| Literature DB >> 23986911 |
Diego F Gomez-Casati1, Maria I Zanor, María V Busi.
Abstract
In the recent years, there has been an increase in the number of metabolomic approaches used, in parallel with proteomic and functional genomic studies. The wide variety of chemical types of metabolites available has also accelerated the use of different techniques in the investigation of the metabolome. At present, metabolomics is applied to investigate several human diseases, to improve their diagnosis and prevention, and to design better therapeutic strategies. In addition, metabolomic studies are also being carried out in areas such as toxicology and pharmacology, crop breeding, and plant biotechnology. In this review, we emphasize the use and application of metabolomics in human diseases and plant research to improve human health.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23986911 PMCID: PMC3748395 DOI: 10.1155/2013/792527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Applications of metabolomics.
A comparison between the most used methods applied to metabolomic research.
| Technique | Use | Overview | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| HPLC-MS | a, b, c | High sensitivity, nonvolatile metabolites, expensive | [ |
| GC-MS | a, c | High sensitivity, only volatile compounds, nonexpensive | [ |
| NMR | b, d, e | For highly abundant metabolites, nondestructive, very reproducible, low sensitivity | [ |
| MS | a, b, c, d, e | High sensitivity, usually coupled with other techniques | [ |
| Raman spectroscopy | e | Low resolution, sensitivity, automated, high throughput | [ |
Ref: a: metabolite target analysis; b: metabolite profiling; c: metabolomics; d: metabolite flux analysis; e: metabolic fingerprinting. MS: mass spectrometry; HPLC-MS: high-performance liquid chromatography-MS; GS-MS: gas chromatography-MS; NMR: nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
Metabolites used as biomarkers of human diseases.
| Disease | Metabolite biomarker | References |
|---|---|---|
| Male infertility | Citrate, lactate, and glycerylphosphorylcholine | [ |
| Lung cancer | Metabolites that are shown to have a statistically significant difference between healthy individuals and lung cancer patients were hippurate, trigonelline, | [ |
| Alzheimer's disease | Succinic anhydride, pyruvic acid, 2-aminopropanol, n,n-didemethylchlorpromazine, L-alanine n-butyl ester, L-glutamic acid dibutyl ester, L-dopa, taurine, creatine, creatinine, lactate, | [ |
| Respiratory diseases | Asthmatic children: acetate; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD): leucine, lactate, propionate, acetate, and pyruvate | [ |
| Huntington disease | 3-Nitropropionic acid | [ |
| Multiple sclerosis | Elevated levels: 2-aminobutyrate, 1,3-dimethylurrate, glutamate, and acetate. Reduced levels: oxaloacetate, citrate, alanine, and 3-hydroxybutyrate. | [ |
| Impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) | Significantly altered levels: glycine, lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) (18:2), and acetylcarnitine | [ |
| Renal cell carcinoma | Phospholipids, phenylalanine, tryptophan, acylcarnitines, cholesterol metabolites, and arachidonic acid metabolism | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | Acteylcarnine, phenylacetylglutamin, leucylproline, and aspartyllysine | [ |
| Kidney cancer | Quinolinate, 4-hydroxybenzoate, and gentisate | [ |
Recent applications of metabolomics in plant biotechnology.
| Organism | Application | Technology used | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Improvement of the production of anticancer indole alkaloid by overexpression of ORCA3 and G10H in C. roseus plants | NMR | [ |
|
| Increased amounts of phenolic acids and a monolignol analog associated with more facile cell wall deconstruction | GC-MS | [ |
|
| Increased drought tolerance by expression of trehalose-6-phosphate synthase 1 | GC-MS | [ |
|
| Modulation of salt tolerance by reduction of OsSUT1 (O. sativa sucrose transporter 1) expression | GC-TOF-MS | [ |
|
| Distinguish transgenic and nontransgenic plants | NMR | [ |
|
| Higher accumulation of flavonoids and thus nutritional value in tomato plants carrying a mutation in HP1/LeDDB1 gene | LC-ESI-MS/MS | [ |
Metabolomic resources.
| Name | URL | Information/Species |
|---|---|---|
| Human metabolome database |
| Chemical and biological data of human metabolites |
| Golm metabolome database |
| GS-MS |
| Madison metabolomics database |
| NMR and MS |
| Metabolights |
| Metabolite structures, spectra, function/cross-species |
| Metabolomics at Rothamsted (MeT-RO) |
| Plant and microbial metabolites |
| Metlin metabolite database |
| High resolution MS/MS spectra and tandem MS experiments |
| PRIMe |
| Genomic and metabolomics data/NMR spectroscopy, GC-MS, LC-MS and CE-MS |
| Plantmetabolomics |
| Arabidopsis and other plant species |
| Metabolome tomato database |
[ | Metabolites identified by LC-MS |
| Terpmed |
| Plant terpenoids, natural products, secondary metabolites/Therapeutic drugs |
| Armec repository project |
| FIE-MS/HPLC-ESI-MS data/human and plant metabolomes for nutrition |
| MetaCyc |
| Integration of metabolite data with metabolic pathways/2000 organisms |
| RiceCyc |
| Metabolic pathways, enzymes, metabolites |
| AraCyc |
| Metabolic pathways, compounds/Arabidopsis |
| Solanacea Genomics network (SolCyc) |
| Pathway genome databases/solanacea species |
| HumanCyc |
| Metabolic pathways, genome/human |
| KEGG Pathway database |
| Pathways, metabolism, genetic information Cellular processes, human diseases |
| Mapman |
| Datasets (e.g., Gene expression data, metabolic pathways) |