Viant Mark R, Lyeth Bruce G, Miller Marion G, Berman Robert F
Department of Environmental Toxicology, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
NMR Biomed. 2005 Dec;18(8):507-16. doi: 10.1002/nbm.980.
The effects of traumatic brain injury (TBI) on brain chemistry and metabolism were examined in three groups of rats using high-resolution (1)H NMR metabolomics of brain tissue extracts and plasma. Brain injury in the TBI group (n = 6) was produced by lateral fluid percussion and regional changes in brain metabolites were analyzed at 1 h after injury in hippocampus, cortex and plasma and compared with changes in both a sham-surgery control group (n = 6) and an untreated control group (n = 6). Evidence was found of oxidative stress (e.g. decreases in ascorbate of 16.4% (p<0.01) and 29.7% (p<0.05) in cortex and hippocampus, respectively) in TBI rats versus the untreated control group, as well as excitotoxic damage (e.g. decreases in glutamate of 14.7% (p<0.05) and 12.3% (p<0.01) in the cortex and hippocampus, respectively), membrane disruption (e.g. decreases in the total level of phosphocholine and glycerophosphocholine of 23.0% (p<0.01) and 19.0% (p<0.01) in the cortex and hippocampus, respectively) and neuronal injury (e.g. decreases in N-acetylaspartate of 15.3% (p<0.01) and 9.7% (p>0.05) in the cortex and hippocampus, respectively). Significant changes in the overall pattern of NMR-observable metabolites using principal components analysis were also observed in TBI animals. Although TBI clearly had an effect on the metabolic profile found in brain tissue, no clear effects could be discerned in plasma samples. This was at least partly due to large variability in dominant glucose and lactate peaks in plasma. However, disruption of the blood-brain barrier and the subsequent movement of metabolites from brain into blood may have been relatively small and below the detection limits of our analytical procedures. Overall, these data indicate that TBI results in several significant changes in brain metabolism early after trauma and that a metabolomic approach based on (1)H NMR spectroscopy can provide a metabolic profile comprising several metabolite classes and allow for relative quantification of such changes within specific brain regions. The results also provide support for further development and application of metabolomic technologies for studying TBI and for the utilization of multivariate models for classifying the extent of trauma within an individual.
利用脑组织提取物和血浆的高分辨率氢核磁共振代谢组学技术,对三组大鼠创伤性脑损伤(TBI)对脑化学和代谢的影响进行了研究。TBI组(n = 6)通过侧脑室液压冲击法造成脑损伤,并在损伤后1小时分析海马体、皮质和血浆中脑代谢物的区域变化,并与假手术对照组(n = 6)和未处理对照组(n = 6)的变化进行比较。与未处理对照组相比,在TBI大鼠中发现了氧化应激的证据(例如,皮质和海马体中抗坏血酸分别降低了16.4%(p<0.01)和29.7%(p<0.05)),以及兴奋性毒性损伤(例如,皮质和海马体中谷氨酸分别降低了14.7%(p<0.05)和12.3%(p<0.01))、膜破坏(例如,皮质和海马体中磷酸胆碱和甘油磷酸胆碱的总水平分别降低了23.0%(p<0.01)和19.0%(p<0.01))和神经元损伤(例如,皮质和海马体中N-乙酰天门冬氨酸分别降低了15.3%(p<0.01)和9.7%(p>0.05))。使用主成分分析还观察到TBI动物中核磁共振可观察代谢物的整体模式有显著变化。虽然TBI明显对脑组织中的代谢谱有影响,但在血浆样本中未发现明显影响。这至少部分是由于血浆中主要的葡萄糖和乳酸峰变化较大。然而,血脑屏障的破坏以及随后代谢物从脑向血液的移动可能相对较小,低于我们分析程序的检测限。总体而言,这些数据表明,TBI在创伤后早期会导致脑代谢发生若干显著变化,基于氢核磁共振波谱的代谢组学方法可以提供包含多种代谢物类别的代谢谱,并允许在特定脑区域内对这些变化进行相对定量。这些结果也为代谢组学技术在研究TBI方面的进一步发展和应用,以及利用多变量模型对个体创伤程度进行分类提供了支持。