4.7 Article

Melatonin Regulates the Daily Levels of Plasma Amino Acids, Acylcarnitines, Biogenic Amines, Sphingomyelins, and Hexoses in a Xenograft Model of Triple Negative Breast Cancer

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23169105

Keywords

breast cancer; melatonin; metabolomics; xenografted mice; plasma metabolites; circadian profile

Funding

  1. Institute of Cancer Research-ICR, Sutton Surrey, London, United Kingdom
  2. Science Without Border national program-SWB, Brazil
  3. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior-CAPES [001]
  4. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq) [306158/2018-3 1D]
  5. Fundacao de Apoio a Pesquisa e Extensao de Sao Jose do Rio Preto-FAPERP, Brazil

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The study found that melatonin plays an important role in regulating plasma metabolite levels in human breast cancer xenografts, which may impact cancer bioenergetics. The findings emphasize the need for a more accurate examination of its metabolomic changes at different time points.
Metabolic dysregulation as a reflection of specific metabolite production and its utilization is a common feature of many human neoplasms. Melatonin, an indoleamine that is highly available during darkness, has a variety of metabolic functions in solid tumors. Because plasma metabolites undergo circadian changes, we investigated the role of melatonin on the profile of amino acids (AAs), biogenic amines, carnitines, sphingolipids, and hexoses present in the plasma of mice bearing xenograft triple negative breast cancer (MDA-MB-231 cells) over 24 h. Plasma concentrations of nine AAs were reduced by melatonin, especially during the light phase, with a profile closer to that of non-breast cancer (BC) animals. With respect to acylcarnitine levels, melatonin reduced 12 out of 24 molecules in BC-bearing animals compared to their controls, especially at 06:00 h and 15:00 h. Importantly, melatonin reduced the concentrations of asymmetric dimethylarginine, carnosine, histamine, kynurenine, methionine sulfoxide, putrescine, spermidine, spermine, and symmetric dimethylarginine, which are associated with the BC metabolite sets. Melatonin also led to reduced levels of sphingomyelins and hexoses, which showed distinct daily variations over 24 h. These results highlight the role of melatonin in controlling the levels of plasma metabolites in human BC xenografts, which may impact cancer bioenergetics, in addition to emphasizing the need for a more accurate examination of its metabolomic changes at different time points.

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