14 research outputs found

    The Iceman's Last Meal Consisted of Fat, Wild Meat, and Cereals

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    The history of humankind is marked by the constant adoption of new dietary habits affecting human physiology, metabolism, and even the development of nutrition-related disorders. Despite clear archaeological evidence for the shift from hunter-gatherer lifestyle to agriculture in Neolithic Europe [1], very little information exists on the daily dietary habits of our ancestors. By undertaking a complementary -omics approach combined with microscopy, we analyzed the stomach content of the Iceman, a 5,300-yearold European glacier mummy [2, 3]. He seems to have had a remarkably high proportion of fat in his diet, supplemented with fresh or dried wild meat, cereals, and traces of toxic bracken. Our multipronged approach provides unprecedented analytical depth, deciphering the nutritional habit, meal composition, and food-processing methods of this Copper Age individual

    GC-MS based metabolomics of colon cancer cells using different extraction solvents

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    The increasing incidence of colorectal cancer enforces the development of novel methodologies and protocols to deepen in the molecular mechanisms that govern disease pathophysiological events. The aim of this work is to deepen in the optimum metabolite extraction protocol from adherent mammalian cells of colon cancer for high throughput metabolomics using gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (GC-MS). GC-MS results showed that metabolic information obtained from colon cancer cells was highly dependent on metabolite extraction selection, which at the same time is extremely influenced by the analytical platform. A further purpose of this investigation is to uncover an unexplored portion of HT-29 colon cancer cells metabolome, complementary to other already explored by CE-MS and LC-MS methods. At this respect, a total of 150 metabolites were identified in HT-29 colon cancer cells by GC-MS. The extraction protocol with acetonitrile-isopropanol-water was the most appropriate for fatty acids and related pathways analysis. Most of the metabolites involved in pathways of amino acids, glutathione, amino sugars and other polar metabolites were better extracted with acidified water, although water extraction showed the best overall reproducibility. Although pathways involving nitrogenous bases could be investigated using organic or aqueous extracts, a higher number of metabolites involved in these pathways were identified in the aqueous extracts. In addition, metabolite extraction protocol was observed to be crucial for the determination of potentially interesting clusters of metabolites.This work was supported the projects AGL2011-29857-C03-01 (Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia, Spain) and AGL2014-53609- P (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Spain). CI thanks to Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad for her stay abroad grant (EEBB-I-12-03995) and for her Juan de la Cierva postdoctoral research contract (FJCI-2014-19601).Peer reviewe

    Changes in plasma metabolites and glucose homeostasis during omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid supplementation in women with polycystic ovary syndrome

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    BackgroundBoth fish (FO) and flaxseed oils (FLX) are n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). Fish oil contains long chain while FLX contains essential n-3 PUFA. We demonstrated that FO altered insulin secretion and resistance in polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) women but FLX did not. Surprisingly, the effects of FO were similar to those of the n-6 PUFA-rich soybean oil (SBO). Since increased branched chain (BCAA) and aromatic amino acids (AA) affect insulin secretion and resistance, we investigated whether FO, FLX and /or SBO affect plasma metabolites, especially AA.Methods and findingsIn this six-week, randomized, 3-parallel arm, double-blinded study, 54 women received 3.5 g/day FO, FLX or SBO. In 51 completers (17 from each arm), fasting plasma metabolites were measured at the beginning and at the end. As compared to FLX, FO and SBO increased insulin response and resistance as well as several BCAA and aromatic AA. Pathway analysis indicated that FO exerted the largest biochemical impact, affecting AA degradation and biosynthesis, amine, polyamine degradation and alanine, glycine, l-carnitine biosynthesis and TCA cycle, while FLX had minimal impact affecting only alanine biosynthesis and l-cysteine degradation.ConclusionEffects of FO and SBO on plasma AA were similar and differed significantly from those of the FLX. The primary target of dietary PUFA is not known. Dietary PUFA may influence insulin secretion and resistance directly and alter plasma AA indirectly. Alternatively, as a novel concept, dietary PUFA may directly affect AA metabolism and the changes in insulin secretion and resistance may be secondary

