Cross-Omics: Integrating Genomics with Metabolomics in Clinical Diagnostics

Next-generation sequencing and next-generation metabolic screening are, independently, increasingly applied in clinical diagnostics of inborn errors of metabolism (IEM). Integrated into a single bioinformatic method, these two -omics technologies can potentially further improve the diagnostic yield...

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Veröffentlicht in:Metabolites 2020-05, Vol.10 (5), p.206
Hauptverfasser: Kerkhofs, Marten H P M, Haijes, Hanneke A, Willemsen, A Marcel, van Gassen, Koen L I, van der Ham, Maria, Gerrits, Johan, de Sain-van der Velden, Monique G M, Prinsen, Hubertus C M T, van Deutekom, Hanneke W M, van Hasselt, Peter M, Verhoeven-Duif, Nanda M, Jans, Judith J M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Next-generation sequencing and next-generation metabolic screening are, independently, increasingly applied in clinical diagnostics of inborn errors of metabolism (IEM). Integrated into a single bioinformatic method, these two -omics technologies can potentially further improve the diagnostic yield for IEM. Here, we present cross-omics: a method that uses untargeted metabolomics results of patient's dried blood spots (DBSs), indicated by Z-scores and mapped onto human metabolic pathways, to prioritize potentially affected genes. We demonstrate the optimization of three parameters: (1) maximum distance to the primary reaction of the affected protein, (2) an extension stringency threshold reflecting in how many reactions a metabolite can participate, to be able to extend the metabolite set associated with a certain gene, and (3) a biochemical stringency threshold reflecting paired Z-score thresholds for untargeted metabolomics results. Patients with known IEMs were included. We performed untargeted metabolomics on 168 DBSs of 97 patients with 46 different disease-causing genes, and we simulated their whole-exome sequencing results in silico. We showed that for accurate prioritization of disease-causing genes in IEM, it is essential to take into account not only the primary reaction of the affected protein but a larger network of potentially affected metabolites, multiple steps away from the primary reaction.
ISSN:2218-1989
2218-1989
DOI:10.3390/metabo10050206