Deep in the Bowel: Highly Interpretable Neural Encoder-Decoder Networks Predict Gut Metabolites from Gut Microbiome

BMC Genomics. 2020 Jul 20;21(Suppl 4):256. doi: 10.1186/s12864-020-6652-7.

Abstract

Background: Technological advances in next-generation sequencing (NGS) and chromatographic assays [e.g., liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS)] have made it possible to identify thousands of microbe and metabolite species, and to measure their relative abundance. In this paper, we propose a sparse neural encoder-decoder network to predict metabolite abundances from microbe abundances.

Results: Using paired data from a cohort of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients, we show that our neural encoder-decoder model outperforms linear univariate and multivariate methods in terms of accuracy, sparsity, and stability. Importantly, we show that our neural encoder-decoder model is not simply a black box designed to maximize predictive accuracy. Rather, the network's hidden layer (i.e., the latent space, comprised only of sparsely weighted microbe counts) actually captures key microbe-metabolite relationships that are themselves clinically meaningful. Although this hidden layer is learned without any knowledge of the patient's diagnosis, we show that the learned latent features are structured in a way that predicts IBD and treatment status with high accuracy.

Conclusions: By imposing a non-negative weights constraint, the network becomes a directed graph where each downstream node is interpretable as the additive combination of the upstream nodes. Here, the middle layer comprises distinct microbe-metabolite axes that relate key microbial biomarkers with metabolite biomarkers. By pre-processing the microbiome and metabolome data using compositional data analysis methods, we ensure that our proposed multi-omics workflow will generalize to any pair of -omics data. To the best of our knowledge, this work is the first application of neural encoder-decoders for the interpretable integration of multi-omics biological data.

Keywords: Deep learning; Interpretability; Machine learning; Metabolomics; Multi-omics.

MeSH terms

  • Gastrointestinal Microbiome*
  • Humans
  • Inflammatory Bowel Diseases / metabolism*
  • Inflammatory Bowel Diseases / microbiology*
  • Metabolome*
  • Models, Statistical
  • Neural Networks, Computer*