UCIBIO/REQUIMTE, Laboratory of Toxicology, Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal.
Cancer Biology & Epigenetics Group, Research Center (CI-IPOP), Portuguese Oncology Institute of Porto (IPO Porto), Porto, Portugal.
Metabolomics. 2018 Apr 17;14(5):62. doi: 10.1007/s11306-018-1361-9.
Recent studies provide a convincing support that the presence of cancer cells in the body leads to the alteration of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emanating from biological samples, particularly of those closely related with tumoral tissues. Thus, a great interest emerged for the study of cancer volatilome and subsequent attempts to confirm VOCs as potential diagnostic biomarkers.
The aim of this study was to determine the volatile metabolomic signature of bladder cancer (BC) cell lines and provide an in vitro proof-of-principle that VOCs emanated into the extracellular medium may discriminate BC cells from normal bladder epithelial cells.
VOCs in the culture media of three BC cell lines (Scaber, J82, 5637) and one normal bladder cell line (SV-HUC-1) were extracted by headspace-solid phase microextraction and analysed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (HS-SPME/GC-MS). Two different pH (pH 2 and 7) were used for VOCs extraction to infer the best pH to be used in in vitro metabolomic studies.
Multivariate analysis revealed a panel of volatile metabolites that discriminated cancerous from normal bladder cells, at both pHs, although a higher number of discriminative VOCs was obtained at neutral pH. Most of the altered metabolites were ketones and alkanes, which were generally increased in BC compared to normal cells, and alcohols, which were significantly decreased in BC cells. Among them, three metabolites, namely 2-pentadecanone, dodecanal and γ-dodecalactone (the latter only tentatively identified), stood out as particularly important metabolites and promising volatile biomarkers for BC detection. Furthermore, our results also showed the potential of VOCs in discriminating BC cell lines according to tumour grade and histological subtype.
We demonstrate that a GC-MS metabolomics-based approach for analysis of VOCs is a valuable strategy for identifying new and specific biomarkers that may improve BC diagnosis. Future studies should entail the validation of volatile signature found for BC cell lines in biofluids from BC patients.
最近的研究提供了令人信服的证据,表明体内癌细胞的存在会导致生物样本中挥发性有机化合物(VOCs)的改变,特别是那些与肿瘤组织密切相关的样本。因此,人们对癌症挥发组学产生了极大的兴趣,并随后尝试证实 VOCs 作为潜在的诊断生物标志物的可能性。
本研究旨在确定膀胱癌(BC)细胞系的挥发性代谢组学特征,并提供体外原理验证,证明细胞外培养基中的 VOCs 可区分 BC 细胞与正常膀胱上皮细胞。
采用顶空固相微萃取(HS-SPME)/气相色谱-质谱联用(GC-MS)技术提取三种 BC 细胞系(Scaber、J82、5637)和一种正常膀胱细胞系(SV-HUC-1)培养介质中的 VOCs。采用两种不同 pH 值(pH 2 和 7)提取 VOCs,以推断体外代谢组学研究中最佳 pH 值。
多元分析显示,在两种 pH 值条件下,癌症细胞与正常细胞之间存在一组挥发性代谢产物的差异,尽管在中性 pH 值条件下获得了更多的差异 VOCs。大多数改变的代谢产物为酮类和烷烃类,它们在 BC 中通常比正常细胞增加,而醇类则在 BC 细胞中显著减少。其中,三种代谢物,即 2-十五烷酮、十二醛和γ-十二内酯(后者仅被初步鉴定),作为特别重要的代谢物和有前途的 BC 检测挥发性生物标志物脱颖而出。此外,我们的结果还表明,根据肿瘤分级和组织学亚型,VOCs 具有区分 BC 细胞系的潜力。
我们证明了基于 GC-MS 代谢组学分析 VOCs 的方法是一种有价值的策略,可以识别可能改善 BC 诊断的新的和特异性生物标志物。未来的研究应在 BC 患者的生物液中验证在 BC 细胞系中发现的挥发性特征。