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Metabolomics: The Basics The Pyramid of Life Metabolomics 1400 Chemicals Proteomics 2500 Enzymes Genomics 25,000 Genes Metabolomics Primary Molecules Secondary Molecules Chemical Fingerprint Metabonomics & Metabolomics • Metabonomics:The quantitative measurement of the time-related “total” metabolic response of vertebrates to pathophysiological (nutritional, xenobiotic, surgical or toxic stimuli) • Metabolomics:The quantitative measurement of the metabolic profiles of model organisms to characterize their phenotype or phenotypic response to genetic or nutritional perturbations Metabolomics Is Growing Growth in Metabolomics 200 180 160 120 100 80 60 40 20 Year 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 0 1998 # References 140 What is a Metabolite? • Any organic molecule detectable in the body with a MW < 1000 Da • Includes peptides, oligonucleotides, sugars, nucelosides, organic acids, ketones, aldehydes, amines, amino acids, lipids, steroids, alkaloids and drugs (xenobiotics) • Includes human & microbial products • Concentration > 1mM Why 1 mM? • Equals ~200 ng/mL • Limit of detection by NMR • Limit of facile isolation/separation by many analytical methods • Excludes environmental pollutants • Most IEM indicators and other disease indicators have concentrations >1 mM • Need to draw the line somewhere Why Are Metabolites Relevant? Metabolites are the Canaries of the Genome Why is Metabolomics Relevant? • • • • • • • • Generate metabolic “signatures” Monitor/measure metabolite flux Monitor enzyme/pathway kinetics Assess/identify phenotypes Monitor gene/environment interactions Track effects from toxins/drugs/surgery Monitor consequences from gene KOs Identify functions of unknown genes Medical Metabolomics • Generate metabolic “signatures” for disease states or host responses • Obtain a more “holistic” view of metabolism (and treatment) • Accelerate assessment & diagnosis • More rapidly and accurately (and cheaply) assess/identify disease phenotypes • Monitor gene/environment interactions • Rapidly track effects from drugs/surgery Traditional Metabolite Analysis HPLC, GC, CE, MS Problems with Traditional Methods • Requires separation followed by identification (coupled methodology) • Requires optimization of separation conditions each time • Often requires multiple separations • Slow (up to 72 hours per sample) • Manually intensive (constant supervision, high skill, tedious) What’s the Difference Between Metabolomics and Traditional Clinical Chemistry? Throughput (more metabolites, greater accuracy, higher speed) New Metabolomics Approaches Advantages • Measure multiple (10’s to 100’s) of metabolites at once – no separation!! • Allows metabolic profiles or “fingerprints” to be generated • Mostly automated, relatively little sample preparation or derivitization • Can be quantitative (esp. NMR) • Analysis & results in < 60 s NMR versus MS • Quantitative, fast • Requires no work up or separation • Allows ID of 300+ cmpds at once • Good for CHO’s • Not sensitive • Needs MS or 2D NMR for positive ID • Very fast • Very sensitive • Allows analysis or ID of 3000+ cmpds at once • Not quantitative • Not good for CHOs • Requires work-up • Needs NMR for ID 2 Routes to Metabolomics ppm 7 6 5 4 Quantitative Methods 3 2 Chemometric (Pattern) Methods 25 TMAO hippurate allantoin creatinine taurine 1 PC2 20 creatinine 15 10 citrate ANIT 5 hippurate urea 2-oxoglutarate water succinate fumarate 0 -5 -10 ppm 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Control -15 PAP -20 -25 -30 PC1 -20 -10 0 10 Quantitative vs. Chemometric • Identifies compounds • Quantifies compds • Concentration range of 1 mM to 1 M • Handles wide range of samples/conditions • Allows identification of diagnostic patterns • Limited by DB size • No compound ID • No compound conc. • No compound concentration range • Requires strict sample uniformity • Allows identification of diagnostic patterns • Limited by training set Principles of Quantitative Metabolomics Mixture Compound A Compound B Compound C Quantitative Metabolomics with Eclipse Sample Compound List • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • (+)-(-)-Methylsuccinic