4.6 Article

A high-throughput metabolomics in vitro platform for the characterization of hepatotoxicity

Journal

CELL BIOLOGY AND TOXICOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10565-023-09809-6

Keywords

Metabolomics; Toxicology in vitro; Toxicometabolomics; Mode of action; Liver toxicity; Hepatotoxicity; High throughput

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Cell-based metabolomics provides multiparametric readouts for decision making in compound development. A LC-MS/MS-based metabolomics platform was developed for liver toxicity classification in HepG2 cells. The platform showed dose response and differentiation between liver toxicity modes of action, and identified specific metabolite patterns for each mode of action. This method offers a mechanistic-based, cost-effective screening for compound development pipelines.
Cell-based metabolomics provides multiparametric physiologically relevant readouts that can be highly advantageous for improved, biologically based decision making in early stages of compound development. Here, we present the development of a 96-well plate LC-MS/MS-based targeted metabolomics screening platform for the classification of liver toxicity modes of action (MoAs) in HepG2 cells. Different parameters of the workflow (cell seeding density, passage number, cytotoxicity testing, sample preparation, metabolite extraction, analytical method, and data processing) were optimized and standardized to increase the efficiency of the testing platform. The applicability of the system was tested with seven substances known to be representative of three different liver toxicity MoAs (peroxisome proliferation, liver enzyme induction, and liver enzyme inhibition). Five concentrations per substance, aimed at covering the complete dose-response curve, were analyzed and 221 uniquely identified metabolites were measured, annotated, and allocated in 12 different metabolite classes such as amino acids, carbohydrates, energy metabolism, nucleobases, vitamins and cofactors, and diverse lipid classes. Multivariate and univariate analyses showed a dose response of the metabolic effects, a clear differentiation between liver toxicity MoAs and resulted in the identification of metabolite patterns specific for each MoA. Key metabolites indicative of both general and mechanistic specific hepatotoxicity were identified. The method presented here offers a multiparametric, mechanistic-based, and cost-effective hepatotoxicity screening that provides MoA classification and sheds light into the pathways involved in the toxicological mechanism. This assay can be implemented as a reliable compound screening platform for improved safety assessment in early compound development pipelines.

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