4.7 Article

A comparative study of plasma and dried blood spot metabolomics and its application to diabetes mellitus

Journal

CLINICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 552, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cca.2023.117655

Keywords

Metabolomics; Liquid chromatography -mass spectrometry; (LC -MS); Dried blood spot (DBS); Plasma (PLS); Correlation; Diabetes mellitus (DM)

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Metabolomics has emerged as a promising approach for understanding pathological mechanisms. This study compared plasma (PLS) and dried blood spot (DBS) samples to investigate the correlation between their metabolites. It was found that approximately 47% of the samples showed a strong correlation, 19% showed a moderate correlation, and 34% showed a low or negligible correlation. Additionally, two significant metabolites were identified in both PLS and DBS samples from diabetes mellitus (DM) patients.
Metabolomics has become a promising method for understanding pathological mechanisms. Plasma (PLS) is the most common sample type used for metabolomics studies, and dried blood spot (DBS) sampling has been regarded as a good strategy due to its unique characteristics. However, how results obtained from DBS can be correlated to results obtained from PLS remains unclear. To bridge the results and to investigate the feasibility of using DBS to study metabolomics, we performed a comparative study using 64 paired PLS and DBS samples. The number of features extracted from the two different sample types was investigated. The concentration correlations of the identified metabolites between the DBS and PLS were individually studied. Approximately 47 % showed a strong correlation, 19 % showed a moderate correlation, and 34 % showed a low or even negligible correlation. Finally, we applied both PLS- and DBS-based metabolomics to explore the dysregulated metabolites in diabetes mellitus (DM) patients. Thirty-two non-DM subjects and 32 DM patients were enrolled, and 2 significant metabolites were found in both PLS and DBS samples. In summary, detailed correlation information between PLS and DBS metabolites was first explored in this study, and it is anticipated that these results could facilitate future applications in DBS-based metabolomics.

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