Title: Metabolomics: an emerging field in the postgenomic era
1Metabolomics an emerging field in the
post-genomic era
- Ming-Shi Shiao
- Department of Life Science
- Chang Gung University
- (03)2118800, ext. 3495
- msshiao_at_mail.cgu.edu.tw
07/13/2009
2-OMICS in the post-genomic era
- 1. Genomics and epigenomics
- 2. Proteomics
- 3. Metabolomics (Metabonomics)
3OMICS-driven Biomarker Discovery in Nutrition and
HealthKussmann M, Raymond F, Affolter M. J.
Biotech. 124, 758-787, 2006
- 1. Proteomics
- 2. Transcriptomics
- 3. Metabolomics
- 4. Omics integration
- Function vs. Dysfunction
- Systems Biology
4What can the OMICS do?
- Better way to answer the questions in biology
- Big biology (e.g. systems biology)
- Useful biomarkers (and disease markers in humans,
e.g. cancer) - Drug development
5Proteomics
- 1. Identification of protein function in a
cellular system, or in an intact animal, can be
very difficult. - 2. Combination of functions from a limited number
of proteins may not be able to address the
complexity in a biological system. - 3. Quantitative proteomics is more difficult due
to great concentration ranges of expressed
proteins. - Full-length vs. protein fragments?
6ProteomicsFrom gene products (proteins) to
functions in a biological system
- Function
- Function
- Function
- Function
- Function
The biological system is more complicated (than
we originally thought).
7SELDI-TOF
Abundance of serum proteins
mM
pM
Diamondis EP. JNCI. 96, 353-356, 2004.
8Mass spectrometry-based proteomics for cancer
diagnosis
- 1. Diamandis EP. Serum proteomic profiling by
matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization
time-of-flight mass spectrometry for cancer
diagnosis next steps. Cancer Res.
2006665540-5541. - 2. Petricoin EF. et al. The use of proteomic
patterns in the serum to identify ovarian cancer.
Lancet 2002359572-575.
9Clin. Can Res. 11, 963-965, 2005.
10Diamondis EP. JNCI. 96, 353-356, 2004.
11Future Directions in Biomedical Research
12New Pathways to Discovery
- 1. Molecular Libraries and Imaging
- 2. Building Blocks, Biological Pathways and
- Networks (Metabolomics)
- 3. Structural Biology (membrane proteins)
- 4. Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
- 5. Nanomedicine
US NIH, 2004
13Structural Biology
- gtgtX-ray crystallography and Nuclear Magnetic
Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy are the two major
tools in structural biology study.
14Metabonomics
- The quantitative measurement of the dynamic
multiparametric metabolic response of living
systems to pathophysiological stimuli or genetic
modification - By Prof. Jeremy Nicholson colleagues, 1999
- Nicholson, J.K., Lindon, J.C. Holmes, E.
Metabonomics understanding the metabolic
responses of living systems to pathophysiological
stimuli via multivariate statistical analysis of
biological NMR spectroscopic data. Xenobiotica
29, 11811189 (1999).
06172008
15Metabolomics
- A comprehensive and quantitative analysis of all
metabolites in a system - Prof. Oliver Fiehn, 2001
- Fiehn, O. Metabolomicsthe link between genotypes
and phenotypes. Plant Mol. Biol. 48, 155171
(2002).
16Original references
- 1. Fiehn, O. Metabolomicsthe link between
genotypes and phenotypes. Plant Mol. Biol. 48,
155171 (2002). - 2. Nicholson, J.K., Lindon, J.C. Holmes, E.
Metabonomics understanding the metabolic
responses of living systems to pathophysiological
stimuli via multivariate statistical analysis of
biological NMR spectroscopic data. Xenobiotica
29, 11811189 (1999).
17Metabolomics(Metabonomics)
- The study of all the metabolites involved in
metabolism (metabolites) in a living organism by
evaluating tissues and body fluids, such as
urine, blood, plasma, and saliva, for metabolic
change. - FDA Consumer, Nov.-Dec. 2005, vol. 39 No. 6.
18Metabolomics Low-molecular-weight metabolite
profiling
- gtPrecise determination and global profiling of
metabolites in their compartments, without
disturbances in the sample treatment, in normal
and patho-physiological states. - Molecular fingerprinting
- Chemical phenotyping
19Lipidomics
- gtgtLipidomics, a branch of metabolomics, is
defined as a systems-based study of all lipid
metabolites, the molecules with which the lipids
interact, and their functions within the cell - Watson, A. D. 2006. Lipidomics a global approach
to lipid analysis in biological systems. J. Lipid
Res. 47 21012111.
20Metabolites
- 1. Primary metabolite
- gtgtgtA metabolite that is essential (and common)
for normal growth and development in a living
organism. It is believed that there are about
3,000 primary metabolites in the human body. - 2. Secondary metabolite
- gtgtgtA metabolite that is not essential for growth
and development in a living organism, but that
may help fight off infection and other forms of
stress.