Acid 2,5-Dihydroxyphenylacetic Acid 2-hydroxy-3-methylbutyric acid 2-Oxoglutaric acid 3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaric acid 3-Indoxyl Sulfate 5-Hydroxyindole-3-acetic Acid Acetamide Acetic Acid Acetoacetic Acid Acetone Acetyl-L-carnitine Alpha-Glucose Alpha-ketoisocaproic acid Benzoic Acid Betaine Beta-Lactose Citric Acid Creatine Creatinine D(-)Fructose D-(+)-Glyceric Acid D(+)-Xylose Dimethylamine DL-B-Aminoisobutyric Acid • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • DL-Carnitine DL-Citrulline DL-Malic Acid Ethanol Formic Acid Fumaric Acid Gamma-Amino-N-Butyric Acid Gamma-Hydroxybutyric Acid Gentisic Acid Glutaric acid Glycerol Glycine Glycolic Acid Hippuric acid Homovanillic acid Hypoxanthine Imidazole Inositol isovaleric acid L(-) Fucose L-alanine L-asparagine L-aspartic acid L-Histidine L-homocitrulline • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • L-Isoleucine L-Lactic Acid L-Lysine L-Methionine L-phenylalanine L-Serine L-Threonine L-Valine Malonic Acid Methylamine Mono-methylmalonate N,N-dimethylglycine N-Butyric Acid Pimelic Acid Propionic Acid Pyruvic Acid Salicylic acid Sarcosine Succinic Acid Sucrose Taurine trans-4-hydroxy-L-Proline Trimethylamine Trimethylamine-N-Oxide Urea Metabolic Profiling: The Possibilities • Toxicology Testing • Genetic Disease Tests • Clinical Trial Testing • Nutritional Analysis • Fermentation Monitoring • Clinical Blood Analysis • Food & Beverage Tests • Clinical Urinalysis • Nutraceutical Analysis • Cholesterol Testing • Drug Phenotyping • Drug Compliance • Water Quality Testing • Dialysis Monitoring • Organ Transplantation • MRS and fMRI Metabolomics and Drug Toxicology 25 PAP PC2 20 15 10 ANIT 5 ANIT 0 -5 Control -10 Control -15 PAP -20 PC1 -25 -30 -20 -10 Principal Component Analysis 0 10 Disease Diagnosis via NMR (140+ Detectable Conditions) Adenine Phosphoribosyltransferase Deficency Adenylosuccinase Deficiency Alcaptonuria a-Aminoadipic Aciduria b-Aminoisobutyric Aciduria a-Aminoketoadipic Aciduria Anorexia Nervosa Argininemia Argininosuccinic Aciduria Aspartylglycosaminuria Asphyxia Biopterin Disorders Biotin-responsive Multiple Carboxylase Deficiency Canavan’s Disease Carcinoid Syndrome Carnosinemia Cerebrotendinous Xanthomatosis/sterol 27hydroxylaseDeficiency Citrullinemia Cystathioninemia Cystinosis Cystinuria (Hypercystinuria) Diabetes Dibasic Aminoaciduria Dicarboxylic Aminoaciduria Dichloromethane Ingestion Dihydrolipoyl Dehydrogenase Deficiency Dihydropyrimidine Dehydrogenase Deficiency Dimethylglycine Dehydrogenase Deficiency Essential Fructosuria Ethanolaminosis Ethylmalonic Aciduria Familial Iminoglycinuria Fanconi’s Syndrome Folate Disorder Fructose Intolerance Fulminant Hepatitis Fumarase Deficiency Galactosemia Glucoglycinuria Glutaric Aciduria Types 1 & 2 Glutathionuria Glyceroluria (GKD) D-Glyceric Aciduria GuanidinoacetateMethyltransferase Deficiency Hartnup Disorder Hawkinsinuria Histidinemia Histidinuria Homocystinsufonuria Homocystinuria 4-Hydroxybutyric Aciduria 2-Hydroxyglutaric Aciduria Hydroxykynureninuria Hydroxylysinemia Hydroxylysinuria 3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaric Aciduria 3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-Co A Lyase Deficiency Hydroxyprolinemia Hyperalaninemia Hyperargininemia (Argininemia) Hyperglycinuria Hyperleucine-Isoleucinemia Hyperlysinemia Hyperornithinemia HyperornithinemiaHyperammonemia-Homocitrullinuria Syndrome (HHH) Hyperoxaluria Types I & 2 Hyperphenylalaninemia Hyperprolinemia Hyperthreoninemia Applications in Clinical Analysis • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 14 propionic acidemia 11 methylmalonic aciduria 11 cystinuria 6 alkaptonuria 4 glutaric aciduria I 3 pyruvate decarboxylase deficiency 3 ketosis 3 Hartnup disorder 3 cystinosis 3 neuroblastoma 3 phenylketonuria 3 ethanol toxicity 3 glycerol kinase deficiency 3 HMG CoA lyase deficiency 2 carbamoyl PO4 synthetase deficiency • 96% sensitivity and 100% specificity in ID of abnormal from normal by metabolite concentrations • 95.5% sensitivity and 92.4% specificity in ID of disease or condition by characteristic metabolite concentrations • 120 sec per sample