (2020). https://researchautism.org/1000-people-surveyed-survey-says/ Accessed 31 Aug 2022.
3. Wasilewska, J. & Klukowski, M. Gastrointestinal symptoms and autism spectrum disorder: Links and risks - a possible new overlap syndrome. Pediatr. Health Med. Therapeut. 6, 153 (2015).
4. Kohane, I. S. et al. The Co-Morbidity burden of children and young adults with autism spectrum disorders. PLoS ONE 7, e33224 (2012).
5. Hsiao, E. Y. Gastrointestinal issues in autism spectrum disorder. Harv. Rev. Psychiatry 22, 104 (2014).
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献