Performance of a Shotgun Prediction Model for Colorectal Cancer When Using 16S rRNA Sequencing Data.
Elies RamonMireia Obón-SantacanaOlfat Khannous-LleiffeEster SausToni GabaldonElisabet GuinóDavid Bars-CortinaGemma Ibañez-SanzLorena Rodríguez-AlonsoAlfredo MataAna García-RodríguezVictor MorenoPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2024)
Colorectal cancer (CRC), the third most common cancer globally, has shown links to disturbed gut microbiota. While significant efforts have been made to establish a microbial signature indicative of CRC using shotgun metagenomic sequencing, the challenge lies in validating this signature with 16S ribosomal RNA (16S) gene sequencing. The primary obstacle is reconciling the differing outputs of these two methodologies, which often lead to divergent statistical models and conclusions. In this study, we introduce an algorithm designed to bridge this gap by mapping shotgun-derived taxa to their 16S counterparts. This mapping enables us to assess the predictive performance of a shotgun-based microbiome signature using 16S data. Our results demonstrate a reduction in performance when applying the 16S-mapped taxa in the shotgun prediction model, though it retains statistical significance. This suggests that while an exact match between shotgun and 16S data may not yet be feasible, our approach provides a viable method for comparative analysis and validation in the context of CRC-associated microbiome research.