Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Application of Taxonomic Modeling to Microbiota Data Mining for Detection of Helminth Infection in Global Populations

Version 1 : Received: 5 December 2016 / Approved: 6 December 2016 / Online: 6 December 2016 (08:23:46 CET)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Eshaghzadeh Torbati, M.; Mitreva, M.; Gopalakrishnan, V. Application of Taxonomic Modeling to Microbiota Data Mining for Detection of Helminth Infection in Global Populations. Data 2016, 1, 19. Eshaghzadeh Torbati, M.; Mitreva, M.; Gopalakrishnan, V. Application of Taxonomic Modeling to Microbiota Data Mining for Detection of Helminth Infection in Global Populations. Data 2016, 1, 19.

Abstract

Human microbiome data from genomic sequencing technologies is fast accumulating, giving us insights into bacterial taxa that contribute to health and disease. Predictive modeling of such microbiota count data for classification of human infection from parasitic worms such as helminths can help in detection and management across global populations. Real-world datasets of microbiome experiments are typically sparse containing hundreds of measurements for bacterial species, of which only a few are detected in the bio-specimens that are analyzed. This feature of microbiome data produces the challenge of needing more observations for accurate predictive modeling and has been dealt with previously using different methods of feature reduction. To our knowledge, integrative methods such as transfer learning has not been explored in the microbiome domain yet, as a way to deal with data sparsity by incorporating knowledge of different but related datasets. One way of incorporating this knowledge is by using a meaningful mapping among features of these datasets. In this paper, we claim that this mapping would exist among members of each individual cluster grouped based on phylogenetic dependency among taxa and their association to the phenotype. We validate our claim by showing that models incorporating associations in such a grouped feature space result in no performance deterioration for the given classification task. In this paper, we test our hypothesis using classification models that detect helminth infection in microbiota of human fecal samples obtained from Indonesia and Liberia countries. In our experiments, we first learn binary classifiers for helminth infection detection by using Naive Bayes, Support Vector Machines, Multilayer Perceptrons, and Random Forest methods. In the next step, we add taxonomic modeling using the SMART-scan module to group the data, and learn classifiers using the same four methods, to test the validity of the achieved groupings. We observed a 6% to 23% and 7% to 26% performance improvement based on the Area Under ROC Curve (AUC) and Balanced Accuracy(Bacc) measures, respectively, over 10 runs of 10-fold cross-validation. These results show that using phylogenetic dependency for grouping our microbiota data actually results in a noticeable improvement in classification performance for helminth infection detection. These promising results from this feasibility study demonstrate that methods such as SMART-scan can be utilized in the future for knowledge transfer from different but related microbiome datasets by phylogenetically-related functional mapping, to enable novel integrative biomarker discovery.

Keywords

helminth infection; microbiota; 16S rRNA Gene; taxonomic tree; classification; SMART-scan method; transfer learning

Subject

Biology and Life Sciences, Immunology and Microbiology

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