    Using MS-FINDER for identifying 19 natural products in the CASMI 2016 contest

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    In its fourth year, the CASMI 2016 contest was organized to evaluate current chemical structure identification strategies for 19 natural products using high-resolution LC-MS and LC-MS/MS challenge datasets using automated methods with or without the combination of other tools. These natural products originate from plants, fungi, marine sponges, algae, or micro-algae. Every compound annotation workflow must start with determination of elemental compositions. Of these 19 challenges, one was excluded by the organizers after submission. For the remaining 18 challenges, three software programs were used. MS-FINDER version 1.62 was able to correctly identify 89% of the molecular formulas using an internal database that comprised of 13 metabolomics repositories with 45,181 formulas. SIRIUS correctly identified 61% compositions using PubChem formulas and Seven Golden Rules correctly identified 83% by using the Dictionary of Natural Products as a targeted database. Next, we performed structural dereplication for which we used the consensus formula from the three software programs. We submitted two solution sets for these challenges. In the first solution set, avaniya001, we only used the internal MS-FINDER functions for predicting and ranking structures, correctly identifying 53% of the structures as top-hit, 72% within the top-3 structures, and 78% within the top-10 hits. For our second set, avaniya002, we used both MS-FINDER predictions as well as MS/MS queries against the commercial NIST 14, METLIN, and the public MassBank of North America libraries. Here we correctly identified 78% of the structures as top-hit and 83% within the top-3 hits. Three challenge spectra remained unidentified in either of our submissions within the top-10 hits

    Expression and purification of cysteine introduced recombinant saporin

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    Saporin, a ribosome inactivating protein is widely used for immunotoxin construction. Here we describe a mutation of saporin (sap)-3 DNA by introducing a cysteine residue, followed by protein expression and purification by ion exchange chromatography. The purified Cys255sap-3, sap-3 isomer and commercially purchased saporin, were tested for toxicity using assays measuring inhibition for protein synthesis. The IC50 values showed that the toxicity of the Cys255sap-3 is equivalent to the sap-3 isomer and commercial saporin. Reactivity of Cys255sap-3 was confirmed by labeling with a thio-specific fluorescent probe as well as conjugation with a nonspecific mouse IgG. We have found that a single cysteine within saporin provides a method for antibody conjugation that ensures a uniform and reproducible modification of a saporin variant retaining high activity. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

    Anesthetic induction with guaifenesin and propofol in adult horses

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    Objective-To evaluate whether guaifenesin can prevent adverse anesthetic induction events caused by propofol and whether a guaifenesin-propofol induction combination has brief cardiovascular effects commensurate with rapid drug washout.Animals-8 healthy adult horses.Procedures-Guaifenesin was administered IV for 3 minutes followed by IV injection of a bolus of propofol (2 mg/kg). Additional propofol was administered if purposeful movement was detected. Anesthesia was maintained for 2 hours with isoflurane or sevoflurane at 1.2 times the minimum alveolar concentration with controlled normocapnic ventilation. Normotension was maintained via a dobutamine infusion. Plasma concentrations of propofol and guaifenesin were measured every 30 minutes.Results-Mean +/- SD guaifenesin and propofol doses inducing anesthesia in half of the horses were 73 +/- 18 mg/kg and 2.2 +/- 0.3 mg/kg, respectively. No adverse anesthetic induction events were observed. By 70 minutes, there was no significant temporal change in the dobutamine infusion rate required to maintain normotension for horses anesthetized with isoflurane or sevoflurane. Mean plasma guaifenesin concentrations were 122 +/- 30 mu M, 101 +/- 34 mu M, 93 +/- 28 mu M, and 80 +/- 24 mu M at 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes after anesthetic induction, respectively. All plasma propofol concentrations were below the limit of quantitation.Conclusions and Clinical Relevance-Guaifenesin prevented adverse anesthetic induction events caused by propofol. Guaifenesin (90 mg/kg) followed by propofol (3 mg/kg) should be sufficient to immobilize >99% of calm healthy adult horses. Anesthetic drug washout was rapid, and there was no change in inotrope requirements after anesthesia for 70 minutes. (Am J Vet Res 201172:1569-1575)Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES
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