Elsevier

Journal of Chromatography B

Volume 1071, 15 December 2017, Pages 68-74
Journal of Chromatography B

MetaNetter 2: A Cytoscape plugin for ab initio network analysis and metabolite feature classification

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jchromb.2017.08.015Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • An update to the ab-initio network construction tool MetaNetter has been produced.

  • The tool creates networks of masses from high resolution mass spectrometry data.

  • The new plugin provides both chemical transformation and adduct mapping.

  • Tables mapping adduct and transform counts across samples can be generated.

  • Retention time windows are supported for both adduct and transform network generation.

Abstract

Metabolomics frequently relies on the use of high resolution mass spectrometry data. Classification and filtering of this data remain a challenging task due to the plethora of complex mass spectral artefacts, chemical noise, adducts and fragmentation that occur during ionisation and analysis. Additionally, the relationships between detected compounds can provide a wealth of information about the nature of the samples and the biochemistry that gave rise to them.

We present a biochemical networking tool: MetaNetter 2 that is based on the original MetaNetter, a Cytoscape plugin that creates ab initio networks. The new version supports two major improvements: the generation of adduct networks and the creation of tables that map adduct or transformation patterns across multiple samples, providing a readout of compound relationships.

We have applied this tool to the analysis of adduct patterns in the same sample separated under two different chromatographies, allowing inferences to be made about the effect of different buffer conditions on adduct detection, and the application of the chemical transformation analysis to both a single fragmentation analysis and an all-ions fragmentation dataset.

Finally, we present an analysis of a dataset derived from anaerobic and aerobic growth of the organism Staphylococcus aureus demonstrating the utility of the tool for biological analysis.

Keywords

MetaNetter
Ab-initio network
Mass spectrometry
Metabolomics

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