PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Metabolomic Profiling in Individuals with a Failing Kidney Allograft.

  • Roberto Bassi,
  • Monika A Niewczas,
  • Luigi Biancone,
  • Stefania Bussolino,
  • Sai Merugumala,
  • Sara Tezza,
  • Francesca D'Addio,
  • Moufida Ben Nasr,
  • Alessandro Valderrama-Vasquez,
  • Vera Usuelli,
  • Valentina De Zan,
  • Basset El Essawy,
  • Massimo Venturini,
  • Antonio Secchi,
  • Francesco De Cobelli,
  • Alexander Lin,
  • Anil Chandraker,
  • Paolo Fiorina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169077
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. e0169077

Abstract

Read online

Alteration of certain metabolites may play a role in the pathophysiology of renal allograft disease.To explore metabolomic abnormalities in individuals with a failing kidney allograft, we analyzed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS; for ex vivo profiling of serum and urine) and two dimensional correlated spectroscopy (2D COSY; for in vivo study of the kidney graft) 40 subjects with varying degrees of chronic allograft dysfunction stratified by tertiles of glomerular filtration rate (GFR; T1, T2, T3). Ten healthy non-allograft individuals were chosen as controls.LC-MS/MS analysis revealed a dose-response association between GFR and serum concentration of tryptophan, glutamine, dimethylarginine isomers (asymmetric [A]DMA and symmetric [S]DMA) and short-chain acylcarnitines (C4 and C12), (test for trend: T1-T3 = p<0.05; p = 0.01; p<0.001; p = 0.01; p = 0.01; p<0.05, respectively). The same association was found between GFR and urinary levels of histidine, DOPA, dopamine, carnosine, SDMA and ADMA (test for trend: T1-T3 = p<0.05; p<0.01; p = 0.001; p<0.05; p = 0.001; p<0.001; p<0.01, respectively). In vivo 2D COSY of the kidney allograft revealed significant reduction in the parenchymal content of choline, creatine, taurine and threonine (all: p<0.05) in individuals with lower GFR levels.We report an association between renal function and altered metabolomic profile in renal transplant individuals with different degrees of kidney graft function.