Taxonomic weighting improves the accuracy of a gap-filling algorithm for metabolic models

Bioinformatics. 2020 Mar 1;36(6):1823-1830. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btz813.

Abstract

Motivation: The increasing availability of annotated genome sequences enables construction of genome-scale metabolic networks, which are useful tools for studying organisms of interest. However, due to incomplete genome annotations, draft metabolic models contain gaps that must be filled in a time-consuming process before they are usable. Optimization-based algorithms that fill these gaps have been developed, however, gap-filling algorithms show significant error rates and often introduce incorrect reactions.

Results: Here, we present a new gap-filling method that computes the costs of candidate gap-filling reactions from a universal reaction database (MetaCyc) based on taxonomic information. When gap-filling a metabolic model for an organism M (such as Escherichia coli), the cost for reaction R is based on the frequency with which R occurs in other organisms within the phylum of M (in this case, Proteobacteria). The assumption behind this method is that different taxonomic groups are biased toward using different metabolic reactions. Evaluation of the new gap-filler on randomly degraded variants of the EcoCyc metabolic model for E.coli showed an increase in the average F1-score to 99.0 (when using the variable weights by frequency method at the phylum level), compared to 91.0 using the previous MetaFlux gap-filler and 80.3 using a basic gap-filler. Evaluation on two other microbial metabolic models showed similar improvements.

Availability and implementation: The Pathway Tools software (including MetaFlux) is free for academic use and is available at http://pathwaytools.com. Additional code for reproducing the results presented here is available at www.ai.sri.com/pkarp/pubs/taxgap/supplementary.zip.

Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms*
  • Databases, Factual
  • Genome
  • Metabolic Networks and Pathways
  • Software*