Title of article :
Aromatic amino acids play a harmonizing role in prostate cancer: A metabolomics-based cross-sectional study
Author/Authors :
Akbari ، Ziba Biochemistry Department, Metabolomics Lab - Pasture Institute of Iran , Taghipour Dijojin ، Roghayeh Biochemistry Department, Metabolomics Lab - Pasture Institute of Iran , Zamani ، Zahra Biochemistry Department, Metabolomics Lab - Pasture Institute of Iran , Haji Hosseini ، Reza Biology Department - Payame Noor University , Arjmand ، Mohammad Biochemistry Department, Metabolomics Lab - Pasture Institute of Iran
From page :
741
To page :
750
Abstract :
Background: Prostate cancer (PCa) is a common health problem worldwide. The rate of this disease is likely to grow by 2021. PCa is a heterogeneous disorder, and various biochemical factors contribute to the development of this disease. The metabolome is the complete set of metabolites in a cell or biological sample and represents the downstream end product of the omics. Hence, to model PCa by computational systems biology, a preliminary metabolomicsbased study was used to compare the metabolome profile pattern between healthy and PCa men. Objective: This study was carried out to highlight energy metabolism modification and assist the prognosis and treatment of disease with unique biomarkers. Materials and Methods: In this crosssectional research, 26 men diagnosed with stageIII PCa and 26 healthy men with normal PSA levels were enrolled. Urine was analyzed with proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1HNMR) spectroscopy, accompanied by the MetaboAnalyst webbased platform tool for metabolomics data analysis. Partial least squares regression discriminant analysis was applied to clarify the separation between the two groups. Outliers were documented and metabolites determined, followed by identifying biochemical pathways. Results: Our findings reveal that modifications in aromatic amino acid metabolism and some of their metabolites have a high potential for use as urinary PCa biomarkers. Tryptophan metabolism (p 0.001), tyrosine metabolism (p 0.001), phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis (p 0.001), phenylalanine metabolism (p = 0.01), ubiquinone and other terpenoidquinone biosynthesis (p = 0.19), nitrogen metabolism (p = 0.21), and thiamine metabolism (p = 0.41) with Q2 (0.198) and R2 (0.583) were significantly altered. Conclusion: The discriminated metabolites and their pathways play an essential role in PCa causes and harmony.
Keywords :
Metabolomics , Prostate cancer , Aromatic amino acids , 1H , NMR spectroscopy ,
Journal title :
International Journal of Reproductive BioMedicine
Journal title :
International Journal of Reproductive BioMedicine
Record number :
2710397
Link To Document :
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