| Literature DB >> 33137934 |
Francisco J Rupérez1, Gabriel Á Martos-Moreno2,3,4,5, David Chamoso-Sánchez1, Coral Barbas1, Jesús Argente2,3,4,5,6.
Abstract
The evolution of obesity and its resulting comorbidities differs depending upon the age of the subject. The dramatic rise in childhood obesity has resulted in specific needs in defining obesity-associated entities with this disease. Indeed, even the definition of obesity differs for pediatric patients from that employed in adults. Regardless of age, one of the earliest metabolic complications observed in obesity involves perturbations in glucose metabolism that can eventually lead to type 2 diabetes. In children, the incidence of type 2 diabetes is infrequent compared to that observed in adults, even with the same degree of obesity. In contrast, insulin resistance is reported to be frequently observed in children and adolescents with obesity. As this condition can be prerequisite to further metabolic complications, identification of biological markers as predictive risk factors would be of tremendous clinical utility. Analysis of obesity-induced modifications of the adipokine profile has been one classic approach in the identification of biomarkers. Recent studies emphasize the utility of metabolomics in the analysis of metabolic characteristics in children with obesity with or without insulin resistance. These studies have been performed with targeted or untargeted approaches, employing different methodologies. This review summarizes some of the advances in this field while emphasizing the importance of the different techniques employed.Entities:
Keywords: adipokine; childhood; insulin resistance; metabolomics; obesity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33137934 PMCID: PMC7692749 DOI: 10.3390/nu12113310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Metabolomic studies about obesity, insulin resistance or type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in children.
| Methodology | Instrumental Analysis | Disease | Study Design | Sample | Findings | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Untargeted | LC-MS, CE-MS, GC-MS | Obesity and IR | Fingerprinting study: | Serum | IR vs non-IR: | [ |
|
Inflammation, central carbon metabolism and gut microbiota are the most altered processes. Increased BCAA, ArAAs, Ala, Pro, Pyr, taurodeoxycholate, glycodeoxycholate, piperidine, pyroglutamate. In females, increased free carnitine, propionylcarnitine and butyrylcarnitine, but in males only propionylcarnitine. | ||||||
| Untargeted | LC-MS/MS | Metabolic Risk | Boys ( | Serum | Metabolic Risk: | [ |
|
Positive association of DG(16:0/16:0), 1,3-dielaidin, myo-inositol, and urate. Inverse association of thymine, dodecenedioic acid, and | ||||||
| In boys:: | ||||||
|
Positive associations of BCAA, DG(16:0/16:0), tyrosine, and 5′-methylthioadenosine. | ||||||
| Untargeted | NMR | IR | Cross sectional study: | Plasma | Higher baseline 2-hydroxybutyrate and BCAA levels in insulin resistant youth and predict worsening of glycemic control | [ |
| Untargeted | NMR | IR | 170 healthy normal weight children | Serum | IR higher in girls than in boys. | [ |
| Semi-targeted | LC-MS/MS, GC-MS | Obesity | Obese ( | Plasma | OB vs NW: | [ |
|
Increased BCAA (Val, Leu, Ile) and androgen hormones (DHEA-S). | ||||||
| Semi-targeted | LC-MS/MS, GC-MS | Obesity and IR | Hispanic children | Plasma | OB vs NOB: | [ |
|
Increased BCAA and acylcarnitine catabolism and changes in nucleotides, lysolipids, steroid derivatives and inflammation markers. Reduced fatty acid catabolism. BCAAs, ArAAs, aspartate, dipeptides, citrate, asparagine, glycine and serine is associated with risk factors for IR, hyperleptinemia, hypertriglyceridemia, hyperuricemia and inflammation. | ||||||
| Semi-targeted | LC-MS/MS, GC-MS | Obesity | Longitudinal study for 5 years: | Plasma | BCAA is not associated with worsening metabolic health during early adolescence. | [ |
| Targeted | LC-MS/MS, GC-MS | Obesity and IR | 100 prepubertal obese children. | Serum | IR vs non-IR: | [ |
|
Higher ALT, GPT and TAG levels Higher leptin and reduce leptin/adiponectin ratio Increase BCAA, ArAAs (Phe, Tyr and Trp), and Ala The most altered pathway is the urea cycle, alanine metabolism and the glucose-alanine cycle. C12 acylcarnitine and methionine correlate with HOMA-IR exclusively in males | ||||||
