| Literature DB >> 27877135 |
Jae M Shin1, Pachiyappan Kamarajan2, J Christopher Fenno3, Alexander H Rickard4, Yvonne L Kapila2.
Abstract
Metabolomics is used in systems biology to enhance the understanding of complex disease processes, such as cancer. Head and neck cancer (HNC) is an epithelial malignancy that arises in the upper aerodigestive tract and affects more than half a million people worldwide each year. Recently, significant effort has focused on integrating multiple "omics" technologies for oncological research. In particular, research has been focused on identifying tumor-specific metabolite profiles using different sample types (biological fluids, cells and tissues) and a variety of metabolomic platforms and technologies. With our current understanding of molecular abnormalities of HNC, the addition of metabolomic studies will enhance our knowledge of the pathogenesis of this disease and potentially aid in the development of novel strategies to prevent and treat HNC. In this review, we summarize the proposed hypotheses and conclusions from publications that reported findings on the metabolomics of HNC. In addition, we address the potential influence of host-microbe metabolomics in cancer. From a systems biology perspective, the integrative use of genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics will be extremely important for future translational metabolomic-based research discoveries.Entities:
Keywords: head and neck cancer; metabolomics; microbiome; oral cancer; squamous cell carcinoma
Year: 2016 PMID: 27877135 PMCID: PMC5099236 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2016.00526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Summary of metabolomic-based studies on head and neck cancers.
| 50 HNSCC | HNSCC | Saliva | HPLC | Increased: Glutathione | Almadori et al., |
| 20 OSCC, | OSCC | Saliva | HPLC/MS | Metabolic profiling data distinguished between OSCC, OLP and OLK | Yan et al., |
| 69 oral cancer patients | Oral cancer | Saliva | CE-TOF-MS | 28 differentially expressed metabolites were detected and was used to predict oral cancer outcome | Sugimoto et al., |
| 37 OSCC | OSCC | Saliva | UPLC-QTOFMS | 41 metabolites distinguished OSCC from control, 61 distinguished OSCC from OLK, and 27 distinguished OLK from control | Wei et al., |
| 33 OSCC | OSCC | Blood (plasma) | 1H NMR | At least 17 metabolites were differentially expressed and differentiated OSCC from healthy | Zhou et al., |
| 15 OSCC | OSCC | Blood (serum) | 1D 1H and 2D 1H J-resolved | Altered energy metabolism: | Tiziani et al., |
| 25 HNSCC (Of these patients, 17 used for serum and 19 used for tissue analysis) | HNSCC | Blood (serum) | GC/MS | Serum: | Yonezawa et al., |
| 37 OSCC | OSCC | Urine | GC-MS | Increased: | Xie et al., |
| HNSCC | Tissues | 1H MRS | Mean choline/creatine ratio was higher in HNSCC samples. Several amino acids including alanine, isoleucine, glutathione, histidine, valine, lysine and polyamine were differentially found in HNSCC samples | Mukherji et al., | |
| 85 HNSCC | HNSCC | Tissues | 1H MRS | Increased: | El-Sayed et al., |
| 159 OSCC (Tumor and neighboring margins and bed tissues) | OSCC | Tissues | HR-MAS NMR | Increased: | Srivastava et al., |
| 22 HNSCC (matched samples divided into 18NAT, 18 tumor and 7 LN-Met) | HNSCC | Tissues | HR-MAS 1H NMR | HNSCC and LN-Met tissues showed elevated levels of lactate, amino acids and decreased levels of triglycerides | Somashekar et al., |
| 5 HNSCC cell lines | HNSCC | Cells | 1H NMR | 21 differentially expressed metabolites: Increased: | Tripathi et al., |
| 2 cell lines (HNSCC cells and stem-like cancer cells) | HNSCC | Cells | Cap IC-MS | Changes in energy metabolism pathways: Glycolysis and TCA cycle | Wang et al., |
Cap IC-MS, Capillary anion exchange ion chromatography-mass spectrometry; CE-TOF/MS, Capillary electrophoresis-time-of-flight mass spectrometry; GC/MS, Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry; 1H-NMR, Proton nuclear magnetic resonance; HR-MAS; High resolution magic angle spinning; 1H-MRS, Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy; HPLC, High performance liquid chromatography; LC/GC, Liquid chromatography/gas chromatography; NMR, Nuclear magnetic resonance; UPLC-QTOFMS, Ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with quadrupole/time-of-flight spectrometry; LN-Met, lymph node metastasis.
Figure 1Head and neck cancer metabolism. (A) Proposed schematic representation of HNC tumor microenvironment. Altered metabolism in HNC can result in differential expression of metabolites associated with carbohydrates, lipids, amino acids, and nucleotide metabolism. The co-inhabiting microbiota of the TME can further result in altered metabolic activity. In addition to the genomic transformation of cancer cells, diet and lifestyle (alcohol, tobacco) are risk factors contributing to the altered cancer metabolism. (B,C) Venn diagrams showing, (B) Overlap of differentially expressed metabolites identified in HNC in saliva, blood and urine, and cells and tissues. (C) Overlap of differentially expressed metabolites in HNC identified by different detection methods such as HPLC/GC/MS, NMR/MAS, MRS and other. Metabolites were selected and compiled from studies in Table 1. Red, detected in increased levels; Blue, detected in decreased levels; Green, detected in increased and decreased levels.