Article

The dynamic range of the human metabolome revealed by challenges.

Department of Nutritional Medicine, Research Center for Nutrition and Food Sciences, Technische Universität München, Freising-Weihenstephan, Germany.
The FASEB Journal (impact factor: 5.71). 03/2012; 26(6):2607-19. DOI:10.1096/fj.11-198093 pp.2607-19
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Metabolic challenge protocols, such as the oral glucose tolerance test, can uncover early alterations in metabolism preceding chronic diseases. Nevertheless, most metabolomics data accessible today reflect the fasting state. To analyze the dynamics of the human metabolome in response to environmental stimuli, we submitted 15 young healthy male volunteers to a highly controlled 4 d challenge protocol, including 36 h fasting, oral glucose and lipid tests, liquid test meals, physical exercise, and cold stress. Blood, urine, exhaled air, and breath condensate samples were analyzed on up to 56 time points by MS- and NMR-based methods, yielding 275 metabolic traits with a focus on lipids and amino acids. Here, we show that physiological challenges increased interindividual variation even in phenotypically similar volunteers, revealing metabotypes not observable in baseline metabolite profiles; volunteer-specific metabolite concentrations were consistently reflected in various biofluids; and readouts from a systematic model of β-oxidation (e.g., acetylcarnitine/palmitylcarnitine ratio) showed significant and stronger associations with physiological parameters (e.g., fat mass) than absolute metabolite concentrations, indicating that systematic models may aid in understanding individual challenge responses. Due to the multitude of analytical methods, challenges and sample types, our freely available metabolomics data set provides a unique reference for future metabolomics studies and for verification of systems biology models.

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Keywords

15 young healthy male volunteers
 
275 metabolic traits
 
36 h fasting
 
56 time points
 
absolute metabolite concentrations
 
available metabolomics data
 
baseline metabolite profiles
 
breath condensate samples
 
fat mass
 
future metabolomics studies
 
human metabolome
 
liquid test meals
 
Metabolic challenge protocols
 
phenotypically similar volunteers
 
physiological challenges
 
physiological parameters
 
systematic model
 
systems biology models
 
understanding individual challenge responses
 
volunteer-specific metabolite concentrations