4.6 Article

AMON: annotation of metabolite origins via networks to integrate microbiome and metabolome data

期刊

BMC BIOINFORMATICS
卷 20, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12859-019-3176-8

关键词

Microbiome; Metabolome; Data-integration

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 DK104047, 4 T15 LM009451-10, 1S10OD012300]
  2. National Institutes of Health Bioinformatics Research training award [5 T15 LM009451-12]
  3. NIH [U2C-DK119886]

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Background Untargeted metabolomics of host-associated samples has yielded insights into mechanisms by which microbes modulate health. However, data interpretation is challenged by the complexity of origins of the small molecules measured, which can come from the host, microbes that live within the host, or from other exposures such as diet or the environment. Results We address this challenge through development of AMON: Annotation of Metabolite Origins via Networks. AMON is an open-source bioinformatics application that can be used to annotate which compounds in the metabolome could have been produced by bacteria present or the host, to evaluate pathway enrichment of host verses microbial metabolites, and to visualize which compounds may have been produced by host versus microbial enzymes in KEGG pathway maps. Conclusions AMON empowers researchers to predict origins of metabolites via genomic information and to visualize potential host:microbe interplay. Additionally, the evaluation of enrichment of pathway metabolites of host versus microbial origin gives insight into the metabolic functionality that a microbial community adds to a host:microbe system. Through integrated analysis of microbiome and metabolome data, mechanistic relationships between microbial communities and host phenotypes can be better understood.

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