4.7 Article

Importance of Sulfur-Containing Metabolites in Discriminating Fecal Extracts between Normal and Type-2 Diabetic Mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages 4220-4231

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/pr500046b

Keywords

type-2 diabetes; db/db mice; metabolomics; high-resolution mass spectrometry; meta-metabolome; sulfur-containing metabolites; FT-ICR-MS

Funding

  1. German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD)
  2. Ministry of Education and Research of the Federal Republic of Germany (BMBF) [0315494A]
  3. German Mouse Clinic: NGFN-Plus [01GS0850]
  4. Infrafrontier [01KX1012]

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A metabolic disorder such as Type-2 Diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a complex disease induced by genetic environmental, and nutritional factors. The db/db mouse model, bearing a nonfunctional leptin receptor, is widely used to investigate the pathophysiology of T2DM. Fecal extracts of db/db and wild-type littermates were studied to unravel a broad spectrum of new and relevant metabolites related to T2DM as proxies of the interplay of gut microbiome and murine metabolomes. The nontargeted metabolomics approach consists of an integrated analytical concept of high-resolution mass spectrometry FT-ICR-MS, followed by UPLC-TOF-MS/MS experiments. We demonstrate that a metabolic disorder such as T2DM affects the gastrointestinal tract environment, thereby influencing different metabolic pathways and their respective mtabolites in diabetic mice. Fatty acids, bile acids concerning cholic and deoxycholic acid, and steroid metabolism were highly discriminative comparing fecal meta-metabolomes of wt and db/db mice. Furthermore, sulfur (S)-containing metabolites including N-acyl taurines were altered in diabetic mice, enabling us to focus on S-containing metabolies, especially the sulfate and taurine conjugates of bile and fatty acids. Different significantly altered diabetic mice. Moreover, we identified 12 new sulfate and taurine conjugates of hydroxylated fatty acids with significant importance in T2DM metabolism in db/db mice.

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