Metabolites (Jul 2022)

NMR Metabolomics in Serum Fingerprinting of Schizophrenia Patients in a Serbian Cohort

  • Katarina Simić,
  • Nina Todorović,
  • Snežana Trifunović,
  • Zoran Miladinović,
  • Aleksandra Gavrilović,
  • Silvana Jovanović,
  • Nataša Avramović,
  • Dejan Gođevac,
  • Ljubodrag Vujisić,
  • Vele Tešević,
  • Ljubica Tasić,
  • Boris Mandić

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo12080707
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 707

Abstract

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Schizophrenia is a widespread mental disorder that leads to significant functional impairments and premature death. The state of the art indicates gaps in the understanding and diagnosis of this disease, but also the need for personalized and precise approaches to patients through customized medical treatment and reliable monitoring of treatment response. In order to fulfill existing gaps, the establishment of a universal set of disorder biomarkers is a necessary step. Metabolomic investigations of serum samples of Serbian patients with schizophrenia (51) and healthy controls (39), based on NMR analyses associated with chemometrics, led to the identification of 26 metabolites/biomarkers for this disorder. Principal component analysis (PCA) and orthogonal partial least squares discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA) models with prediction accuracies of 0.9718 and higher were accomplished during chemometric analysis. The established biomarker set includes aspartate/aspartic acid, lysine, 2-hydroxybutyric acid, and acylglycerols, which are identified for the first time in schizophrenia serum samples by NMR experiments. The other 22 identified metabolites in the Serbian samples are in accordance with the previously established NMR-based serum biomarker sets of Brazilian and/or Chinese patient samples. Thirteen metabolites (lactate/lactic acid, threonine, leucine, isoleucine, valine, glutamine, asparagine, alanine, gamma-aminobutyric acid, choline, glucose, glycine and tyrosine) that are common for three different ethnic and geographic origins (Serbia, Brazil and China) could be a good start point for the setup of a universal NMR serum biomarker set for schizophrenia.

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