Predicting intercellular communication based on metabolite-related ligand-receptor interactions with MRCLinkdb

Author:

Zhang Yuncong,Yang Yu,Ren Liping,Zhan Meixiao,Sun Taoping,Zou Quan,Zhang Yang

Abstract

Abstract Background Metabolite-associated cell communications play critical roles in maintaining human biological function. However, most existing tools and resources focus only on ligand-receptor interaction pairs where both partners are proteinaceous, neglecting other non-protein molecules. To address this gap, we introduce the MRCLinkdb database and algorithm, which aggregates and organizes data related to non-protein L-R interactions in cell-cell communication, providing a valuable resource for predicting intercellular communication based on metabolite-related ligand-receptor interactions. Results Here, we manually curated the metabolite-ligand-receptor (ML-R) interactions from the literature and known databases, ultimately collecting over 790 human and 670 mouse ML-R interactions. Additionally, we compiled information on over 1900 enzymes and 260 transporter entries associated with these metabolites. We developed Metabolite-Receptor based Cell Link Database (MRCLinkdb) to store these ML-R interactions data. Meanwhile, the platform also offers extensive information for presenting ML-R interactions, including fundamental metabolite information and the overall expression landscape of metabolite-associated gene sets (such as receptor, enzymes, and transporter proteins) based on single-cell transcriptomics sequencing (covering 35 human and 26 mouse tissues, 52 human and 44 mouse cell types) and bulk RNA-seq/microarray data (encompassing 62 human and 39 mouse tissues). Furthermore, MRCLinkdb introduces a web server dedicated to the analysis of intercellular communication based on ML-R interactions. MRCLinkdb is freely available at https://www.cellknowledge.com.cn/mrclinkdb/. Conclusions In addition to supplementing ligand-receptor databases, MRCLinkdb may provide new perspectives for decoding the intercellular communication and advancing related prediction tools based on ML-R interactions.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Sichuan Province

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Sichuan Province Postdoctoral Research Project Special Support Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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