Lipidomics for wildlife disease etiology and biomarker discovery: a case study of pansteatitis outbreak in South Africa
Autor: | Willem J. Smit, Berkley C. Olsen, Candice Z. Ulmer, Matthew P. Guillette, Jacqueline T. Bangma, Timothy J. Garrett, Joseph R. Sara, Wilmien J. Luus-Powell, Hannes Botha, Christina M. Jones, John A. Bowden, Richard A. Yost, Jason A. Cochran, Jeremy P. Koelmel, Susan B. Fogelson, Korin Albert, Harmony A. Miller, Theresa C. Guillette |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Endocrinology
Diabetes and Metabolism Clinical Biochemistry Adipose tissue Animals Wild Biology Wildlife disease 01 natural sciences Biochemistry Disease Outbreaks South Africa 03 medical and health sciences Tandem Mass Spectrometry Lipidomics Pansteatitis medicine Animals Biomarker discovery 030304 developmental biology 0303 health sciences 010401 analytical chemistry Lipidome Lipids Sphingolipid 0104 chemical sciences Immunology Biomarker (medicine) medicine.symptom Biomarkers Chromatography Liquid Tilapia |
Zdroj: | Metabolomics. 15 |
ISSN: | 1573-3890 1573-3882 |
Popis: | Lipidomics is an emerging field with great promise for biomarker and mechanistic studies due to lipids diverse biological roles. Clinical research applying lipidomics is drastically increasing, with research methods and tools developed for clinical applications equally promising for wildlife studies. Limited research to date has applied lipidomics, especially of the intact lipidome, to wildlife studies. Therefore, we examine the application of lipidomics for in situ studies on Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) in Loskop Dam, South Africa. Wide-scale mortality events of aquatic life associated with an environmentally-derived inflammatory disease, pansteatitis, have occurred in this area. The lipidome of adipose tissue (n = 31) and plasma (n = 51) from tilapia collected from Loskop Dam were characterized using state of the art liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry. Lipid profiles reflected pansteatitis severity and were significantly different between diseased and healthy individuals. Over 13 classes of lipids associated with inflammation, cell death, and/or oxidative damage were upregulated in pansteatitis-affected adipose tissue, including ether-lipids, short-chained triglyceride oxidation products, sphingolipids, and acylcarnitines. Ceramides showed a 1000-fold increase in the most affected adipose tissues and were sensitive to disease severity. In plasma, triglycerides were found to be downregulated in pansteatitis-affected tilapia. Intact lipidomics provided useful mechanistic data and possible biomarkers of pansteatitis. Lipids pointed to upregulated inflammatory pathways, and ceramides serve as promising biomarker candidates for pansteatitis. As comprehensive coverage of the lipidome aids in the elucidation of possible disease mechanisms, application of lipidomics could be applied to the understanding of other environmentally-derived inflammatory conditions, such as those caused by obesogens. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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