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Research Article

Disentangling direct from indirect relationships in association networks

Naijia Xiao, Aifen Zhou, Megan L. Kempher, Benjamin Y. Zhou, Zhou Jason Shi, Mengting Yuan, View ORCID ProfileXue Guo, Linwei Wu, View ORCID ProfileDaliang Ning, Joy Van Nostrand, Mary K. Firestone, and View ORCID ProfileJizhong Zhou

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    PNAS January 11, 2022 119 (2) e2109995119; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2109995119
    1. Contributed by Mary K. Firestone; received November 18, 2021; accepted November 30, 2021; reviewed by Jack Gilbert, Fengzhu Sun, and Dong Xu

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    Significance

    Networks are fundamental units for studying complex systems, but reconstructing networks from large-scale experimental data is very challenging in systems biology and microbial ecology, primarily due to the difficulty in unraveling direct and indirect interactions. By tackling several mathematical challenges, this study provides a conceptual framework for disentangling direct and indirect relationships in association networks. The application of iDIRECT (Inference of Direct and Indirect Relationships with Effective Copula-based Transitivity) to synthetic, gene expression, and microbial community data demonstrates that it is a powerful, robust, and reliable tool for network inference. The framework developed here will greatly enhance our capability to discern network interactions in various complex systems and allow scientists to address research questions that could not be approached previously.

    Abstract

    Networks are vital tools for understanding and modeling interactions in complex systems in science and engineering, and direct and indirect interactions are pervasive in all types of networks. However, quantitatively disentangling direct and indirect relationships in networks remains a formidable task. Here, we present a framework, called iDIRECT (Inference of Direct and Indirect Relationships with Effective Copula-based Transitivity), for quantitatively inferring direct dependencies in association networks. Using copula-based transitivity, iDIRECT eliminates/ameliorates several challenging mathematical problems, including ill-conditioning, self-looping, and interaction strength overflow. With simulation data as benchmark examples, iDIRECT showed high prediction accuracies. Application of iDIRECT to reconstruct gene regulatory networks in Escherichia coli also revealed considerably higher prediction power than the best-performing approaches in the DREAM5 (Dialogue on Reverse Engineering Assessment and Methods project, #5) Network Inference Challenge. In addition, applying iDIRECT to highly diverse grassland soil microbial communities in response to climate warming showed that the iDIRECT-processed networks were significantly different from the original networks, with considerably fewer nodes, links, and connectivity, but higher relative modularity. Further analysis revealed that the iDIRECT-processed network was more complex under warming than the control and more robust to both random and target species removal (P < 0.001). As a general approach, iDIRECT has great advantages for network inference, and it should be widely applicable to infer direct relationships in association networks across diverse disciplines in science and engineering.

    • network analysis
    • direct relationship
    • indirect relationship
    • systems biology
    • climate change

    Footnotes

    • ↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: mkfstone@berkeley.edu or jzhou@ou.edu.
      • Accepted November 30, 2021.
    • Author contributions: M.K.F. and J.Z. designed research; N.X., B.Y.Z., Z.J.S., D.N., and J.Z. performed research; N.X., B.Y.Z., Z.J.S., and D.N. contributed new analytic tools; N.X., A.Z., M.L.K., M.Y., X.G., L.W., and J.Z. analyzed data; and N.X., A.Z., M.L.K., B.Y.Z., D.N., J.V.N., M.K.F., and J.Z. wrote the paper.

    • Reviewers: J.G., Scripps Institute of Oceanography; F.S., University of Southern California; and D.X., University of Missouri.

    • The authors declare no competing interest.

    • This article contains supporting information online at https://www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.2109995119/-/DCSupplemental.

    Data Availability

    The method has been incorporated with our Molecular Ecological Network Analysis Pipeline (http://ieg4.rccc.ou.edu/mena/login.cgi). The Python code is available for download at GitHub (https://github.com/nxiao6gt/iDIRECT) (68). Previously published data were used for this work (22, 36). The DNA sequences of the 16S rRNA gene and ITS amplicons were deposited in the National Center for Biotechnology Information (accession no. PRJNA331185).

    • Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.

    This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND).

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    • Biological Sciences
    • Ecology
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: 119 (2)
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