| Literature DB >> 30830405 |
Justin J J van der Hooft1, Wejdan Alghefari2,3,4, Eleanor Watson4, Paul Everest5, Fraser R Morton6, Karl E V Burgess6, David G E Smith7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Campylobacter jejuni is the leading cause of foodborne bacterial enteritis in humans, and yet little is known in regard to how genetic diversity and metabolic capabilities among isolates affect their metabolic phenotype and pathogenicity.Entities:
Keywords: Campylobacter jejuni; HILIC chromatography; Mass spectrometry fragmentation; Metabolomics; Sulphur metabolism
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30830405 PMCID: PMC6208705 DOI: 10.1007/s11306-018-1438-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolomics ISSN: 1573-3882 Impact factor: 4.290
Fig. 5Schematic overview of study: one bacterial strain under three conditions revealed pleiotropic metabolic effects upon growth whereas two different supplementations result in specific metabolic characteristics
Feature selection from untargeted analysis for metabolite identification and annotation
| Comparisons | Log2 FC | Intensity | # Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| 24 h Fuc/4 h Fuc and 24 h Fuc/24 h Med | ≥ 6 | ≥ 2E6 | 25 |
| 24 h Fuc/4 h Fuc and 24 h Fuc/24 h Med | ≤ − 1.5 | ≥ 2E6 | 7 |
| 24 h Glu/4 h Glu and 24 h Glu/24 h Med | ≥ 1.5 | ≥ 5E6 | 23 |
| 24 h Glu/4 h Glu and 24 h Glu/24 h Med | ≤ − 1.5 | ≥ 2E6 | 9 |
| 24 h Med/4 h Med | ≥ 2 | ≥ 2E6 | 37 |
| 4 h Med/24 h Med | ≤ − 2 | ≥ 2E7 | 13 |
Fig. 1Amino acid analysis using IDEOM identifications to determine Log2 fold changes (mean of triplicate measurements) of amino acid peaks of 24 h compared with 0 h samples for medium only (Med), medium supplemented with fucose (Fuc), and medium supplemented with glutamic acid (Glu). It can be seen that several amino acids are preferably depleted from the medium. Further inspection revealed that aspartic acid, glutamine, methionine, proline, and serine are all completely depleted from the medium within 4 h. Glutamate was depleted under all conditions; in the glutamate-supplemented condition the Log2 fold change is less pronounced due to the glutamate surplus abundance
Fig. 2Upon growth in MEMα medium Campylobacter jejuni excreted a unexpectedly high number of metabolites into the medium. Plotted are the Log2 fold changes of selected metabolites based on 24/4 h non-supplemented MEMα comparison—for all the three conditions Med; non-supplemented MEMα (left), Fuc; fucose-supplemented MEMα (middle), Glu; glutamate-supplemented MEMα (right). It can be observed that most of the metabolite changes occurring upon growth in MEMα medium are similar across the two treatments and control and form a ‘base metabolic response’; however there are some exceptions. Some metabolites were detected in both negative and positive mode; hence their double presence here
Fig. 3Most-differential metabolomic changes upon glutamate supplementation of selected metabolites based on 24/4 h fucose-supplemented and 24 h fucose-supplemented/24 h medium only comparisons. It can be observed that a wide range of acylated amino acids is excreted into the medium. Some metabolites were detected in both negative and positive ionization mode; hence their double presence here
Fig. 4Most-differential metabolomic changes upon fucose supplementation of selected metabolites based on 24/4 h fucose-supplemented and 24 h fucose-supplemented/24 h medium only comparisons with metabolites a released into and b depleted from the medium. c Breakdown products of fucose were also found to be excreted in the medium by Campylobacter, thereby supporting the proposal of Stahl et al. that Campylobacter jejuni possesses a Xanthomonas campestris-like fucose utilisation pathway (Stahl et al. 2011). d Molecular networking provided additional evidence for metabolites detected only upon fucose supplementation of the medium. A number of annotated metabolites were thiazole-containing (the heteroatomic ring depicted). Arrows point towards examples of detected structures