PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

A new metabolomic signature in type-2 diabetes mellitus and its pathophysiology.

  • Inken Padberg,
  • Erik Peter,
  • Sandra González-Maldonado,
  • Henning Witt,
  • Matthias Mueller,
  • Tanja Weis,
  • Bianca Bethan,
  • Volker Liebenberg,
  • Jan Wiemer,
  • Hugo A Katus,
  • Dietrich Rein,
  • Philipp Schatz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085082
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. e85082

Abstract

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OBJECTIVE: The objective of the current study was to find a metabolic signature associated with the early manifestations of type-2 diabetes mellitus. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHOD: Modern metabolic profiling technology (MxP™ Broad Profiling) was applied to find early alterations in the plasma metabolome of type-2 diabetic patients. The results were validated in an independent study. Eicosanoid and single inon monitoring analysis (MxP™ Eicosanoid and MxP™ SIM analysis) were performed in subsets of samples. RESULTS: A metabolic signature including significantly increased levels of glyoxylate as a potential novel marker for early detection of type-2 diabetes mellitus was identified in an initial study (Study1). The signature was significantly altered in fasted diabetic and pre-diabetic subjects and in non-fasted subjects up to three years prior to the diagnosis of type-2 diabetes; most alterations were also consistently found in an independent patient group (Study 2). In Study 2 diabetic and most control subjects suffered from heart failure. In Study 1 a subgroup of diabetic subjects, with a history of use of anti-hypertensive medication further showed a more pronounced increase of glyoxylate levels, compared to a non-diabetic control group when tested in a hyperglycemic state. In the context of a prior history of anti-hypertensive medication, alterations in hexosamine and eicosanoid levels were also found. CONCLUSION: A metabolic signature including glyoxylate was associated with type-2 diabetes mellitus, independent of the fasting status and of occurrence of another major disease. The same signature was also found to be associated with pre-diabetic subjects. Glyoxylate levels further showed a specifically strong increase in a subgroup of diabetic subjects. It could represent a new marker for the detection of medical subgroups of diabetic subjects.