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Metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of TCA cycle and amino acid turnover

BACKGROUND: Apart from genetic alterations, development and progression of colorectal cancer has been linked to influences from nutritional intake, hyperalimentation, and cellular metabolic changes that may be the basis for new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. However, in contrast to genomics...

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Autores principales: Denkert, Carsten, Budczies, Jan, Weichert, Wilko, Wohlgemuth, Gert, Scholz, Martin, Kind, Tobias, Niesporek, Silvia, Noske, Aurelia, Buckendahl, Anna, Dietel, Manfred, Fiehn, Oliver
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2569965/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18799019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-72
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author Denkert, Carsten
Budczies, Jan
Weichert, Wilko
Wohlgemuth, Gert
Scholz, Martin
Kind, Tobias
Niesporek, Silvia
Noske, Aurelia
Buckendahl, Anna
Dietel, Manfred
Fiehn, Oliver
author_facet Denkert, Carsten
Budczies, Jan
Weichert, Wilko
Wohlgemuth, Gert
Scholz, Martin
Kind, Tobias
Niesporek, Silvia
Noske, Aurelia
Buckendahl, Anna
Dietel, Manfred
Fiehn, Oliver
author_sort Denkert, Carsten
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Apart from genetic alterations, development and progression of colorectal cancer has been linked to influences from nutritional intake, hyperalimentation, and cellular metabolic changes that may be the basis for new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. However, in contrast to genomics and proteomics, comprehensive metabolomic investigations of alterations in malignant tumors have rarely been conducted. RESULTS: In this study we investigated a set of paired samples of normal colon tissue and colorectal cancer tissue with gas-chromatography time-of-flight mass-spectrometry, which resulted in robust detection of a total of 206 metabolites. Metabolic phenotypes of colon cancer and normal tissues were different at a Bonferroni corrected significance level of p = 0.00170 and p = 0.00005 for the first two components of an unsupervised PCA analysis. Subsequent supervised analysis found 82 metabolites to be significantly different at p < 0.01. Metabolites were connected to abnormalities in metabolic pathways by a new approach that calculates the distance of each pair of metabolites in the KEGG database interaction lattice. Intermediates of the TCA cycle and lipids were found down-regulated in cancer, whereas urea cycle metabolites, purines, pyrimidines and amino acids were generally found at higher levels compared to normal colon mucosa. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates that metabolic profiling facilitates biochemical phenotyping of normal and neoplastic colon tissue at high significance levels and points to GC-TOF-based metabolomics as a new method for molecular pathology investigations.
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spelling pubmed-25699652008-10-18 Metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of TCA cycle and amino acid turnover Denkert, Carsten Budczies, Jan Weichert, Wilko Wohlgemuth, Gert Scholz, Martin Kind, Tobias Niesporek, Silvia Noske, Aurelia Buckendahl, Anna Dietel, Manfred Fiehn, Oliver Mol Cancer Research BACKGROUND: Apart from genetic alterations, development and progression of colorectal cancer has been linked to influences from nutritional intake, hyperalimentation, and cellular metabolic changes that may be the basis for new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches. However, in contrast to genomics and proteomics, comprehensive metabolomic investigations of alterations in malignant tumors have rarely been conducted. RESULTS: In this study we investigated a set of paired samples of normal colon tissue and colorectal cancer tissue with gas-chromatography time-of-flight mass-spectrometry, which resulted in robust detection of a total of 206 metabolites. Metabolic phenotypes of colon cancer and normal tissues were different at a Bonferroni corrected significance level of p = 0.00170 and p = 0.00005 for the first two components of an unsupervised PCA analysis. Subsequent supervised analysis found 82 metabolites to be significantly different at p < 0.01. Metabolites were connected to abnormalities in metabolic pathways by a new approach that calculates the distance of each pair of metabolites in the KEGG database interaction lattice. Intermediates of the TCA cycle and lipids were found down-regulated in cancer, whereas urea cycle metabolites, purines, pyrimidines and amino acids were generally found at higher levels compared to normal colon mucosa. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates that metabolic profiling facilitates biochemical phenotyping of normal and neoplastic colon tissue at high significance levels and points to GC-TOF-based metabolomics as a new method for molecular pathology investigations. BioMed Central 2008-09-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2569965/ /pubmed/18799019 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-72 Text en Copyright © 2008 Denkert et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Denkert, Carsten
Budczies, Jan
Weichert, Wilko
Wohlgemuth, Gert
Scholz, Martin
Kind, Tobias
Niesporek, Silvia
Noske, Aurelia
Buckendahl, Anna
Dietel, Manfred
Fiehn, Oliver
Metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of TCA cycle and amino acid turnover
title Metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of TCA cycle and amino acid turnover
title_full Metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of TCA cycle and amino acid turnover
title_fullStr Metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of TCA cycle and amino acid turnover
title_full_unstemmed Metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of TCA cycle and amino acid turnover
title_short Metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of TCA cycle and amino acid turnover
title_sort metabolite profiling of human colon carcinoma – deregulation of tca cycle and amino acid turnover
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2569965/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18799019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-7-72
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