| Literature DB >> 22072900 |
Jia Liu1, Lawrence Litt, Mark R Segal, Mark J S Kelly, Jeffrey G Pelton, Myungwon Kim.
Abstract
Aerobic metabolism occurs in a background of oxygen radicals and reactive oxygen species (ROS) that originate from the incomplete reduction of molecular oxygen in electron transfer reactions. The essential role of aerobic metabolism, the generation and consumption of ATP and other high energy phosphates, sustains a balance of approximately 3000 essential human metabolites that serve not only as nutrients, but also as antioxidants, neurotransmitters, osmolytes, and participants in ligand-based and other cellular signaling. In hypoxia, ischemia, and oxidative stress, where pathological circumstances cause oxygen radicals to form at a rate greater than is possible for their consumption, changes in the composition of metabolite ensembles, or metabolomes, can be associated with physiological changes. Metabolomics and metabonomics are a scientific disciplines that focuse on quantifying dynamic metabolome responses, using multivariate analytical approaches derived from methods within genomics, a discipline that consolidated innovative analysis techniques for situations where the number of biomarkers (metabolites in our case) greatly exceeds the number of subjects. This review focuses on the behavior of cytosolic, mitochondrial, and redox metabolites in ameliorating or exacerbating oxidative stress. After reviewing work regarding a small number of metabolites-pyruvate, ethyl pyruvate, and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate-whose exogenous administration was found to ameliorate oxidative stress, a subsequent section reviews basic multivariate statistical methods common in metabolomics research, and their application in human and preclinical studies emphasizing oxidative stress. Particular attention is paid to new NMR spectroscopy methods in metabolomics and metabonomics. Because complex relationships connect oxidative stress to so many physiological processes, studies from different disciplines were reviewed. All, however, shared the common goal of ultimately developing "omics"-based, diagnostic tests to help influence therapies.Entities:
Keywords: NMR; Principal Component Analysis; brain; chemometrics; heart; kidney; liver; metabolomics; metabonomics; multivariate analysis; oxidative stress; proteomics; targeted profiling; transcriptionomics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22072900 PMCID: PMC3210991 DOI: 10.3390/ijms12106469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the chemical structure of Fructose-1,6-Bisphosphate (FBP). Two negatively charged phosphate groups (carbons 1 and 6) make it possible for FBP to chelate calcium.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the chemical structures of pyruvate (A) and ethyl pyruvate (B). Ethyl pyruvate is formed by an ester linkage of pyruvate (right side of the structure in Figure 2B) with ethanol (left side of the structure in Figure 2B).
Figure 3Several key reactions are shown that depict the antioxidant roles of pyruvate and FBP. Hydrogen peroxide and peroxynitrite, shown at the top of the diagram, are reactive oxygen and nitrogen species formed during oxidative stress. One antioxidant mechanism of pyruvate is associated with the keto-carbonyl group that can scavenge peroxides and peroxynitrites in direct decarboxylation reactions. The antioxidant role of keto-carbonyl groups in metabolites would help relieve the free radical burden handled by the GSH system. Pyruvate can indirectly help maintain reduced glutathione (GSH) instead of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) by increasing NADPH production. Pyruvate carboxylation by pyruvate carboxylase (PC) and/or malic enzyme (ME) increases the formation of citrate, which can suppress phosphofructokinase (PFK) activity, and drive glucose-6-phosphate into the hexose monophosphate pathway (HMP); or it can generate isocitrate, the substrate for NADP+-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH).
