Author
Listed:
- Siyu Han
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
Technical University of Munich
Partner Neuherberg)
- Shixiang Yu
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
Technical University of Munich
Partner Neuherberg)
- Mengya Shi
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
Technical University of Munich
Partner Neuherberg)
- Makoto Harada
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
Partner Neuherberg)
- Jianhong Ge
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
Technical University of Munich
Partner Neuherberg)
- Jiesheng Lin
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
Pettenkofer School of Public Health)
- Cornelia Prehn
(German Research Center for Environmental Health)
- Agnese Petrera
(German Research Center for Environmental Health)
- Ying Li
(Jilin University)
- Flora Sam
(Lilly Corporate Center
Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine)
- Giuseppe Matullo
(Turin University)
- Jerzy Adamski
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
National University of Singapore
University of Ljubljana)
- Karsten Suhre
(Education City
Weill Cornell Medicine)
- Christian Gieger
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
German Research Center for Environmental Health)
- Stefanie M. Hauck
(German Research Center for Environmental Health)
- Christian Herder
(Leibniz Center for Diabetes Research at Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf
Partner Düsseldorf
Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf)
- Michael Roden
(Leibniz Center for Diabetes Research at Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf
Partner Düsseldorf
Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf)
- Francesco Paolo Casale
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
German Research Center for Environmental Health
Technical University of Munich)
- Na Cai
(Technical University of Munich
German Research Center for Environmental Health)
- Annette Peters
(Partner Neuherberg
German Research Center for Environmental Health
Pettenkofer School of Public Health
Partner-Site Munich))
- Rui Wang-Sattler
(German Research Center for Environmental Health
Partner Neuherberg
Pettenkofer School of Public Health)
Abstract
Longitudinal multi-view omics data offer unique insights into the temporal dynamics of individual-level physiology, which provides opportunities to advance personalized healthcare. However, the common occurrence of incomplete views makes extrapolation tasks difficult, and there is a lack of tailored methods for this critical issue. Here, we introduce LEOPARD, an innovative approach specifically designed to complete missing views in multi-timepoint omics data. By disentangling longitudinal omics data into content and temporal representations, LEOPARD transfers the temporal knowledge to the omics-specific content, thereby completing missing views. The effectiveness of LEOPARD is validated on four real-world omics datasets constructed with data from the MGH COVID study and the KORA cohort, spanning periods from 3 days to 14 years. Compared to conventional imputation methods, such as missForest, PMM, GLMM, and cGAN, LEOPARD yields the most robust results across the benchmark datasets. LEOPARD-imputed data also achieve the highest agreement with observed data in our analyses for age-associated metabolites detection, estimated glomerular filtration rate-associated proteins identification, and chronic kidney disease prediction. Our work takes the first step toward a generalized treatment of missing views in longitudinal omics data, enabling comprehensive exploration of temporal dynamics and providing valuable insights into personalized healthcare.
Suggested Citation
Siyu Han & Shixiang Yu & Mengya Shi & Makoto Harada & Jianhong Ge & Jiesheng Lin & Cornelia Prehn & Agnese Petrera & Ying Li & Flora Sam & Giuseppe Matullo & Jerzy Adamski & Karsten Suhre & Christian , 2025.
"LEOPARD: missing view completion for multi-timepoint omics data via representation disentanglement and temporal knowledge transfer,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-20, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-58314-3
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-58314-3
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