4.6 Article

A Sample Preparation Method for the Simultaneous Profiling of Signaling Lipids and Polar Metabolites in Small Quantities of Muscle Tissues from a Mouse Model for Sarcopenia

Journal

METABOLITES
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/metabo12080742

Keywords

metabolomics extraction; signaling lipids; polar metabolites; muscle tissue; muscle ageing and sarcopenia

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) in the Building Blocks of Life [737.016.015]
  2. China Scholarship Council (CSC) [201706320322]
  3. European Research Council
  4. NIH [PO1 AG017242]
  5. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [73111208-SFB 829]
  6. ZonMW Memorabel [733050810]
  7. EJP-RD TC-NER [RD20-113]
  8. ONCODE (Dutch Cancer Society)
  9. Netherlands X-omics Initiative
  10. NWO [184.034.019]

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In this study, the authors focused on the metabolic profiling of muscle tissue in order to understand sarcopenia. They evaluated and compared different sample preparation methods and found that the BMMW method had the highest extraction recovery and matrix effect. They successfully applied this method to small muscle tissue samples and detected a variety of lipids and metabolites. The authors also emphasized the importance of fast sample isolation for more oxidative muscles in sarcopenia studies.
The metabolic profiling of a wide range of chemical classes relevant to understanding sarcopenia under conditions in which sample availability is limited, e.g., from mouse models, small muscles, or muscle biopsies, is desired. Several existing metabolomics platforms that include diverse classes of signaling lipids, energy metabolites, and amino acids and amines would be informative for suspected biochemical pathways involved in sarcopenia. The sample limitation requires an optimized sample preparation method with minimal losses during isolation and handling and maximal accuracy and reproducibility. Here, two developed sample preparation methods, BuOH-MTBE-Water (BMW) and BuOH-MTBE-More-Water (BMMW), were evaluated and compared with previously reported methods, Bligh-Dyer (BD) and BuOH-MTBE-Citrate (BMC), for their suitability for these classes. The most optimal extraction was found to be the BMMW method, with the highest extraction recovery of 63% for the signaling lipids and 81% for polar metabolites, and an acceptable matrix effect (close to 1.0) for all metabolites of interest. The BMMW method was applied on muscle tissues as small as 5 mg (dry weight) from the well-characterized, prematurely aging, DNA repair-deficient Ercc1 Delta/-mouse mutant exhibiting multiple-morbidities, including sarcopenia. We successfully detected 109 lipids and 62 polar targeted metabolites. We further investigated whether fast muscle tissue isolation is necessary for mouse sarcopenia studies. A muscle isolation procedure involving 15 min at room temperature revealed a subset of metabolites to be unstable; hence, fast sample isolation is critical, especially for more oxidative muscles. Therefore, BMMW and fast muscle tissue isolation are recommended for future sarcopenia studies. This research provides a sensitive sample preparation method for the simultaneous extraction of non-polar and polar metabolites from limited amounts of muscle tissue, supplies a stable mouse muscle tissue collection method, and methodologically supports future metabolomic mechanistic studies of sarcopenia.

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