Figure 4Schematic diagram showing alternate analysis paths in NMR-based metabolomics analyses. One begins with 1H NMR spectra similar to the one at the top of the figure, obtained at the NIH-supported Central California 900 MHz NMR Facility at UC Berkeley during a study of rat brain extracts. The 1H resonance for water at 4.66 ppm has been removed. The chemical shifts of most metabolites measured in vivo and in many studies of extracts are typically to the right of 4.66 ppm (upfield), but 1H nuclei on many important compounds, such as ATP and NADH, are found to the left of 4.66 ppm (downfield). In the first step of NMR metabolomics, accurate high resolution spectra such as the one shown are obtained from solutions containing processed biological fluids or tissues from clinic or laboratory sources. As explained in the text NMR spectra are then typically compared by one or both of two approaches: chemometrics and targeted profiling. In each of the approaches it is common to perform unsupervised Principal Component Analysis (PCA), and supervised Projection to Least Squares-Discriminant Analyses (PLS-DA), and each produces Scores Plots and Loading Plots, as explained in the text, and exemplified in the bottom part of the figure, where data from three treatment groups cluster apart from each other, and metabolites that led to separations are found in corresponding quadrants of the Loadings Plot.
Figure 5Typical 900 MHz NMR spectra for 2D 1H JRES and 1D 1H pJRES spectroscopy. (A) The 1H lactate resonance at 1.33 ppm, which comes from the methyl group on lactate’s middle carbon, provides a good example of the differences that occur in JRES spectroscopy. Because of 1H-1H J-coupling between methyl 1H nuclei and the 1H atom on the other side of the methyl group, the 1H lactate doublet at 1.33, which has its two peaks separated by 7 Hz or 0.008 ppm, as can be seen in the 2D plot and the black 1D standard spectrum at the top of the figure. In the downwards projection of the 2D plot onto the x-axis, which creates the 1D pJRES spectrum, the 7 Hz doublet merges to form a sharp singlet. There is no lateral dispersion of a nucleus’ NMR signal when one projects the 2D spectrum down onto the ppm axis, because the J-coupling data were aligned vertically. This produces 1D 1H NMR spectra in which metabolites have less overlap with each other; (B) A comparison is provided between a standard 1D 1H spectrum (bottom of the two spectra) and a 1D 1H pJRES spectrum (upper of the two spectra). The numbers refer as follows to the metabolites: 1. Isoleucine; 2. Leucine; 3. Valine; 4. Lactate 13C; 5. Lactate; 6. Alanine; 7. Alanine 13C; 8. Acetate 13C; 9. GABA; 10. Acetate; 11. NAA; 12. NAAG; 13. Glutamate; 14. Glutamate/Glutamine; 15. Succinate; 16. Glutamine. The baseline is clearly much flatter, and ripples caused by 1H-1H J-coupling are very much reduced. Glutamate and glutamine (peaks 13 and 14), which are difficult to quantify in normal 1D spectra, are collapsed into sharp peaks in 1D 1H JRES Spectroscopy. Note that when the methyl carbon of lactate is a 13C nucleus, one still has the 1H-13C J-coupling that produces the satellite lactate peaks approximately 0.07 ppm to either side of 1.33 ppm. The 1H-13C coupling is not collapsed with this type of JRES spectroscopy; (C) An expanded view of the glutamate-glutamine region permits better appreciation of the improvement created by JRES Spectroscopy.
Metabolomic studies in different diseases associated with oxidative stress.
