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Binary similarity measures for fingerprint analysis of qualitative metabolomic profiles
Authors:" target="_blank">Anita Rácz  Filip Andri?  " target="_blank">Dávid Bajusz  " target="_blank">Károly Héberger
Institution:1.Plasma Chemistry Research Group, Research Centre for Natural Sciences,Hungarian Academy of Sciences,Budapest,Hungary;2.Department of Analytical Chemistry,University of Belgrade - Faculty of Chemistry,Belgrade,Serbia;3.Medicinal Chemistry Research Group, Research Centre for Natural Sciences,Hungarian Academy of Sciences,Budapest,Hungary
Abstract:

Introduction

Contemporary metabolomic fingerprinting is based on multiple spectrometric and chromatographic signals, used either alone or combined with structural and chemical information of metabolic markers at the qualitative and semiquantitative level. However, signal shifting, convolution, and matrix effects may compromise metabolomic patterns. Recent increase in the use of qualitative metabolomic data, described by the presence (1) or absence (0) of particular metabolites, demonstrates great potential in the field of metabolomic profiling and fingerprint analysis.

Objectives

The aim of this study is a comprehensive evaluation of binary similarity measures for the elucidation of patterns among samples of different botanical origin and various metabolomic profiles.

Methods

Nine qualitative metabolomic data sets covering a wide range of natural products and metabolomic profiles were applied to assess 44 binary similarity measures for the fingerprinting of plant extracts and natural products. The measures were analyzed by the novel sum of ranking differences method (SRD), searching for the most promising candidates.

Results

Baroni-Urbani–Buser (BUB) and Hawkins–Dotson (HD) similarity coefficients were selected as the best measures by SRD and analysis of variance (ANOVA), while Dice (Di1), Yule, Russel-Rao, and Consonni-Todeschini 3 ranked the worst. ANOVA revealed that concordantly and intermediately symmetric similarity coefficients are better candidates for metabolomic fingerprinting than the asymmetric and correlation based ones. The fingerprint analysis based on the BUB and HD coefficients and qualitative metabolomic data performed equally well as the quantitative metabolomic profile analysis.

Conclusion

Fingerprint analysis based on the qualitative metabolomic profiles and binary similarity measures proved to be a reliable way in finding the same/similar patterns in metabolomic data as that extracted from quantitative data.
Keywords:
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