| Literature DB >> 32114632 |
Alaa Abuawad1,2, Chidimma Mbadugha3, Amir M Ghaemmaghami3, Dong-Hyun Kim4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Macrophages constitute a heterogeneous population of functionally distinct cells involved in several physiological and pathological processes. They display remarkable plasticity by changing their phenotype and function in response to environmental cues representing a spectrum of different functional phenotypes. The so-called M1 and M2 macrophages are often considered as representative of pro- and anti-inflammatory ends of such spectrum. Metabolomics approach is a powerful tool providing important chemical information about the cellular phenotype of living systems, and the changes in their metabolic pathways in response to various perturbations.Entities:
Keywords: LC–MS; Macrophage polarisation; Metabolic pathway analysis; Metabolite profiling; THP-1 cell
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32114632 PMCID: PMC7049298 DOI: 10.1007/s11306-020-01656-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolomics ISSN: 1573-3882 Impact factor: 4.290
Fig. 1Functional categories of the intracellular metabolites produced by THP-1 macrophages. In total, 644 metabolites were putatively identified in THP-1 macrophage extracts using LC–MS-based metabolite profiling
Fig. 2OPLS-DA scores plots of macrophage extracts after polarisation toward M1 and M2 states and their corresponding unpolarised (M0) controls. a M1 and M2 macrophage samples and their respective unpolarised controls (R2 = 0.647 and Q2 = 0.847). b Two-way orthogonal comparison between M0 and M1 (R2 = 0.664 and Q2 = 0.899). c Two-way orthogonal comparison between M0 and M2 (R2 = 0.711 and Q2 = 0.838). M0 (yellow circles), M1 (blue squares), and M2 (purple triangles). n = 6
The significant metabolites in THP-1 macrophages upon polarisation into M1 and M2
| Putative metabolite | Exact mass | RT (min) | Formula | PubChem ID | ID confidence | Polarization state | Fold change | FDR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5-Hydroxy- | 220.0847 | 9.21 | C11H12N2O3 | 439280 | L3 | M1 | 15.44 | 4.12E−06 |
| Cer (d18:1/22:1) | 619.5899 | 5.03 | C40H77NO3 | 53481052 | L3 | M1 | 4.77 | 0.0002 |
| Cytidine | 243.0854 | 11.26 | C9H13N3O5 | 6175 | L2 | M1 | 3.74 | 0.0029 |
| C14 Ceramide | 509.4806 | 5.12 | C32H63NO3 | 5282310 | L3 | M1 | 3.45 | 6.36E−05 |
| Ceramide (d18:1/16:0) | 537.5120 | 5.10 | C34H67NO3 | 5283564 | L3 | M1 | 3.96 | 0.0012 |
| Ceramide (d18:1/18:0) | 565.5435 | 5.10 | C36H71NO3 | 53481047 | L3 | M1 | 4.73 | 0.0156 |
| Ceramide (d18:1/22:0) | 621.6068 | 5.10 | C40H79NO3 | 53481048 | L3 | M1 | 6.84 | 0.0122 |
| Ceramide (d18:1/24:0) | 649.6385 | 5.10 | C42H83NO3 | 5283576 | L3 | M1 | 5.76 | 0.0128 |
| 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl) pyruvate | 180.0423 | 8.52 | C9H8O4 | 5318321 | L3 | M2 | 2.19 | 0.0024 |
| 3-Dehydroxycarnitine | 145.1103 | 6.15 | C7H15NO2 | 725 | L3 | M2 | 3.47 | 0.0078 |
| 4-Imidazolone-5-propanoate | 156.0534 | 9.76 | C6H8N2O3 | 128 | L3 | M2 | 2.08 | 6.3E−05 |
| Alpha-CEHC | 278.1517 | 4.65 | C16H22O4 | 9943542 | L3 | M2 | 2.67 | 6.3E−05 |
| Ala-Ala | 160.0847 | 8.59 | C6H12N2O3 | 5460362 | L3 | M2 | 1.94 | 0.0023 |
| 175.0480 | 11.16 | C6H9NO5 | 65065 | L3 | M2 | 1.07 | 0.0065 | |
| 189.0636 | 10.85 | C7H11NO5 | 185 | L2 | M2 | 3.57 | 0.0046 | |
| PC(O-14:0/16:0) | 691.5514 | 5.27 | C38H78NO7P | 24779275 | L3 | M2 | 2.12 | 0.0076 |
| PC(P-20:0/0:0) | 535.3997 | 5.66 | C28H58NO6P | 52924063 | L3 | M2 | 3.99 | 0.0139 |
| 218.1055 | 6.34 | C12H14N2O2 | 903 | L3 | M1/M2 | 6.78/3.04 | 0.001/0.017 |
(+) indicates the metabolite increase upon polarisation. M1 and M2 indicate the polarisation states. ID confidence represents the level of metabolite identification based on (Schymanski et al. 2014; Sumner et al. 2014, 2007). Ala-AlaD-Alanyl-l-Alanine, N-Ac-L-AspN-acetyl-l-aspartate, N-Ac-L-GluN-acetyl-l-glutamate
Fig. 3Summary of pathway analysis by MetaboAnalyst. The top-pathways are ranked by the gamma-adjusted p values for permutation per pathway (y-axis) and the total number of hits per pathway (x-axis). The colour graduated from white to yellow, orange and red as the values of both x and y increase. a Metabolic pathways significantly changed in M1 macrophages. b Metabolic pathways significantly changed in M2 macrophages
Fig. 4GLs and sphingolipids that significantly affected upon polarisation. a PC (14:2/16:0), b PS (18:0/20:4), and c PE (18:1/22:6) represent some GLs increased significantly in M1 or M2 macrophages compared to M0 macrophages. d Ceramide (d18:1/24:0), e Ceramide (d18:1/22:0) and f Ceramide (d18:1/16:0) as potential key characteristic metabolites of M1 macrophages and their significant increase compared to M0 and M2 macrophages
Fig. 5Significant metabolic pathways upon polarisation of THP-1 macrophages toward M1 and M2 states with bar graphs of key metabolites that significantly changed, the other metabolites either identified with no significant change (pyruvate, citrate, G6P, glutamate, ornithine and arginine) or unidentified. Metabolic enzymes are as follows; 1: pyruvate dehydrogenase, 2: pyruvate carboxylase, 3: glutamate-aspartate aminotransferase, 4: l-aspartate N-acetyltransferase, 5: N-acetylglutamate synthetase, 6: formiminoglutamase, 7: imidazolonepropionase, 8: tryptophan 5-monooxygenase, 9: arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase, 10: ornithine aminotransferase, 11: arginase-1, 12: ribosylpyrimidine nucleosidase, 13: pyrimidine-nucleoside phosphorylase. G6P: glucose 6-phosphate, PRPP: 5-phosphoribosyl 1-pyrophosphate, F6P: fructose 6-phosphate. The bar charts show the peak intensity (y-axis) of corresponding metabolites, from the top to the bottom and left to right (cytidine, N-Ac-l-Asp, N-Ac-l-Glu, 4-imidazolone-5-propanoate, 5-hydroxy-tryptophan and N-acetylserotonine). M0 in yellow, M1 in blue and M2 in purple