| Targeted | MS/MS | Obesity and T2D | Case-control: | Plasma | T2D vs OB/NW: | [ |
|
Decreased BCAA. | ||||||
| T2D/OB vs NW: | ||||||
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No difference in long-chain AcylCN Reduced short and medium-chain AcycCN No defects in fatty acid or amino acid metabolism | ||||||
| No differences in fasting FFA levels | ||||||
| Targeted | MS/MS | Obesity, IR and T2D | Case-control: | Plasma | BCAA and BCAA intermediates correlated: positively with insulin sensitivity and DI | [ |
| Targeted | LC-MS/MS | Obesity and IR | Cross sectional study: | Plasma | OB vs NW: | [ |
|
Increased BCAA Increased BCAA not associated with measures of insulin resistance at baseline. Baseline BCAAs predicted HOMA-IR at 18 months. Elevations in the concentrations of BCAAs were associated with reduced insulin sensitivity at 12 months. | ||||||
| Targeted | MS/MS | Obesity and IR | Cross-sectional study: | Plasma | BCAA levels and by products of BCAA catabolism are higher in males than females with similar BMI. | [ |
|
Positively: BMI z-score, BCAA, uric acid, long-chain acyl-carnitines Negatively: fatty-acid oxidation products | ||||||
| In females, HOMA-IR correlated: | ||||||
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Positively: BMI z-score | ||||||
| Adiponectin correlated inversely with BCAA and uric acid in males, but not females | ||||||
| Targeted | LC-MS/MS | Obesity and IR | Identify biomarkers predictive of future disease risk- | Plasma | Baseline BCAA concentration as a predictor of future risk of insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome | [ |
|
Increased levels of BCAA, Tyr, Phe, 2-AAA and several acyl-carnitines Lower levels of acyl-alkyl phosphatidylcholines | ||||||
| Targeted | MS/MS | Obesity and IR | Longitudinal study: | Serum | Tyr was the only metabolite significantly associated with HOMA-IR at baseline and after 1-year intervention. | [ |
| Targeted | MS/MS | Obesity and IR | 430 control (13–15 years). | Plasma | Accumulation of ADMA is associated with modulation of insulin signaling and insulin resistance. | [ |
| Targeted | MS/MS, LC-MS/MS | Obesity and IR | Meta-analysis 1020 pre-pubertal children from three European studies. | Plasma |
Positive association of SM (32:2) with BMI z-score. SM 32:2 as a potential molecular marker for mechanistic alterations involved in the pathogenesis of obesity. Ala and Tyr was associated positively with HOMA-IR. Acylcarnitines and non-esterified fatty acids were negatively associated with HOMA. | [ |
| Targeted | GC-MS | Obesity and IR | 20 obese with IR | Urine | The steroidal signature IR vs non-IR: | [ |
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High adrenal androgens, glucocorticoids and mineralocorticoid metabolites Higher 5α-reductase and 21-hidroxylase activity Lower 11bHSD1 activity | ||||||
| The authors suggest a vicious cycle model, whereby glucocorticoids induce IR. | ||||||
| Targeted | MS/MS | Obesity and Metabolic Risk | Non-OW/OB and low MetRisk ( | Plasma | Lower levels of LCFA in non-OW/OB with high MetRisk and OW/OB with high MetRisk compared to mon-OW/OB with low MetRisk. | [ |
Abbreviations: 11bHSD1: 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1; 2-AAA: alpha amino adipic acid; AcylCN: acylcarnitines; ADMA: asymmetric dimethylarginine; Ala: alanine; ALT: alanine transaminase; ArAAs: aromatic amino acids; BCAA: branched chain amino acids; BMI: body mass index; CE-MS: capillary electrophoresis – mass spectrometry; CRP: C-reactive protein; DAG: diacylglycerides; DG: diglyceride; DI: disposition index; GC-MS: gas chromatography – mass spectrometry; GPT: gamma-glutamyltransferase; HOMA-IR: homeostatic model assessment – insulin resistance; IR: insulin resistance; LCFA: long-chain fatty acids; LC-MS: liquid chromatography – mass spectrometry; NMR: nuclear magnetic resonance; NOB: non obese; NW: normal weight; OB: obese; OW: overweight; Phe: phenylalanine; Pro: proline; Pyr: pyruvate; SM: sphingomyelin; T2D: type 2 diabetes; TAG: triacylglycerides; Trp: tryptophan; Tyr: tyrosine.