Assessing and removing the effect of unwanted technical variations in microbiome data

Author:

Fachrul Muhamad,Méric Guillaume,Inouye Michael,Pamp Sünje Johanna,Salim Agus

Abstract

AbstractVarying technologies and experimental approaches used in microbiome studies often lead to irreproducible results due to unwanted technical variations. Such variations, often unaccounted for and of unknown source, may interfere with true biological signals, resulting in misleading biological conclusions. In this work, we aim to characterize the major sources of technical variations in microbiome data and demonstrate how in-silico approaches can minimize their impact. We analyzed 184 pig faecal metagenomes encompassing 21 specific combinations of deliberately introduced factors of technical and biological variations. Using the novel Removing Unwanted Variations-III-Negative Binomial (RUV-III-NB), we identified several known experimental factors, specifically storage conditions and freeze–thaw cycles, as likely major sources of unwanted variation in metagenomes. We also observed that these unwanted technical variations do not affect taxa uniformly, with freezing samples affecting taxa of class Bacteroidia the most, for example. Additionally, we benchmarked the performances of different correction methods, including ComBat, ComBat-seq, RUVg, RUVs, and RUV-III-NB. While RUV-III-NB performed consistently robust across our sensitivity and specificity metrics, most other methods did not remove unwanted variations optimally. Our analyses suggest that a careful consideration of possible technical confounders is critical during experimental design of microbiome studies, and that the inclusion of technical replicates is necessary to efficiently remove unwanted variations computationally.

Funder

University of Melbourne

Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute

Munz Chair of Cardiovascular Prediction and Prevention

Medical Research Council

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Economic and Social Research Council

Department of Health and Social Care

Chief Scientist Office, Scottish Government Health and Social Care Directorate

Health and Social Care Research and Development Division

Public Health Agency

British Heart Foundation

Wellcome

State Government of Victoria

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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