Abstract

Explorative visualization techniques provide a first summary of microbiome read count datasets through dimension reduction. A plethora of dimension reduction methods exists, but many of them focus primarily on sample ordination, failing to elucidate the role of the bacterial species. Moreover, implicit but often unrealistic assumptions underlying these methods fail to account for overdispersion and differences in sequencing depth, which are two typical characteristics of sequencing data. We combine log-linear models with a dispersion estimation algorithm and flexible response function modelling into a framework for unconstrained and constrained ordination. The method is able to cope with differences in dispersion between taxa and varying sequencing depths, to yield meaningful biological patterns. Moreover, it can correct for observed technical confounders, whereas other methods are adversely affected by these artefacts. Unlike distance-based ordination methods, the assumptions underlying our method are stated explicitly and can be verified using simple diagnostics. The combination of unconstrained and constrained ordination in the same framework is unique in the field and facilitates microbiome data exploration. We illustrate the advantages of our method on simulated and real datasets, while pointing out flaws in existing methods. The algorithms for fitting and plotting are available in the R-package RCM.

Highlights

  • Explorative visualization is a key first step in the analysis of high-dimensional ecological datasets

  • An n×d matrix of sample-specific variables Q can be available; categorical variables are represented by 0/1 dummy variables

  • Unconstrained and constrained ordination techniques that are currently employed in microbial ecology rely mainly on eigenvalues/eigenvectors and singular value decompositions

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Summary

Introduction

Explorative visualization is a key first step in the analysis of high-dimensional ecological datasets.

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