D'Alessandro Angelo, Slaughter Annie L, Peltz Erik D, Moore Ernest E, Silliman Christopher C, Wither Matthew, Nemkov Travis, Bacon Anthony W, Fragoso Miguel, Banerjee Anirban, Hansen Kirk C
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, East 17th Ave, Aurora, CO, 12801, USA.
Department of Surgery, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.
J Transl Med. 2015 Aug 5;13:253. doi: 10.1186/s12967-015-0612-z.
Metabolic derangement is a key hallmark of major traumatic injury. The recent introduction of mass spectrometry-based metabolomics technologies in the field of trauma shed new light on metabolic aberrations in plasma that are triggered by trauma and hemorrhagic shock. Alteration in metabolites associated with catabolism, acidosis and hyperglycemia have been identified. However, the mechanisms underlying fluxes driving such metabolic adaptations remain elusive.
A bolus of U-(13)C-glucose was injected in Sprague-Dawley rats at different time points. Plasma extracts were analyzed via ultra-high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry to detect quantitative fluctuations in metabolite levels as well as to trace the distribution of heavy labeled carbon isotopologues.
Rats experiencing trauma did not show major plasma metabolic aberrations. However, trauma/hemorrhagic shock triggered severe metabolic derangement, resulting in increased glucose levels, lactate and carboxylic acid accumulation. Isotopologue distributions in late Krebs cycle metabolites (especially succinate) suggested a blockade at complex I and II of the electron transport chain, likely due to mitochondrial uncoupling. Urate increased after trauma and hemorrhage. Increased levels of unlabeled mannitol and citramalate, metabolites of potential bacterial origin, were also observed in trauma/hemorrhagic shock rats, but not trauma alone or controls.
These preliminary results are consistent with observations we have recently obtained in humans, and expand upon our early results on rodent models of trauma and hemorrhagic shock by providing the kinetics of glucose fluxes after trauma and hemorrhage. Despite the preliminary nature of this study, owing to the limited number of biological replicates, results highlight a role for shock, rather than trauma alone, in eliciting systemic metabolic aberrations. This study provides the foundation for tracing experiments in rat models of trauma. The goal is to improve our understanding of substrate specific metabolic derangements in trauma/hemorrhagic shock, so as to design resuscitative strategies tailored toward metabolic alterations and the severity of trauma.
代谢紊乱是严重创伤性损伤的一个关键特征。近期,基于质谱的代谢组学技术引入创伤领域,为创伤和失血性休克引发的血浆代谢异常带来了新的认识。已确定与分解代谢、酸中毒和高血糖相关的代谢物发生了改变。然而,驱动这种代谢适应的通量背后的机制仍然难以捉摸。
在不同时间点向Sprague-Dawley大鼠注射一剂U-(13)C-葡萄糖。通过超高效液相色谱-质谱法分析血浆提取物,以检测代谢物水平的定量波动,并追踪重标记碳同位素异构体的分布。
遭受创伤的大鼠未表现出主要的血浆代谢异常。然而,创伤/失血性休克引发了严重的代谢紊乱,导致血糖水平升高、乳酸和羧酸积累。晚期三羧酸循环代谢物(尤其是琥珀酸)中的同位素异构体分布表明电子传递链复合体I和II处存在阻断,可能是由于线粒体解偶联。创伤和出血后尿酸增加。在创伤/失血性休克大鼠中还观察到未标记的甘露醇和柠苹酸水平升高,它们是潜在细菌来源的代谢物,但单独创伤组或对照组中未观察到。
这些初步结果与我们最近在人类中获得的观察结果一致,并通过提供创伤和出血后葡萄糖通量的动力学,扩展了我们在创伤和失血性休克啮齿动物模型上的早期结果。尽管本研究具有初步性质,由于生物重复样本数量有限,但结果突出了休克而非单独创伤在引发全身代谢异常中的作用。本研究为创伤大鼠模型的追踪实验奠定了基础。目标是增进我们对创伤/失血性休克中底物特异性代谢紊乱的理解,以便设计针对代谢改变和创伤严重程度的复苏策略。