Systemic Responses of Mice to Dextran Sulfate Sodium-Induced
Acute Ulcerative Colitis Using <sup>1</sup>H NMR Spectroscopy
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Abstract
The interplay between genetic mutation
and environmental factors
is believed to contribute to the etiology of inflammatory bowel disease
(IBD). While focused attention has been paid to the aforementioned
research, time-specific and organ-specific metabolic changes associated
with IBD are still lacking. Here, we induced acute ulcerative colitis
in mice by providing water containing 3% dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)
for 7 days and investigated the metabolic changes of plasma, urine,
and a range of biological tissues by employing a <sup>1</sup>H nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR)-based metabonomics approach with complementary
information on serum clinical chemistry and histopathology. We found
that DSS-induced acute ulcerative colitis leads to significant elevations
in the levels of amino acids in plasma and decreased levels in the
membrane-related metabolites and a range of nucleotides, nucleobases,
and nucleosides in the colon. In addition, acute-colitis-induced elevations
in the levels of nucleotides in the liver were observed, accompanied
by reduced levels of glucose. DSS-induced acute colitis also resulted
in increased levels of oxidized glutathione and attenuated levels
of taurine in the spleen. Furthermore, acute colitis resulted in depletion
in the levels of gut microbial cometabolites in urine along with an
increase in citric acid cycle intermediates. These findings suggest
that DSS-induced acute colitis causes a disturbance of lipid and energy
metabolism, damage to the colon and liver, a promoted antioxidative
and anti-inflammatory response, and perturbed gut microbiotal communities.
The information obtained here provided details of the time-dependent
and holistic metabolic changes in the development of the DSS-induced
acute ulcerative colitis, which could be useful in discovery of novel
therapeutic targets for management of IBD