Metabolic Fingerprints
of Serum, Brain, and Liver
Are Distinct for Mice with Cerebral and Noncerebral Malaria: A 1H NMR Spectroscopy-Based Metabonomic Study
posted on 2012-10-05, 00:00authored bySoumita Ghosh, Arjun Sengupta, Shobhona Sharma, Haripalsingh M. Sonawat
Cerebral malaria (CM) is a life-threatening disease in
humans caused
by Plasmodium falciparum, leading to high mortality. Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) infection in C57Bl/6 mice
induces pathologic symptoms similar to that in human CM. However,
experimental CM incidence in mice is variable, and there are no known
metabolic correlates/fingerprints for the animals that develop CM.
Here, we have used 1H NMR-based metabonomics to investigate
the metabolic changes in the mice with CM with respect to the mice
that have noncerebral malaria (NCM) of the same batchmates with identical
genetic backgrounds and infected simultaneously. The metabolic profile
of the infected mice (both CM and NCM) was separately compared with
the metabolite profile of uninfected control mice of same genetic
background. The objective of this study was to search for metabolic
changes/fingerprints of CM and identify the pathways that might be
differentially altered in mice that succumbed to CM. The results show
that brain, liver, and sera exhibit unique metabolic fingerprints
for CM over NCM mice. Some of the major fingerprints are increased
level of triglycerides, VLDL-cholesterol in sera of CM mice, and decreased
levels of glutamine in the sera concomitant with increased levels
of glutamine in the brain of the mice with CM. Moreover, glycerophosphocholine
is decreased in both the brain and the liver of animals with CM, and myo-inositol and histamine are increased in the liver of
CM mice. The metabolic fingerprints in brain, sera, and liver of mice
with CM point toward perturbation in the ammonia detoxification pathway
and perturbation in lipid and choline metabolism in CM specifically.
The study helps us to understand the severity of CM over NCM and in
unrevealing the specific metabolic pathways that are compromised in
CM.