Martinez-Lozano Sinues Pablo, Tarokh Leila, Li Xue, Kohler Malcolm, Brown Steven A, Zenobi Renato, Dallmann Robert
Department of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; University Hospital of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2014 Dec 29;9(12):e114422. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0114422. eCollection 2014.
Circadian clocks play a significant role in the correct timing of physiological metabolism, and clock disruption might lead to pathological changes of metabolism. One interesting method to assess the current state of metabolism is metabolomics. Metabolomics tries to capture the entirety of small molecules, i.e. the building blocks of metabolism, in a given matrix, such as blood, saliva or urine. Using mass spectrometric approaches we and others have shown that a significant portion of the human metabolome in saliva and blood exhibits circadian modulation; independent of food intake or sleep/wake rhythms. Recent advances in mass spectrometry techniques have introduced completely non-invasive breathprinting; a method to instantaneously assess small metabolites in human breath. In this proof-of-principle study, we extend these findings about the impact of circadian clocks on metabolomics to exhaled breath. As previously established, our method allows for real-time analysis of a rich matrix during frequent non-invasive sampling. We sampled the breath of three healthy, non-smoking human volunteers in hourly intervals for 24 hours during total sleep deprivation, and found 111 features in the breath of all individuals, 36-49% of which showed significant circadian variation in at least one individual. Our data suggest that real-time mass spectrometric "breathprinting" has high potential to become a useful tool to understand circadian metabolism, and develop new biomarkers to easily and in real-time assess circadian clock phase and function in experimental and clinical settings.
昼夜节律时钟在生理代谢的正确定时中起着重要作用,而时钟紊乱可能导致代谢的病理变化。一种评估当前代谢状态的有趣方法是代谢组学。代谢组学试图在给定的基质(如血液、唾液或尿液)中捕获小分子的整体,即代谢的组成部分。我们和其他人利用质谱方法表明,唾液和血液中的很大一部分人体代谢组表现出昼夜节律调节;与食物摄入或睡眠/清醒节律无关。质谱技术的最新进展引入了完全非侵入性的呼吸印记技术;一种即时评估人体呼出气体中小代谢物的方法。在这项原理验证研究中,我们将关于昼夜节律时钟对代谢组学影响的这些发现扩展到呼出气体。如先前确立的那样,我们的方法允许在频繁的非侵入性采样期间对丰富的基质进行实时分析。我们在完全睡眠剥夺期间每小时对三名健康、不吸烟的人类志愿者的呼吸进行采样,持续24小时,在所有个体的呼出气体中发现了111个特征,其中36 - 49%在至少一个个体中表现出显著的昼夜节律变化。我们的数据表明,实时质谱“呼吸印记”有很大潜力成为一种有用的工具,用于理解昼夜节律代谢,并开发新的生物标志物,以便在实验和临床环境中轻松、实时地评估昼夜节律时钟的相位和功能。