4.8 Article

Towards Mapping Mouse Metabolic Tissue Atlas by Mid-Infrared Imaging with Heavy Water Labeling

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.202105437

Keywords

heavy water labeling; infrared imaging; metabolic heterogeneity; metabolism; multivariate analysis

Funding

  1. NIH [GM128214, GM132860, EB029523]

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Understanding metabolism is crucial for deciphering physiological and pathogenic processes. In this study, the authors used mid-infrared imaging coupled with heavy water metabolic labeling to generate a metabolic atlas for mouse organs and tissues. They successfully identified inter-organ and intra-tissue metabolic signatures and revealed spatially-resolved metabolic profiles of brain tissues. This integrated platform allows for mapping the metabolic tissue atlas in complex mammalian systems.
Understanding metabolism is of great significance to decipher various physiological and pathogenic processes. While great progress has been made to profile gene expression, how to capture organ-, tissue-, and cell-type-specific metabolic profile (i.e., metabolic tissue atlas) in complex mammalian systems is lagging behind, largely owing to the lack of metabolic imaging tools with high resolution and high throughput. Here, the authors applied mid-infrared imaging coupled with heavy water (D2O) metabolic labeling to a scope of mouse organs and tissues. The premise is that, as D2O participates in the biosynthesis of various macromolecules, the resulting broad C-D vibrational spectrum should interrogate a wide range of metabolic pathways. Applying multivariate analysis to the C-D spectrum, the authors successfully identified both inter-organ and intra-tissue metabolic signatures of mice. A large-scale metabolic atlas map between different organs from the same mice is thus generated. Moreover, leveraging the power of unsupervised clustering methods, spatially-resolved metabolic signatures of brain tissues are discovered, revealing tissue and cell-type specific metabolic profile in situ. As a demonstration of this technique, the authors captured metabolic changes during brain development and charaztereized intratumoral metabolic heterogeneity of glioblastoma. Altogether, the integrated platform paves a way to map the metabolic tissue atlas for complex mammalian systems.

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