Metabolic Phenotyping of an
Adoptive Transfer Mouse
Model of Experimental Colitis and Impact of Dietary Fish Oil Intake
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Abstract
Inflammatory
bowel diseases are acute and chronic disabling inflammatory
disorders with multiple complex etiologies that are not well-defined.
Chronic intestinal inflammation has been linked to an energy-deficient
state of gut epithelium with alterations in oxidative metabolism.
Plasma-, urine-, stool-, and liver-specific metabonomic analyses are
reported in a naïve T cell adoptive transfer (AT) experimental
model of colitis, which evaluated the impact of long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated
fatty acid (PUFA)-enriched diet. Metabolic profiles of AT animals
and their controls under chow diet or fish oil supplementation were
compared to describe the (i) consequences of inflammatory processes
and (ii) the differential impact of n-3 fatty acids. Inflammation
was associated with higher glycoprotein levels (related to acute-phase
response) and remodeling of PUFAs. Low triglyceride levels and enhanced
PUFA levels in the liver suggest activation of lipolytic pathways
that could lead to the observed increase of phospholipids in the liver
(including plasmalogens and sphingomyelins). In parallel, the increase
in stool excretion of most amino acids may indicate a protein-losing
enteropathy. Fecal content of glutamine was lower in AT mice, a feature
exacerbated under fish oil intervention that may reflect a functional
relationship between intestinal inflammatory status and glutamine
metabolism. The decrease in Krebs cycle intermediates in urine (succinate,
α-ketoglutarate) also suggests a reduction in the glutaminolytic
pathway at a systemic level. Our data indicate that inflammatory status
is related to this overall loss of energy homeostasis