21Secondary Metabolism (I)
1. Reactions frequently occur which are not
necessarily vital, often differ from species to
species, and may be considered as an expression
of the chemical individuality of the organisms.
2. These reactions are grouped under the term
secondary metabolism and the products formed are
called secondary metabolites (n 3,000).
22Secondary Metabolites
A. Biogenesis Origin and sources of the primary
metabolites that are involved in the formation of
secondary metabolites. A ? ?
? ? ? ? X B. Biosynthesis Reactions and
mechanisms involved in the biosynthetic pathway
of secondary metabolite formation.
A ? B ? C ? D ? E ? F ? X
Ex. Cholesterol (C27H46O1) and bile acids
23Metabolomics
- gtgtThe study of all the metabolites involved in
metabolism (metabolites) in a living organism by
evaluating - Body fluids (such as urine, blood, plasma, and
saliva) - Tissues
- 3. Cellular system
24Pathway and network
25Assembly by modules
(Building blocks)
- A
- AB
- ABC
- ABCD
- ABCDE ABCDE
FGHIJ - ABCDEF
- ABCDEFG
- ABCDEFGH
- ABCDEFGHI
- ABCDEFGHIJ ABCDEFGHIJ
Module
Stepwise
26The mevalonate pathway
HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors as
cholesterol-lowering drugs (Statins)
Nature, 343, 425, 1990.
27Modules at the gene level
- Gene clustering
- Gene module
- A ? B ? C ? D ? ? ? X
- a. Efficiency
- b. Regulation
28Functional connections between the proteome and
metabolome
- Biomolecules (cell as a chemical library)
- Concentration and compartmentation
- Molecular interactions
- Time scale
29Chemical biology
Saghatelian A, Cravatt BF. Life Sciences. 77
1759-1766, 2005.
30Connecting the proteome and metabolome through
discovery metabolite profiling (DMP)
- A. Assigning enzyme function using DMP
- Disruption of the enzyme activity of interest
through either pharmacological or genetic means.
Saghatelian A, Cravatt BF. Life Sciences. 77
1759-1766, 2005.
31- A. Assigning enzyme function using DMP
- b. Differences in the metabolome between
wild-type and enzyme-disrupted systems are
identified using untargeted LCMS methods and
converted into chemical structures using more
detailed analytical methods (tandem MS, NMR) and
chemical synthesis. - c. These compounds are then directly examined as
substrates for the enzyme of interest.
Saghatelian A, Cravatt BF. Life Sciences. 77
1759-1766, 2005.
32The strategy
Saghatelian A, Cravatt BF. Life Sciences. 77
1759-1766, 2005.
33A ? B ? C ? D
Saghatelian A, Cravatt BF. Life Sciences. 77
1759-1766, 2005.
34Targeted vs. untargeted approaches for LCMS
metabolite profiling
- a. Targeted MS is performed using selected ion
monitoring (SIM), where metabolites are
quantified by comparing their mass signals to
those of isotopically distinct internal
standards. These targeted approaches are limited
to the analysis of known metabolites.
Saghatelian A, Cravatt BF. Life Sciences. 77
1759-1766, 2005.
35e.g. Single gene mutation in the inborn error
Saghatelian A, Cravatt BF. Life Sciences. 77
1759-1766, 2005.
36Targeted vs. untargeted approaches for LCMS
metabolite profiling
- b. For discovery metabolite profiling (DMP), an
untargeted LCMS approach, metabolites are
detected in the broad mass scanning mode (e.g.,
2001200 mass units) and their levels quantified
by measuring direct mass ion intensities (MIIs).
Enzyme-regulated metabolites are identified by
comparing MIIs between wild-type and
enzyme-disrupted samples. - c. Because DMP does not require the inclusion of
internal standards (IS), this method can provide
quantitative measurements on metabolites of
unknown structures.
Saghatelian A, Cravatt BF. Life Sciences. 77
1759-1766, 2005.
37What is the remaining problem?
- Proteins not involved in catalytic functions
(structural and regulatory proteins) - Proteins with post-translational modifications
- Up-stream regulatory proteins
- Protein functions require other proteins or LMW
metabolites. - Others
38Two major tools in the studies of metabolomics
- gtgtAnalytical tools for multiple, simultaneous,
and sub-micro scale analyses of metabolites
identification and quantitation - 1. Mass spectrometry (MS/LC-MS)
- 2. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy
(also LC-NMR)
39Major tools in metabolomic (Lipidomics) study
- Two major analytical tools are liquid
chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) and
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy
(Brindle et al., 2002 Yang et al., 2006). - LC-MS is very concentration-sensitive. NMR
spectroscopy, which requires higher concentration
for determination, is indispensable in structural
elucidation, especially for unknown metabolites
(Kochhar et al., 2006).
