Metabolomics in agriculture and environmental monitoring

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The metabolomes of plants differ fundamentally from those of animals. As illustrated with hippuric acid, the human metabolome is a mixture of enzyme products, plant matter, and microorganisms. Autotrophic plants, in contrast, make all of their own metabolites, and while much of their primary metabolism, such as their catabolism (breakdown) of glucose to carbon dioxide and water, resembles that of animals, they also synthesize specialized secondary compounds (secondary metabolites), such as caffeine and various chemicals that give flowers their fragrance. To identify these metabolites, botanists need spectral libraries specialized for the taxonomic group under study. (A spectral library is a database of compounds classified according to the wavelength of the light they emit or absorb.) For example, in white wines analyzed by both NMR and MS, scientists have associated wine metabolites with “body” and other subjective attributes perceived by tasters. Such a collection of information can be a valuable reference for researchers who are working to cultivate grape varieties tailored for the production of specific attributes. Botanists also use metabolomics to evaluate plant growth and development and to monitor changes in the nutritional value and aesthetics of foods during transport.

Environmental scientists have also been developing practical applications for metabolomics. For instance, studying the molecular physiology of small animals resident in natural communities provides functional information on the effects of stressors (e.g., pollutants) on ecosystem health. Sentinel species, which readily accumulate pollutants and therefore serve as indicators of ecosystem health, have been evaluated for different environments, including terrestrial, freshwater, and marine habitats. Examples of sentinel species in each of those environments include earthworms, fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) and water fleas, and mussels, respectively.

Metabolomics in medical research

The completion of the Human Genome Project in 2003 raised the possibility that scientists would be able to use knowledge of a person’s complete genetic makeup to help personalize his or her medical care in ways that would improve health and prolong life. Personalized medicine benefits especially from in-depth molecular phenotyping methods, such as proteomics and metabolomics, which provide additional insight into gene function and may lead to the discovery of new opportunities in disease diagnosis and treatment. Metabolomics has particular promise in these areas, because it provides an integrated picture of genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic variation.

Disease detection

Mass spectrometry (MS) of small metabolites has been in use for decades for the diagnosis and monitoring of so-called inborn errors of metabolism, which are rare genetic disorders. One such example is phenylketonuria (PKU), in which a metabolically inactive form of the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase prevents the usual conversion of the amino acid phenylalanine to tyrosine. In many countries, testing for PKU is carried out for every newborn infant, typically by blotting a droplet of blood from a heel stick onto an absorbent paper card. Metabolites extracted from the card are then screened by using MS, enabling the detection of PKU and other metabolic diseases arising from gene defects. Likewise, MS profiling of urinary catecholamines has long been helpful in evaluating patients with neuroendocrine tumours, such as pheochromocytoma and neuroblastoma.

Encouraged by these successes in niche applications, laboratories worldwide have initiated efforts to evaluate ways in which metabolomics might be developed as a means of low-cost screening of large populations. This approach to screening is based on the detection of biomarkers (physiological or molecular changes) that are characteristic of common infectious diseases, cancers, and other disorders. Noninvasive sampling, such as through urinalysis or analysis of exhaled breath, could lead to increased acceptance of screening programs.

Disease prevention and treatment

The growing prevalence of overnutrition and inactivity that has fueled obesity epidemics in developed and less-developed countries has formed the basis for a number of metabolomic studies, many of which have been aimed at the prevention and treatment of obesity and associated diseases, including diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, and kidney disease. Scientists have observed “signatures,” or distinct patterns, in the circulating metabolites of obese patients that correlate with increased risk of type II diabetes and death from cardiovascular disease. Abnormally high levels of aromatic amino acids and the three branched-chain amino acids (leucine, isoleucine, and valine), for example, have been associated with poor health outcomes for obese persons. The mechanisms underlying the elevation of these amino acids in disease-susceptible subjects may be linked to excess protein consumption, genetic variation in catabolic enzymes, and altered metabolism of gut microbes. Conversely, glycine is reduced in people with obesity and type II diabetes, which illustrates another challenge of interpreting metabolomic findings: unlike macromolecules, which often have just one or a few functions, a given small metabolite might participate in many diverse biochemical reactions. Reduced blood glycine in obesity and diabetes may be associated with the need to synthesize the tripeptide antioxidant glutathione in order to combat the oxidative stress (production of reactive substances) that comes with these conditions.

Role in understanding drug action and toxicity

Metabolomics has provided fresh understanding of drug action and has the potential to identify biochemical pathways toward which new drugs might be directed. In the past, investigators focused on expected pathways of drug action and toxicity. In the early 21st century, scientists increasingly focused on pharmacometabolomics, which enabled a broad look at metabolic responses to drugs and in turn stimulated new lines of investigation. For example, although the anti-inflammatory agent acetaminophen had been studied and used widely since the mid-20th century, in 2008–09 researchers at the U.S. National Cancer Institute used metabolomics to identify acetaminophen metabolites that were responsible for liver damage associated with acetaminophen overdose.

Role in understanding biochemical mechanisms of disease

By the early 2010s, while discoveries from small-molecule phenotyping via metabolomics had not yet translated into accepted diagnostic tests or treatments, the scientific value of metabolomics in mechanistic biochemistry was becoming clear. Metabolite profiles gave amplified readouts of subtle changes in complex cellular machinery, which was especially useful for cancer researchers, who knew that the fates of metabolic fuels could change as normal cells transformed into cancerous cells. For example, rather than extracting maximum energy from glucose by oxidizing it completely to water and carbon dioxide, a cancer cell might partially oxidize sugar to lactic acid (the so-called Warburg effect). Mutation of an enzyme in the tricarboxylic acid cycle known as isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1), which was known to cause certain human brain cancers, was found to convert a normal metabolite (alpha-ketoglutaric acid) into an unusual metabolite (R(-)-2-hydroxyglutaric acid, or 2HG). The unusual metabolite could serve as both a cancer biomarker and an endogenous carcinogen (a cancer-causing substance produced naturally by the body). The IDH1 story illustrates how metabolomics can help researchers understand the molecular characteristics of lesions that underlie human disease.

Metabolomics as functional genomics

American evolutionary biologist Paul R. Ehrlich noted that genes do not shout, but they whisper, a principle evident in the moment-to-moment biochemistry of metabolism, which ultimately is the product of flexible interactions between genes and environmental factors (e.g., diet). In the mid-20th century, after the intermediate pathways of metabolism were elucidated, research on metabolism fell into relative obscurity, because of largely the inability of detecting the subtlety of gene-environment interactions. However, with the later development of potent NMR and MS technologies, coupled with tools that enabled detailed investigation of genomic function, there came a renaissance in metabolism research, in the form of metabolomics.

In the early 21st century, metabolomics was closely aligned with functional genomics, owing to the former’s emphasis on the effects of metabolites on gene activity. In agriculture, environmental monitoring, and medical research, metabolomics scientists have in turn made contributions that have complemented other -omics sciences. Of special significance has been the development of numerical methods and intellectual constructs capable of distilling massive sets of data on genes, transcripts, proteins, and metabolites.

James Bain Chris Newgard