CIBION   24492
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIONES EN BIONANOCIENCIAS "ELIZABETH JARES ERIJMAN"
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Metabolic Footprinting of a Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma in Vitro Model for Human Kidney Cancer Detection
Autor/es:
MANZI M; PURICELLI LI; MANZI M; PURICELLI LI; KNOTT ME; SALAZAR MO; KNOTT ME; SALAZAR MO; ZABALEGUI N; MONGE ME; ZABALEGUI N; MONGE ME
Revista:
JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Editorial:
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Referencias:
Año: 2018 vol. 17 p. 3877 - 3888
ISSN:
1535-3893
Resumen:
A protocol for harvesting and extracting extracellular metabolites from an in vitro model of human renal cell lines was developed to profile the exometabolome by means of a discovery-based metabolomics approach using ultraperformance liquid chromatography coupled to quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Metabolic footprints provided by conditioned media (CM) samples (n = 66) of two clear cell Renal Cell Carcinoma (ccRCC) cell lines with different genetic backgrounds and a nontumor renal cell line, were compared with the human serum metabolic profile of a pilot cohort (n = 10) comprised of stage IV ccRCC patients and healthy individuals. Using a cross-validated orthogonal projection to latent structures-discriminant analysis model, a panel of 21 discriminant features selected by iterative multivariate classification, allowed differentiating control from tumor cell lines with 100% specificity, sensitivity, and accuracy. Isoleucine/leucine, phenylalanine, N-lactoyl-leucine, and N-acetyl-phenylalanine, and cysteinegluthatione disulfide (CYSSG) were identified by chemical standards, and hydroxyprolyl-valine was identified with MS and MS/MS experiments. A subset of 9 discriminant features, including the identified metabolites except for CYSSG, produced a fingerprint of classification value that enabled discerning ccRCC patients from healthy individuals. To our knowledge, this is the first time that N-lactoyl-leucine is associated with ccRCC. Results from this study provide a proof of concept that CM can be used as a serum proxy to obtain disease-related metabolic signatures.