Abstract
Identifying which taxa in our microbiota are associated with traits of interest is important for advancing science and health. However, the identification is challenging because the measured vector of taxa counts (by amplicon sequencing) is compositional, so a change in the abundance of one taxon in the microbiota induces a change in the number of sequenced counts across all taxa. The data are typically sparse, with many zero counts present either due to biological variance or limited sequencing depth. We examine the case of Crohn’s disease, where the microbial load changes substantially with the disease. For this representative example of a highly compositional setting, we show existing methods designed to identify differentially abundant taxa may have an inflated number of false positives. We introduce a novel nonparametric approach that provides valid inference, even when the fraction of zero counts is substantial. Our approach uses a set of reference taxa that are nondifferentially abundant which can be estimated from the data or from outside information. Our approach also allows for a novel type of testing: multivariate tests of differential abundance over a focused subset of the taxa. Genera-level multivariate testing discovers additional genera as differentially abundant by avoiding agglomeration of taxa.
Funding Statement
The work of Barak Brill and Ruth Heller was funded by ISF Grant 1049/16.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank the anonymous referees, an Associate Editor, and the Editor for their constructive comments that improved the quality of this paper.
Citation
Barak Brill. Amnon Amir. Ruth Heller. "Testing for differential abundance in compositional counts data, with application to microbiome studies." Ann. Appl. Stat. 16 (4) 2648 - 2671, December 2022. https://doi.org/10.1214/22-AOAS1607
Information