40Mass spectrometry (MS) is the most important tool
in metabolomic study
- gtgtThe mass spectrometry for metabolomic study is
different from those used for proteomic studies - 1. Precision M/Z for low-molecular-weight (LMW)
metabolites - 2. Submicro-scale simultaneous and quantitative
determination
41Nuclear Magnet Resonance Spectroscopy (NMR)
LC-NMR
A major tool for structural determination
42Mass spectrometry in proteomics
- Surface-enhanced laser desorption-ionization
time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SELDI-TOF-MS) - b. Matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization
time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS)
43Bajad SU. J Chromatogr. A. 1125, 76-88, 2006.
44(No Transcript)
45Information from metabolomic approach
- a. How can it be obtained?
- b. How can it be integrated?
- c. How can it be applied?
46Chen M, Hofestadt R. J Biomed. Inform. 39,
147-159, 2006.
47Chen M, Hofestadt R. J Biomed. Inform. 39,
147-159, 2006.
48Database for metabolomic study (IA)
- 1. As a result of the Human Genome Project and
related clinical efforts, tremendous amount of
useful biomedical information is accumulated in
hundreds of public databases. - 2. A huge number of genes, enzymes, and metabolic
pathways have already been identified, isolated,
sequenced, and collected in these databases.
49Database for metabolomic study (IB)
- 2. A huge number of genes, enzymes, and metabolic
pathways have already been identified, isolated,
sequenced, and collected in these databases. - a. EMBL http//www.ebi.ac.uk/ embl/
- b. GenBank http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/
Genbank/ (DNA sequences) - c. BioBases Trans-Fac/TransPath
http//www.biobase.de/ (knowledge about gene
expression)
50Database for metabolomic study (II)
- gtgtMetabolic pathways and their single biochemical
reactions -
- a. KEGG http//www.genome.ad.jp/kegg/
- b. ExPASy http//www.expasy.org/
- c. BRENDA http//www.brenda.uni-koeln.de/
(kinetics of enzymatic driven processes)
51Database for metabolomic study (III)
- Inborn errors of metabolism are included in
- a. OMIM http//www3.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Omim (a
catalogue of medically important human traits,
genes, and disorders thought to have a genetic
basis) - b. Metagene http//www.metagene.de/ (designed
to support the diagnosis of inborn errors of
metabolism) - c. Ramedis/MD-Cave http//mdcave.genophen.de/
(a patient database of rare metabolic diseases. A
bioinformatics system for representing, modeling,
and simulating genetic effects on gene regulation
and metabolic processes in human)
52Research In which direction is the answer?
- Metabolomics may provided extensive
information about a persons traits and
characteristics (chemical phenotype) which may
reveal the presence, severity, and direction of
treatment of human diseases. - Disease markers
- FDA Consumer, Nov.-Dec. 2005, vol. 39 No. 6.
53Directions and potential benefits of metabolomic
research
- 1. To diagnose disease or predict the risk of
disease (especially human degenerative diseases) - 2. To determine whether a treatment is effective
- 3. To target specific patient group most likely
to benefit from a drug, while excluding its use
by those who may be harmed by it - 4. To speed the discovery and development of new
drugs - 5. To make safer drugs by early prediction of
adverse effects - 6. To monitor healthy people to direct early
signs of diseases
(US FDA, 2005)
54Metabolomics as a platform technology
- 1. Chemistry sub-micro scale analysis and
spectroscopy (LC-tandem MS and NMR, particularly) - 2. Chemical biology
- a. Metabolism-based chemical phenotyping
- b. Disease markers
55Longitudinal approach to major human diseases
- 1. Genomics and epigenomics
- 2. Proteomics
- 3. Metabolomics
- a. Gene expression profiling
- b. Protein (function?) profiling
- c. Metabolite profiling
56US FDA, 2005
57(No Transcript)
58Ten Top Causes of Human Death and Disability (in
the year 2020)
- 1. Heart disease
- 2. Severe depression
- 3. Traffic accidents
- 4. Stroke
- 5. Chronic pulmonary disease
- 6. Respiratory infections
- 7. Tuberculosis
- 8. War injury
- 9. Diarrheal diseases
- 10. HIV (AIDS)
- (Harvard School of Public Health Time, Nov. 8,
1999)
59Incorporation of metabolomic platform technology
into research
60Longitudinal and translational studies
- A. Longitudinal
- 1. Genomics and epigenomics
- 2. Proteomics
- 3. Metabolomics
- B. Translational from basic studies to clinical
application - a. Human degenerative diseases
- c. Ageing (from Caenorhabditis elegans to human)
61Combination of OMICSIs it possible to build an
artificial living system?
Proteins
DNA
Metabolites
62Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 1, 153-161, 2002
63Proteomics
Chemical library
Metabolomics
64- Metabolomics Society Website
- www.metabolomicssociety.org
65Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 1, 153-161, 2002
66Important techniques and procedures in
metabonomics
67Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 1, 153-161, 2002
68Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 1, 153-161, 2002