4.6 Article

Sweat lipid mediator profiling: a noninvasive approach for cutaneous research

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
Volume 58, Issue 1, Pages 188-195

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M071738

Keywords

oxidized lipids; endocannabinoids; ceramides; sphingolipids; skin; metabolic profiling; non-invasive sampling; atopic dermatitis

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [T32-GM008799]
  2. University of California-Davis Medical Student Research Fellowship from School of Medicine, University of California, Davis
  3. US Department of Agriculture Intramural Project [2032-51530-022-00D]
  4. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [U24DK097154-01]

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Recent advances in analytical and sweat collection techniques provide new opportunities to identify noninvasive biomarkers for the study of skin inflammation and repair. This study aims to characterize the lipid mediator profile including oxygenated lipids, endocannabinoids, and ceramides/sphingoid bases in sweat and identify differences in these profiles between sweat collected from nonlesional sites on the unflared volar forearm of subjects with and without atopic dermatitis (AD). Adapting routine procedures developed for plasma analysis, over 100 lipid mediators were profiled using LC-MS/MS and 58 lipid mediators were detected in sweat. Lipid mediator concentrations were not affected by sampling or storage conditions. Increases in concentrations of C30-C40 [NS] and [NdS] ceramides, and C18:1 sphingosine, were observed in the sweat of study participants with AD despite no differences being observed in transepidermal water loss between study groups, and this effect was strongest in men (P < 0.05, one-way ANOVA with Tukey's post hoc HSD). No differences in oxylipins and endocannabinoids were observed between study groups.(Jlr) Sweat mediator profiling may therefore provide a noninvasive diagnostic for AD prior to the presentation of clinical signs.

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