| Literature DB >> 34959800 |
Laura Mayo-Martínez1, Francisco J Rupérez1, Gabriel Á Martos-Moreno2,3,4,5, Montserrat Graell6,7, Coral Barbas1, Jesús Argente2,3,4,5,8, Antonia García1.
Abstract
Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a mental disorder characterized by an intense fear of weight gain that affects mainly young women. It courses with a negative body image leading to altered eating behaviors that have devastating physical, metabolic, and psychological consequences for the patients. Although its origin is postulated to be multifactorial, the etiology of AN remains unknown, and this increases the likelihood of chronification and relapsing. Thus, expanding the available knowledge on the pathophysiology of AN is of enormous interest. Metabolomics is proposed as a powerful tool for the elucidation of disease mechanisms and to provide new insights into the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of AN. A review of the literature related to studies of AN patients by employing metabolomic strategies to characterize the main alterations associated with the metabolic phenotype of AN during the last 10 years is described. The most common metabolic alterations are derived from chronic starvation, including amino acid, lipid, and carbohydrate disturbances. Nonetheless, recent findings have shifted the attention to gut-microbiota metabolites as possible factors contributing to AN development, progression, and maintenance. We have identified the areas of ongoing research in AN and propose further perspectives to improve our knowledge and understanding of this disease.Entities:
Keywords: anorexia; mass spectrometry; metabolic phenotype; metabolism; metabolomics; microbiota
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34959800 PMCID: PMC8706417 DOI: 10.3390/nu13124249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Main factors predisposing to the development of anorexia nervosa [21,22].
Metabolomics studies on AN in human.
| Methodology | Instrumental Analysis | Sample | Study Design | Findings | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Targeted | FIA-MS/MS | Serum | Evaluation of the metabolic profile of patients during weight recovery. |
Mild hyper aminoacidemia in patients Increased AC, PC, and SM in patients at different time points Lower sum of hexoses in patients compared to controls FDR | [ |
| Targeted | FIA-MS/MS | Serum | Comparison of the metabolic profile of acute patients and short-term weight recovered patients. |
Mild hyper aminoacidemia in patients Altered lipidic profile: increased AC, LPC and PC, and SM in patients Increased hexoses in patients FDR | [ |
| Targeted | LC-MS/MS | Plasma | Analysis of one-carbon metabolism in AN-R and AN-BP patients, in recovered AN patients, and healthy controls. |
Increased B12 and betaine in AN active patients compared to controls No differences in choline and Met FDR | [ |
| Targeted | GC-MS (SIM) | Serum | Changes in BMI, and psychopathology and steroid metabolome profiling in AN patients before and after hospitalization. |
Increased 20α-dihydro-pregnenolone sulfate and pregnenolone sulfate after treatment 5-androstene-3β,7β,17β-triol, 7β-OH-DHEA, epietiocholanolone, and epipregnanolone were decreased after renourishment | [ |
| Untargeted | UPLC-MS | Serum | Comparison of the metabolic profile of AN-R patients with age-matching healthy controls. |
Lower amino acidic levels in patients Decreased AC in patients Lower levels of cis-aconitate, betaine, choline, methyl-2-oxovalerate, and oxovalerate Increased N-phenylacetylglutamine and guanidinosuccinate FDR | [ |
| Untargeted | GC-MS | Plasma | Multiomics study of AN (genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics). Multiplatform metabolomics study of the lipidome and eicosanoid metabolome of acute AN patients, recovered patients, and healthy controls. |
EPHX2 genetic variation is associated with AN development The activity of sEH is elevated in AN compared to controls AN present altered postprandial metabolism of PUFAs and sEH-dependent eicosanoids | [ |
| Untargeted | GC-MS | Plasma | Evaluation of the lipidomic profile of AN patients compared to healthy controls and recovered patients. |
Increased n-3 and n-6 PUFAs Decreased n-3: n-6 ratios in AN Increased oxylipins from CYP450 pathway | [ |
| Untargeted | 1H NMR | Feces | Multiomics approach for analyzing the intestinal microbiota and its metabolites in patients before and after treatment compared to healthy controls. |
Acetate is decreased before and after treatment Butyrate is decreased in acute patients but increases with renourishment therapy Propionate is lower after treatment and presents no difference in acute patients Decreased dopamine and GABA in acute patients compared to controls Decreased serotonin in recovered patients FDR | [ |
| Untargeted | 1H NMR | Serum | Metabolome profiling of acute AN patients, recovered patients, and healthy controls. |
Gln is higher in acute patients when compared to controls and recovered patients, with no difference between the last two groups Thr is increased only in recovered patients when compared with the acute patients Ala, Gly, Pro, and Ser showed no differences between groups FDR | [ |
| Untargeted | GC-MS | Plasma | Evaluation of the fatty acid profile after renourishment therapy in AN patients. |
DPA, EPA, and laurate were increased at fasting compared to controls ALA was increased at both time points compared to controls FDR | [ |
| Untargeted | GC-MS | Feces | Comparison of metabolic profiles of patients in an acute state, after recovery, and healthy controls. |
Higher Phe in patients after treatment Higher laurate, hydroxy stearate, and stearate in acute patients Lower fucose, rhamnose, and xylose in acute patients FDR | [ |
| Untargeted | GC-MS | Feces | Analysis of the microbiome and the metabolome of AN patients before and after treatment compared to healthy controls. |
Lower Asp, Met, Phe, and Ser in AN patients before and after weight recovery Lower Leu only in acute patients compared to controls Lower fucose, rhamnose, and xylose in patients and their values are restored after treatment Lower arabinose and tagatose in acute patients and increased levels after therapy FDR | [ |
| Untargeted | GC-MS | Feces | Evaluation of the microbiome and the metabolic profile of AN-R and AN-BP patients and healthy controls. |
Lower pyro-Glu, Ile, Leu, and Val in AN-R and AN-BP Lower Thr and Tyr in AN-R Lower palmitate in AN-R and AN-BP Lower glycerol in AN-R Lower allose, arabinose, lactose, rhamnose, scyllo-inositol, sorbose, tagatose, and xylose in AN-R and AN-BP Lower malate in AN-R and AN-BP Lower succinate in AN-R FDR | [ |
Figure 2Summary of the main metabolomic alterations found in plasma or serum samples from AN patients in the included studies. Altered pathways: (A) glycolysis and gluconeogenesis, (B) methionine and cysteine metabolism, (C) serine and glycine metabolism, (D) lipid metabolism, (E) urea cycle, (F) tricarboxylate cycle, (G) phenylalanine and tyrosine metabolism, (H) glutamate, glutamine, proline and histidine metabolism, (I) branched-chain amino acids metabolism, (J) serotonin pathway, (K) kynurenine pathway, (L) indole pathway, (M) tryptophan metabolism. Metabolites: (1) glucose, (2) pyruvate, (3) alanine, (4) taurine, (5) serine, (6) glycine, (7) methionine, (8) citrate, (9) cis-aconitate, (10) isocitrate, (11) succinate, (12) malate, (13) asparagine, (14) ornithine, (15) arginine, (16) guanidinosuccinate, (17) p-cresyl sulfate, (18) tyrosine, (19) phenylalanine, (20) phenylacetylglutamine, (21) phenylacetate, (22) hippurate, (23) tryptophan, (24) indole-3-acetate, (25) indoxyl sulfate, (26) glutamate, (27) glutamine, (28) histidine, (29) proline, (30) fatty acids, (31) phosphatidylcholines, (32) lysophosphatidylcholines, (33) sphingomyelins, (34) acylcarnitines, (35) oxylipins, (36) leucine, (37) isoleucine.