| Literature DB >> 35323654 |
Andressa de Zawadzki1, Maja Thiele2,3, Tommi Suvitaival1, Asger Wretlind1, Min Kim1,4, Mina Ali1, Annette F Bjerre1, Karin Stahr1, Ismo Mattila1, Torben Hansen5, Aleksander Krag2,3, Cristina Legido-Quigley1,6.
Abstract
Feces are the product of our diets and have been linked to diseases of the gut, including Chron's disease and metabolic diseases such as diabetes. For screening metabolites in heterogeneous samples such as feces, it is necessary to use fast and reproducible analytical methods that maximize metabolite detection. As sample preparation is crucial to obtain high quality data in MS-based clinical metabolomics, we developed a novel, efficient and robust method for preparing fecal samples for analysis with a focus in reducing aliquoting and detecting both polar and non-polar metabolites. Fecal samples (n = 475) from patients with alcohol-related liver disease and healthy controls were prepared according to the proposed method and analyzed in an UHPLC-QQQ targeted platform in order to obtain a quantitative profile of compounds that impact liver-gut axis metabolism. MS analyses of the prepared fecal samples have shown reproducibility and coverage of n = 28 metabolites, mostly comprising bile acids and amino acids. We report metabolite-wise relative standard deviation (RSD) in quality control samples, inter-day repeatability, LOD (limit of detection), LOQ (limit of quantification), range of linearity and method recovery. The average concentrations for 135 healthy participants are reported here for clinical applications. Our high-throughput method provides a novel tool for investigating gut-liver axis metabolism in liver-related diseases using a noninvasive collected sample.Entities:
Keywords: bile acids; fecal metabolomics; gut-liver axis; sample preparation; targeted metabolomics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35323654 PMCID: PMC8950041 DOI: 10.3390/metabo12030211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolites ISSN: 2218-1989
Figure 1Scheme of sample preparation of fecal samples for targeted analysis of metabolites related to the gut-liver axis. Created with biorender.
Average concentrations (mmol g−1 of dried sample) and range of concentrations of metabolites of relevance for the gut-liver axis in fecal samples from healthy controls.
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| CA | 0.26 ± 0.35 | 0.07–2.50 | LCA | 2.95 ± 3.02 | 0.08–19.0 |
| CDCA | 8.99 ± 8.98 | 0.22–62.0 | DCA | 10.16 ± 10.04 | 0.05–52.0 |
| TCA | 0.11 ± 0.05 | 0.06–0.45 | GLCA | 0.17 ± 0.44 | 0.10–0.40 |
| TCDCA | 0.21 ± 0.34 | 0–3.20 | TDCA | 0.13 ± 0.21 | 0–1.50 |
| GCA | 0.11 ± 0.12 | 0–0.85 | TUDCA | 0.10 ± 0.09 | 0.02–0.60 |
| GCDCA | 0.16 ± 0.33 | 0–2.30 | GDCA | 0.14 ± 0.23 | 0–2.00 |
| UDCA | BLOQ * | ||||
| GUDCA | BLOQ * | ||||
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| DCA/CA | 38.59 | ||||
| LCA/CDCA | 0.33 | ||||
| TUDCA/CDCA | 0.01 | ||||
| Total ratio | 1.40 | ||||
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| Alanine | 6.49 ± 8.71 | 0.2–58.0 | Kynurenine | 0.60 ± 0.16 | 0.36–1.10 |
| ADMA | BLOQ * | Leucine | 4.15 ± 3.82 | 0.80–26.0 | |
| Citruline | 1.31 ± 1.12 | 0.5–9.0 | Isoleucine | 2.92 ± 2.21 | 1.0–15.0 |
| Glutamine | BLOQ * | Phenylalanine | 2.57 ± 2.51 | 0.8–19.0 | |
| Glutamate | 1.21 v 2.71 | 0.2–28.0 | Taurine | 0.81 ± 2.45 | 0–20.0 |
| Glycine | BLOQ * | Tryptophan | 1.05 ± 0.85 | 0.50–6.50 | |
| Homocitruline | BLOQ * | Tyrosine | 0.17 ± 0.03 | 0.10–0.33 | |
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| AADA | BLOQ * | ||||
| Azelaic acid | 0.50 ± 0.37 | 0.10–2.30 | |||
| β-OHB | 73.58 ± 280.51 | 17.0–355.0 | |||
| GBB | 0.80 ± 0.89 | 0.13–6.20 | |||
| IndS | BLOQ * | ||||
| N-MNA | BLOQ * | ||||
Measured concentrations (mM) were normalized to dried fecal weight (g), and converted to mmol g−1. Values of concentration are presented as mean ± standard deviation. * Determined concentration below limit of quantification (BLOQ).
Figure 2Analytical stability of a targeted UHPLC-MS platform for quantitative analysis of metabolites related to gut-liver axis: γ-butyl butyrate (GBB), tryptophan (Trp), leucine (Leu), cholic acid (CA), taurochendeoxycholic acid (TCDCA) and deoxycholic acid (DCA). Time related variation of metabolite response measured in quality control pooled (pink) samples representing replicates and samples representing a cohort (blue). Interval of variation in QC pooled samples is represented in grey.
Figure 3Violin plots for distribution of metabolite concentrations across human fecal samples representing a cohort with different degrees of liver disease (n = 475) and fecal pooled samples (PO), used as replicates (n = 36) for quality control. Bottom right: PCA scores plot for fecal metabolites in pooled samples and samples from the investigated cohort.