Abstract

Whole Genome Shotgun (WGS) metagenomics is increasingly used to study the structure and functions of complex microbial ecosystems, both from the taxonomic and functional point of view. Gene inventories of otherwise uncultured microbial communities make the direct functional profiling of microbial communities possible. The concept of community aggregated trait has been adapted from environmental and plant functional ecology to the framework of microbial ecology. Community aggregated traits are quantified from WGS data by computing the abundance of relevant marker genes. They can be used to study key processes at the ecosystem level and correlate environmental factors and ecosystem functions. In this paper we propose a novel model based approach to infer combinations of aggregated traits characterizing specific ecosystemic metabolic processes. We formulate a model of these Combined Aggregated Functional Traits (CAFTs) accounting for a hierarchical structure of genes, which are associated on microbial genomes, further linked at the ecosystem level by complex co-occurrences or interactions. The model is completed with constraints specifically designed to exploit available genomic information, in order to favor biologically relevant CAFTs. The CAFTs structure, as well as their intensity in the ecosystem, is obtained by solving a constrained Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NMF) problem. We developed a multicriteria selection procedure for the number of CAFTs. We illustrated our method on the modelling of ecosystemic functional traits of fiber degradation by the human gut microbiota. We used 1408 samples of gene abundances from several high-throughput sequencing projects and found that four CAFTs only were needed to represent the fiber degradation potential. This data reduction highlighted biologically consistent functional patterns while providing a high quality preservation of the original data. Our method is generic and can be applied to other metabolic processes in the gut or in other ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Whole Genome Shotgun (WGS) metagenomics is increasingly used to study the structure and functions of complex microbial ecosystems

  • Focusing on the functional traits of microorganisms instead of species offers an interesting and complementary insight since quite often, owing to environmental selection pressure, traits are less variable in time and shared by many species

  • By providing gene inventories of otherwise uncultured microbial communities, Whole Genome Shotgun (WGS) metagenomics made the functional profiling of microbial communities possible, since community aggregated traits can be quantified by the abundance of relevant marker genes

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Summary

Introduction

Whole Genome Shotgun (WGS) metagenomics is increasingly used to study the structure and functions of complex microbial ecosystems. Recent achievements [1,2,3] for analyzing metagenomic reads have focused on genome or species reconstruction They constitute an alternative to amplicon sequencing approaches such as 16S rDNA and provide potentially more robust tools for community structure assessment. The functional annotation of these genes, as well as the evaluation of their abundances requires the mapping of metagenomic reads on one or several functional databases which may include annotated, de novo assembled gene catalogs. It is a challenging task for which bioinformatic tools are still being developed (see [4] for a very recent review)

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