Söder Josefin, Hagman Ragnvi, Dicksved Johan, Lindåse Sanna, Malmlöf Kjell, Agback Peter, Moazzami Ali, Höglund Katja, Wernersson Sara
Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Biochemistry, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.
Department of Clinical Sciences, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.
PLoS One. 2017 Jun 29;12(6):e0180086. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180086. eCollection 2017.
Obesity in dogs is an increasing problem and better knowledge of the metabolism of overweight dogs is needed. Identification of molecular changes related to overweight may lead to new methods to improve obesity prevention and treatment. The aim of the study was firstly to investigate whether Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) based metabolomics could be used to differentiate postprandial from fasting urine in dogs, and secondly to investigate whether metabolite profiles differ between lean and overweight dogs in fasting and postprandial urine, respectively. Twenty-eight healthy intact male Labrador Retrievers were included, 12 of which were classified as lean (body condition score (BCS) 4-5 on a 9-point scale) and 16 as overweight (BCS 6-8). After overnight fasting, a voided morning urine sample was collected. Dogs were then fed a high-fat mixed meal and postprandial urine was collected after 3 hours. Metabolic profiles were generated using NMR and 45 metabolites identified from the spectral data were evaluated using multivariate data analysis. The results revealed that fasting and postprandial urine differed in relative metabolite concentration (partial least-squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) 1 comp: R2Y = 0.4, Q2Y = 0.32; cross-validated ANOVA: P = 0.00006). Univariate analyses of discriminant metabolites showed that taurine and citrate concentrations were elevated in postprandial urine, while allantoin concentration had decreased. Interestingly, lean and overweight dogs differed in terms of relative metabolite concentrations in postprandial urine (PLS-DA 1 comp: R2Y = 0.5, Q2Y = 0.36, cross-validated ANOVA: P = 0.005) but not in fasting urine. Overweight dogs had lower postprandial taurine and a trend of higher allantoin concentrations compared with lean dogs. These findings demonstrate that metabolomics can differentiate 3-hour postprandial urine from fasting urine in dogs, and that postprandial urine metabolites may be more useful than fasting metabolites for identification of metabolic alterations linked to overweight. The lowered urinary taurine concentration in overweight dogs could indicate alterations in lipid metabolism and merits further investigation.
犬类肥胖问题日益严重,因此需要更深入了解超重犬的新陈代谢情况。识别与超重相关的分子变化可能会带来改善肥胖预防和治疗的新方法。本研究的目的,一是调查基于核磁共振(NMR)的代谢组学是否可用于区分犬类餐后尿液和空腹尿液,二是分别研究空腹和餐后尿液中,瘦犬和超重犬的代谢物谱是否存在差异。研究纳入了28只健康的未绝育雄性拉布拉多猎犬,其中12只被归类为瘦犬(身体状况评分为9分制中的4 - 5分),16只为超重犬(身体状况评分为6 - 8分)。经过一夜禁食后,收集清晨的排尿尿液样本。然后给犬喂食高脂混合餐,并在3小时后收集餐后尿液。使用核磁共振生成代谢谱,并使用多变量数据分析评估从光谱数据中识别出的45种代谢物。结果显示,空腹尿液和餐后尿液的相对代谢物浓度存在差异(偏最小二乘判别分析(PLS - DA)1个成分:R2Y = 0.4,Q2Y = 0.32;交叉验证方差分析:P = 0.00006)。对判别性代谢物的单变量分析表明,餐后尿液中牛磺酸和柠檬酸盐浓度升高,而尿囊素浓度降低。有趣的是,瘦犬和超重犬在餐后尿液的相对代谢物浓度方面存在差异(PLS - DA 1个成分:R2Y = 0.5,Q2Y = 0.36,交叉验证方差分析:P = 0.005),但在空腹尿液中没有差异。与瘦犬相比,超重犬餐后牛磺酸含量较低,尿囊素浓度有升高趋势。这些发现表明,代谢组学可以区分犬类餐后3小时尿液和空腹尿液,并且餐后尿液代谢物可能比空腹代谢物更有助于识别与超重相关的代谢改变。超重犬尿液中牛磺酸浓度降低可能表明脂质代谢发生改变,值得进一步研究。