4.8 Article

? Evaluation of the Use of Saliva Metabolome as a Surrogate of Blood Metabolome in Assessing Internal Exposures to Traffic-Related Air Pollution

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 10, Pages 6525-6536

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c00064

Keywords

traffic-related air pollution; high-resolution metabolomics; blood metabolome; saliva metabolome; pathway analysis; metabolic perturbations

Funding

  1. Health Effects Institute [4942-RFA13-1/14-3]
  2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency STAR [R834799]
  3. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [P30ES019776]
  4. National Institute of Health (NIH) [R21ES032117]

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Saliva may serve as an alternative biospecimen to blood in evaluating the association between traffic-related air pollution and biological responses.
In the omics era, saliva, a filtrate of blood, may serve as an alternative, noninvasive biospecimen to blood, although its use for specific metabolomic applications has not been fully evaluated. We demonstrated that the saliva metabolome may provide sensitive measures of traffic-related air pollution (TRAP) and associated biological responses via high-resolution, longitudinal metabolomics profiling. We collected 167 pairs of saliva and plasma samples from a cohort of 53 college student participants and measured corresponding indoor and outdoor concentrations of six air pollutants for the dormitories where the students lived. Grand correlation between common metabolic features in saliva and plasma was moderate to high, indicating a relatively consistent association between saliva and blood metabolites across subjects. Although saliva was less associated with TRAP compared to plasma, 25 biological pathways associated with TRAP were detected via saliva and accounted for 69% of those detected via plasma. Given the slightly higher feature reproducibility found in saliva, these findings provide some indication that the saliva metabolome offers a sensitive and practical alternative to blood for characterizing individual biological responses to environmental exposures.

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