4.5 Article

Distinct metabolic profiles associated with autism spectrum disorder versus cancer in individuals with germline PTEN mutations

期刊

NPJ GENOMIC MEDICINE
卷 7, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41525-022-00289-x

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资金

  1. Ambrose Monell Foundation
  2. Breast Cancer Research Foundation
  3. National Cancer Institute [P01CA124570, R01CA118989]
  4. Zacconi Program of PTEN Research Excellence, American Cancer Society [RPG-02-151-01-CCE]
  5. Doris Duke Distinguished Clinical Scientist Award
  6. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [U54NS092090]

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A metabolomics study on PHTS individuals with ASD/DD, cancer, or both phenotypes found differentially abundant metabolites and distinct metabolic phenotypes, indicating that metabolites may enable more accurate risk predictions and prevention in individual PHTS patients at highest risk.
PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome (PHTS), caused by germline PTEN mutations, has been associated with organ-specific cancers and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and/or developmental delay (DD). Predicting precise clinical phenotypes in any one PHTS individual remains impossible. We conducted an untargeted metabolomics study on an age- and sex-matched series of PHTS individuals with ASD/DD, cancer, or both phenotypes. Using agnostic metabolomic-analyses from patient-derived lymphoblastoid cells and their spent media, we found 52 differentially abundant individual metabolites, 69 cell/media metabolite ratios, and 327 pair-wise metabotype (shared metabolic phenotype) ratios clearly distinguishing PHTS individuals based on phenotype. Network analysis based on significant metabolites pointed to hubs converging on PTEN-related insulin, MAPK, AMPK, and mTOR signaling cascades. Internal cross-validation of significant metabolites showed optimal overall accuracy in distinguishing PHTS individuals with ASD/DD versus those with cancer. Such metabolomic markers may enable more accurate risk predictions and prevention in individual PHTS patients at highest risk.

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