4.7 Article

MAPLE: A Microbiome Analysis Pipeline Enabling Optimal Peptide Search and Comparative Taxonomic and Functional Analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages 2882-2894

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.1c00114

Keywords

metaproteomics; bioinformatics; mass spectrometry; FASTA database; search space; proteome inference; parsimony; taxonomy; gene ontology; enrichment analysis

Funding

  1. University of Maryland School of Pharmacy Mass Spectrometry Center [SOP1841-IQB2014]

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Metaproteomics by mass spectrometry is a powerful method for analyzing proteins in complex samples, providing insights into the functional composition of microbiota. Human gastrointestinal microbiota plays important roles in human health, and metaproteomics reveals novel associations between microbiota and diseases. The MAPLE microbiome analysis pipeline offers a user-friendly solution for optimal proteome inference and comprehensive comparison of microbiota composition.
Metaproteomics by mass spectrometry (MS) is a powerful approach to profile a large number of proteins expressed by all organisms in a highly complex biological or ecological sample, which is able to provide a direct and quantitative assessment of the functional makeup of a microbiota. The human gastrointestinal microbiota has been found playing important roles in human physiology and health, and metaproteomics has been shown to shed light on multiple novel associations between microbiota and diseases. MS-powered proteomics generally relies on genome data to define search space. However, metaproteomics, which simultaneously analyzes all proteins from hundreds to thousands of species, faces significant challenges regarding database search and interpretation of results. To overcome these obstacles, we have developed a user-friendly microbiome analysis pipeline (MAPLE, freely downloadable at http://maple.rx.umaryland.edu/), which is able to define an optimal search space by inferring proteomes specific to samples following the principle of parsimony. MAPLE facilitates highly comparable or better peptide identification compared to a sample-specific metagenome-guided search. In addition, we implemented an automated peptide-centric enrichment analysis function in MAPLE to address issues of traditional protein-centric comparison, enabling straightforward and comprehensive comparison of taxonomic and functional makeup between microbiota.

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