Clinical Chemistry 47, 1918-1921 (2001). Applications in Metabolite Imaging Lactate N-acetyl-aspartate Glutamate Citrate Alanine Normal Below Normal Above Norrmal Absent Patient 1 Patient 2 Patient 3 Patient 4 Patient 5 Patient 6 Patient 7 Patient 8 Patient 9 Patient 10 Patient 11 Patient 12 Patient 13 Patient 14 Patient 15 Acetic Acid Betaine Carnitine Citric Acid Creatinine Dimethylglycine Dimethylamine Hippulric Acid Lactic Acid Succinic Acid Trimethylamine Trimn-N-Oxide Urea Lactose Suberic Acid Sebacic Acid Homovanillic Acid Threonine Alanine Glycine Glucose Metabolic Microarrays Metabolomics and IVF http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhDb0rq0MLw Why Metabolomics For Transplants? • Relatively non-invasive (no need for biopsy, just collect urine, blood or bile) • Can be quite organ specific • Very fast (<60 s for an answer) & cheap • Metabolic changes happen in seconds, gene, protein and tissue changes happen in minutes, hours or days • Allows easy longitudinal monitoring of patient (or organ) function (pre&post op) Applications In Transplantation Organ Condition Metabolite(s) Increased Metabolite(s) Decreased Kidney (Human) Chronic Renal Failure TMAO, Dimethylamine, Urea, Creatinine (serum) Kidney (Rat) Renal Damage (chemical) Acetone, Lactate, Ethanol, Succinate, TMAO, Dimethylamine, Taurine (urine & serum) Kidney (Human) Graft Dysfunction TMAO, Dimetheylamine Lactate, Acetate, Succinate, Glycine, Alanine, (urine) Kidney (Rat) Graft Dysfunction Reperfusion Injury TMAO, Citrate, Lactate, Dimetheylamine, Acetate (urine) Kidney (Rat) Reperfusion Injury (ischemia) TMAO, Allantoin (serum) Kidney (Human) Graft Dysfunction CsA toxicity TMAO, Alanine, Lactate, Citrate (urine & serum) Kidney (Mouse) Nephrectomy Methionine, Citrulline, Arginine, Alanine (urine & serum) Serine (serum) Kidney (Mouse) Nephrectomy Guanidinosuccinate, Guanidine, Creatinine, Guanidinovalearate, (urine & serum) Guanidinoacetate (urine) Kidney (Human) Acute Rejection Citrate, Glucose, Urea Allantoin (urine & serum) Nitrates, Nitrites, Nitric oxide metabolites (urine) Applications In Transplantation Organ Condition Metabolite(s) Increased Metabolite(s) Decreased Liver (Rat) Reperfusion Injury Citrate, Succinate, Ketone bodies (good function) Citrate, Succinate, Ketone bodies (poor function) Liver (Human) Ischemia Methylarginine Dimethylarginine (liver catheter) Liver (Human) Graft Dysfunction Glutamine (serum & urine) Liver (Human) Post-transplant Phosphatidylcholine (bile) Heart (Human) Rejection Nitrate (urine) Heart (Human) Rejection General lipids, Lipoproteins, VLDL, LDL, Phosphatidylcholine (serum) Heart (Mouse) Acute Rejection Phosphocreatine, PO4 (in vivo) Heart (Human) Ischemia Phosphocreatine, PO4 (in vivo) Heart (Human) Congestive Heart Failure N-acetylaspartate, Creatine, Choline Myo-inositol (in vivo) Urea (urine) 2 2 Metabolites & Function • Serum Creatinine – Late stage organ stress and tissue breakdown • TMAO – Early stage buffering response • Creatine, methyl-histidine, taurine, glycine – Tissue damage, muscle breakdown, remodelling • Citrate, lactate, acetate, acetone – Oxidative stress, apoptosis, anoxia, ischemia • Histamine, chlorotyrosine, thromoxane, NO3 – Immune response, inflammation Why NOT Metabolomics For Transplants? • Still an early stage technology – not “ready for prime time” • Metabolites are not always organ specific and not always as informative as protein or gene measures • Still defining signature metabolites and their meaning • Still don’t have a complete list of human metabolites Human Metabolome Project • Purpose is to facilitate Metabolomics • Objective is to improve – Disease identification – Disease prognosis & prediction – Disease monitoring – Drug metabolism and toxicology – Linkage between metabolome & genome – Development of software for metabolomics Concluding Comments • Metabolomics is rapidly becoming the “new clinical chemistry” • Metabolomics complements genomics, proteomics and histology • Metabolomics allows probing of rapid physiological changes or events that are not as easily detected by microarrays or histological methods • Canada is actually leading the way (at least for now) in this field