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A pipeline for the reconstruction and evaluation of context-specific human metabolic models at a large-scale

Author

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  • Vítor Vieira
  • Jorge Ferreira
  • Miguel Rocha

Abstract

Constraint-based (CB) metabolic models provide a mathematical framework and scaffold for in silico cell metabolism analysis and manipulation. In the past decade, significant efforts have been done to model human metabolism, enabled by the increased availability of multi-omics datasets and curated genome-scale reconstructions, as well as the development of several algorithms for context-specific model (CSM) reconstruction. Although CSM reconstruction has revealed insights on the deregulated metabolism of several pathologies, the process of reconstructing representative models of human tissues still lacks benchmarks and appropriate integrated software frameworks, since many tools required for this process are still disperse across various software platforms, some of which are proprietary. In this work, we address this challenge by assembling a scalable CSM reconstruction pipeline capable of integrating transcriptomics data in CB models. We combined omics preprocessing methods inspired by previous efforts with in-house implementations of existing CSM algorithms and new model refinement and validation routines, all implemented in the Troppo Python-based open-source framework. The pipeline was validated with multi-omics datasets from the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia (CCLE), also including reference fluxomics measurements for the MCF7 cell line. We reconstructed over 6000 models based on the Human-GEM template model for 733 cell lines featured in the CCLE, using MCF7 models as reference to find the best parameter combinations. These reference models outperform earlier studies using the same template by comparing gene essentiality and fluxomics experiments. We also analysed the heterogeneity of breast cancer cell lines, identifying key changes in metabolism related to cancer aggressiveness. Despite the many challenges in CB modelling, we demonstrate using our pipeline that combining transcriptomics data in metabolic models can be used to investigate key metabolic shifts. Significant limitations were found on these models ability for reliable quantitative flux prediction, thus motivating further work in genome-wide phenotype prediction.Author summary: Genome-scale models of human metabolism are promising tools capable of contextualising large omics datasets within a framework that enables analysis and manipulation of metabolic phenotypes. Despite various successes in applying these methods to provide mechanistic hypotheses for deregulated metabolism in disease, there is no standardized workflow to extract these models using existing methods and the tools required to do so are mostly implemented using proprietary software. We have assembled a generic pipeline to extract and validate context-specific metabolic models using multi-omics datasets and implemented it using the troppo framework. We first validate our pipeline using MCF7 cell line models and assess their ability to predict lethal gene knockouts as well as flux activity using multi-omics data. We also demonstrate how this approach can be generalized for large-scale transcriptomics datasets and used to generate insights on the metabolic heterogeneity of cancer and relevant features for other data mining approaches. The pipeline is available as part of an open-source framework that is generic for a variety of applications.

Suggested Citation

  • Vítor Vieira & Jorge Ferreira & Miguel Rocha, 2022. "A pipeline for the reconstruction and evaluation of context-specific human metabolic models at a large-scale," PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 18(6), pages 1-24, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1009294
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009294
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Adil Mardinoglu & Rasmus Agren & Caroline Kampf & Anna Asplund & Mathias Uhlen & Jens Nielsen, 2014. "Genome-scale metabolic modelling of hepatocytes reveals serine deficiency in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 5(1), pages 1-11, May.
    2. Nikos Vlassis & Maria Pires Pacheco & Thomas Sauter, 2014. "Fast Reconstruction of Compact Context-Specific Metabolic Network Models," PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(1), pages 1-10, January.
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