4.7 Review

Volatilomes of human infection

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-023-04986

Keywords

Microbial volatiles; Clinical; Metabolic pathways; Gas chromatography; Mass spectrometry

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This review examines the impact of infection on the production of volatile metabolites and the value of volatile biomarkers in non-invasive detection. By linking microbial studies to clinical investigations, the metabolic species and pathways leading to volatile signatures can be robustly elucidated.
The human volatilome comprises a vast mixture of volatile emissions produced by the human body and its microbiomes. Following infection, the human volatilome undergoes significant shifts, and presents a unique medium for non-invasive biomarker discovery. In this review, we examine how the onset of infection impacts the production of volatile metabolites that reflects dysbiosis by pathogenic microbes. We describe key analytical workflows applied across both microbial and clinical volatilomics and emphasize the value in linking microbial studies to clinical investigations to robustly elucidate the metabolic species and pathways leading to the observed volatile signatures. We review the current state of the art across microbial and clinical volatilomics, outlining common objectives and successes of microbial-clinical volatilomic workflows. Finally, we propose key challenges, as well as our perspectives on emerging opportunities for developing clinically useful and targeted workflows that could significantly enhance and expedite current practices in infection diagnosis and monitoring.

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