AI decodes gut bacteria to provide clues about health

Tokyo: For the first time, researchers from the University of Tokyo have used a special kind of artificial intelligence (AI) called a Bayesian neural network to probe a dataset on gut bacteria in order to find relationships that current analytical tools could not reliably identify.

Gut bacteria are known to be a key factor in many health-related concerns. The human body comprises about 30 trillion to 40 trillion cells, but your intestines contain about 100 trillion gut bacteria.

“The problem is that we’re only beginning to understand which bacteria produce which human metabolites and how these relationships change in different diseases,” said Project Researcher Tung Dang from the Tsunoda lab in the Department of Biological Sciences in a paper published in Briefings in Bioinformatics.

By accurately mapping these bacteria-chemical relationships, we could potentially develop personalised treatments, Dang mentioned. “Imagine being able to grow a specific bacterium to produce beneficial human metabolites or designing targeted therapies that modify these metabolites to treat diseases.”

The system, VBayesMM, automatically distinguishes the key players that significantly influence metabolites from the vast background of less relevant microbes, while also acknowledging uncertainty about the predicted relationships, rather than providing overconfident but potentially wrong answers.

“When tested on real data from sleep disorder, obesity and cancer studies, our approach consistently outperformed existing methods and identified specific bacterial families that align with known biological processes, giving confidence that it discovers real biological relationships rather than meaningless statistical patterns,” Dang explained.

As VBayesMM can handle and communicate issues of uncertainty, it gives researchers more confidence than a tool which does not. Even though the system is optimised to cope with heavy analytical workloads, mining such huge datasets still comes with high computational cost; however, as time goes on, this will become less and less of a barrier to those wishing to use it.

“We plan to work with more comprehensive chemical datasets that capture the complete range of bacterial products, though this creates new challenges in determining whether chemicals come from bacteria, the human body or external sources like diet,” said Dang.

IANS

 

UK PM Keir Starmer announces ban on social media for children under 16 years

London: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday announced that he would ban access to social media for children aged below 16 years, terming it a "big step" for the...

Vijay-Sangeetha divorce proceedings deferred again, next hearing on August 7

Chennai: The divorce case of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister and Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) President C. Joseph Vijay and his wife Sangeetha was adjourned once again on Monday after neither...

‘Women across Kerala will be able to travel for free’: K.C. Venugopal hails launch of Priyadarshini bus scheme

New Delhi: The Congress on Monday welcomed the rollout of the Kerala government's ‘Priyadarshini’ scheme, which provides free travel for women and transgender persons on ordinary Kerala State Road Transport...

We support NDA; final call on Trinamool MPs merger still awaited, says NCPI founder

New Delhi: The Nationalist Citizens Party of India (NCPI) founder Shantanu Dey on Monday said his party members will further deliberate and discuss the merger proposal from the Trinamool Congress...

Abhishek Banerjee appears before ED in Bengal school job case

Kolkata: Trinamool Congress’ general secretary and the party’s Lok Sabha member, Abhishek Banerjee, on Monday turned up at the Enforcement Directorate office to face interrogation in the multi-crore cash-for-school-job case...

France, UK, Germany, Italy welcome US-Iran deal; signal readiness to lift sanctions

London: The leaders of France, the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy have welcomed the announcement of a memorandum of understanding between the US and Iran, hailing it as a major...

El Nino impact: Maha stops dam water for agricultural irrigation, reserve stocks for drinking till August 31

Mumbai: In a critical move to tackle the growing threat of a water crisis, Maharashtra Water Resources Minister Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil has directed officials to immediately halt the release of...

Delhi L-G orders weekly public hearings at all police stations from June 20

New Delhi: Starting June 20, Delhi Lt Governor T.S. Sandhu has directed all police stations to conduct public hearings every Saturday to resolve complaints and assist on issues related to...

26-year-old Indian-origin man killed in knife attack in London; police launch probe

London: A 26-year-old Indian-origin man has been killed in a knife attack in Southall, west London, the Metropolitan Police said, prompting a murder investigation and a fresh appeal for witnesses....

First batch of women cadets commissioned as officers in the defence forces

New Delhi: In a historic stride for gender inclusion in the armed forces, the first batch of women cadets trained at the National Defence Academy (NDA) has been commissioned as...

Visakhapatnam Steel Plant explosion death toll rises to 10

Visakhapatnam: The death toll in the June 8 accident at Visakhapatnam Steel Plant rose to 10 with another worker succumbing to his injuries. G. Suribabu, a contract worker, breathed his...

Trump, PM Modi bilateral meeting in France on June 17; to review trade deal: White House

Washington : US President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi will hold a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the G7 Summit in France next week, during which both...

Read Previous

Kareena Kapoor takes a dig at Prada for copying Kolhapuri chappal designs

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com