Differing Alterations of Odor Volatiles Among Pathogenic Stimuli.
Patrick MilletTalia MartinMaryanne OpiekunGary K BeauchampBruce A KimballPublished in: Chemical senses (2022)
Alterations of the volatile metabolome (the collection of volatiles present in secretions and other emanations) that occur in response to inflammation can be detected by conspecifics and chemometric analyses. Using a model system where mouse urinary metabolites are altered by treatment with lipopolysaccharide (found in the outer cell membrane of gram-negative bacteria), we hypothesized that alteration of body odor volatiles will vary according to the pathogen responsible for inducing the inflammation. We tested this hypothesis by treating mice with different immunogens that engage different immune signaling pathways. Results suggest that alterations of body odor volatiles resulting from inflammation do contain detailed information about the type of pathogen that instigated the inflammation and these differences are not merely dependent on the severity of the inflammatory event. These results are encouraging for the future of differential medical diagnosis of febrile diseases by analysis of the volatile metabolome. In particular, our data support the possibility that bacterial infections can be differentiated from viral infections such that antibiotic drug stewardship could be drastically improved by reducing unneeded treatments with antibiotics.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- gas chromatography mass spectrometry
- signaling pathway
- healthcare
- sars cov
- inflammatory response
- electronic health record
- adipose tissue
- machine learning
- immune response
- ms ms
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- big data
- induced apoptosis
- high resolution
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- skeletal muscle
- urinary tract infection
- drug induced
- wild type