4.6 Article

Spatially resolved characterization of tissue metabolic compartments in fasted and high-fat diet livers

期刊

PLOS ONE
卷 17, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261803

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资金

  1. Human Frontier Science Program [LT000530/2020-L]
  2. NIH T32 fellowship [T32EB025823]
  3. NCI CaNCURE grant [R25 CA174650]
  4. Education and Fellowship Fund (United States
  5. Harvard Medical School)
  6. Ludwig Center at Harvard Medical School
  7. Paul F. Glenn Foundation for Medical Research
  8. NIH [R01DK127278, U54 CA210180]
  9. Pediatric Low-Grade Astrocytoma Program at PBTF [9616692]
  10. Ferenc Jolesz Advanced Technologies National Center for Image Guided Therapy [NIH P41 EB028741]

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Cells adapt their metabolism in response to physiological cues, and metabolic heterogeneity exists at various levels. The liver plays a crucial role in maintaining overall metabolic balance, and its structure is defined by metabolic zones. Mass spectrometry imaging enables the mapping of metabolites directly from tissue sections, allowing for a better understanding of metabolic heterogeneity compared to traditional methods. This study establishes a workflow for matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry imaging and provides insights into liver metabolism under nutrient stress and excess.
Cells adapt their metabolism to physiological stimuli, and metabolic heterogeneity exists between cell types, within tissues, and subcellular compartments. The liver plays an essential role in maintaining whole-body metabolic homeostasis and is structurally defined by metabolic zones. These zones are well-understood on the transcriptomic level, but have not been comprehensively characterized on the metabolomic level. Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) can be used to map hundreds of metabolites directly from a tissue section, offering an important advance to investigate metabolic heterogeneity in tissues compared to extraction-based metabolomics methods that analyze tissue metabolite profiles in bulk. We established a workflow for the preparation of tissue specimens for matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) MSI that can be implemented to achieve broad coverage of central carbon, nucleotide, and lipid metabolism pathways. Herein, we used this approach to visualize the effect of nutrient stress and excess on liver metabolism. Our data revealed a highly organized metabolic tissue compartmentalization in livers, which becomes disrupted under high fat diet. Fasting caused changes in the abundance of several metabolites, including increased levels of fatty acids and TCA intermediates while fatty livers had higher levels of purine and pentose phosphate-related metabolites, which generate reducing equivalents to counteract oxidative stress. This spatially conserved approach allowed the visualization of liver metabolic compartmentalization at 30 mu m pixel resolution and can be applied more broadly to yield new insights into metabolic heterogeneity in vivo.

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