Metabolomic Biomarker Candidates for Skeletal Muscle Loss in the Collagen-Induced Arthritis (CIA) Model.
Paulo Vinicius Gil AlabarseJordana M S SilvaRafaela Cavalheiro do Espírito SantoMarianne S OliveiraAndrelise S AlmeidaMayara S de OliveiraMônica L ImmigEduarda C FreitasVivian O N TeixeiraCamilla L BathurstClaiton V BrenolLidiane I FilippinStephen P YoungPriscila S LoraRicardo M XavierPublished in: Journal of personalized medicine (2021)
There is no consensus for diagnosis or treatment of RA muscle loss. We aimed to investigate metabolites in arthritic mice urine as biomarkers of muscle loss. DBA1/J mice comprised collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) and control (CO) groups. Urine samples were collected at 0, 18, 35, 45, 55, and 65 days of disease and subjected to nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Metabolites were identified using Chenomx and Birmingham Metabolite libraries. The statistical model used principal component analysis, partial least-squares discriminant analysis, and partial least-squares regression analysis. Linear regression and Fisher's exact test via the MetaboAnalyst website were performed (VIP-score). Nearly 100 identified metabolites had CIA vs. CO and disease time-dependent differences (p < 0.05). Twenty-eight metabolites were muscle-associated: carnosine (VIPs 2.8 × 102) and succinyl acetone (VIPs 1.0 × 10) showed high importance in CIA vs. CO models at day 65; CIA pair analysis showed histidine (VIPs 1.2 × 102) days 55 vs. 65, histamine (VIPs 1.1 × 102) days 55 vs. 65, and L-methionine (VIPs 1.1 × 102) days 0 vs. 18. Carnosine was fatigue- (0.039) related, creatine was food intake- (-0.177) and body weight- (-0.039) related, and both metabolites were clinical score- (0.093; 0.050) and paw edema- (0.125; 0.026) related. Therefore, muscle metabolic alterations were detected in arthritic mice urine, enabling further validation in RA patient's urine, targeting prognosis, diagnosis, and monitoring of RA-mediated muscle loss.
Keyphrases
- skeletal muscle
- rheumatoid arthritis
- ms ms
- body weight
- high fat diet induced
- disease activity
- high glucose
- drug induced
- endothelial cells
- physical activity
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- metabolic syndrome
- cancer therapy
- sleep quality
- tissue engineering
- molecular dynamics
- depressive symptoms
- interstitial lung disease
- wild type
- clinical evaluation