| Pathology | Change of metabolites | Samples | Analytical technique | Ref. | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schizophrenia | Taurine ↑; Glutathione | Prefrontal cortex tissue from patients | 1H NMR | [ | 2004 |
| Schizophrenia | Glucose ↑; Acetate ↓; Alanine; Glutamine | CSF from human | 1H NMR | [ | 2006 |
| Schizophrenia | Phosphotidylethanolamine ↓ Phosphotidylcholine ↓ | Lipid extracts of patient’s plasma | HPLC | [ | 2007 |
| Parkinson’s disease | Uric acid ↓; GSSG ↑ | Plasma from patients | LCECA | [ | 2008 |
| Parkinson’s disease | Urate ↓ | Plasma from patients | LCECA | [ | 2009 |
| Trauma Brain Injury | Ascorbate ↓; Glutamate ↓; NAA ↓; Total of PC/GPC ↓ | Brain tissue extracts and plasma from rats | 1H NMR | [ | 2005 |
| Asphyxia | Glutarate ↑; Methylmalonate ↑; 3-hyroxy-butyrate ↑; Orotate ↑ | Urine from patients | MS | [ | 2006 |
| Hypoxia-reoxygenati on | Urea; Creatinine; Malonate; Methylguanidine; Hydrooxyisobutyric acid | Urine from piglets 1–4 days old | 1H NMR | [ | 2010 |
| Oxygen-Glucose deprivation | PCr; ATP ; NAA; Taurine | Rat brain slice extracts | 1H/31P NMR | [ | 2011 |
| Proliferative diabetic retinopathy | Ascorbate ↓; Galactitol ↓ | Vitreous samples from patients | 1H NMR | [ | 2010 |
| Type 1 diabetes | Glucose ↑; Alanine ↑; Lactate ↑; Ethanol ↑; Acetate ↑; Fumarate ↑ | Urine and plasma from rats | 1H NMR | [ | 2008 |
| Cyclosporine nephrotoxicity | 15-F(2t)-isoprostane ↑; Creatinine ↑; Citrate ↓; Hippurate ↑; Phenylalanine | Urine and plasma from human | 1H NMR | [ | 2010 |
| Kidney transplantation | Allantoin ↑; Polyunsaturated fatty acids ↓ | Kidney tissue and plasma from rats | 1H NMR | [ | 2005 |
| Radiation injury | Glyoxylate ↑; Threonate ↑; Thymine ↑; Uracil ↑; Citrate ↓; Adipate ↓; Pimelate ↓; Suberate ↓; 2-oxoglutarate ↓ | Urine from rats | GC-MS | [ | 2009 |
| Ochratoxin A toxicity | 2-oxoglutarate ↓; Citrate ↓; Glucose ↑; Creatinine ↑; Pseudouridine ↑; 5-oxoproline ↑; Myo-inositol ↑ | Urine from rats | GC-MS | [ | 2009 |
| Cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity | Glucosuria ↑; Nonesterified fatty acids ↑; Triglycerides ↑ | Kidney tissue, urine, plasma from rats | 1H NMR | [ | 2007 |
| Hypoxia | Glutathione ↓; Lactate ↑; Succinate↑ | Plasma and urine from human | 1H NMR | [ | 2009 |
| Abdominal aortic aneurysms | Fatty acid amides | Aortas tissue from human | LC-MS | [ | 2011 |
| Atherosclerosis | Alanine ↓; 1-Cys peroxiredoxin (identified in proteomics) | Mouse aortas tissue | 1H NMR | [ | 2005 |
| H2O2-induced stress | Alanine ↓; Lactate ↑; Carnitine ↑; Glutathione↓ | Mouse C2C12 myotubes | MS | [ | 2004 |
| Doxorubicin cardiotoxicity | Acetate ↑; Succinate ↑ | Dog heart tissue extracts | 1H NMR | [ | 2009 |
| Fatty liver disease | Glycocholate↑; Taurocholate↑ | Plasma from patients | GC-MS | [ | 2011 |
| Acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity | Ophthalmate ↓ | Mouse liver extracts and serum | CE-TOFMS | [ | 2006 |
| Obesity | Hepatic ratios of PUFA/MUFA ↓ Glutathione ↓ | Liver lipid extracts and serum from rat | 1H NMR | [ | 2006 |
| Ionizing radiation | Arginine ↑; Glutamine ↑; Creatine ↑; Proline ↑; GSH↑ | Human leukocytes | CE-ESI-MS | [ | 2010 |
LCECA: Liquid chromatography coupled with eletrochemical coulometric array; GC-MS: Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; LC-MS: Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry; CE-TOFMS: Capillary eletrophoresis time-of-flight mass spectrometry; CE-ESI-MS: Capillary electrophoresis mass spectrometry.