Integrative metabolomic characterisation identifies altered portal vein serum metabolome contributing to human hepatocellular carcinoma

Author:

Liu Jinkai,Geng Wei,Sun Hanyong,Liu Changan,Huang Fan,Cao Jie,Xia Lei,Zhao Hongchuan,Zhai Jianning,Li Qing,Zhang Xiang,Kuang MingORCID,Shen Shunli,Xia QiangORCID,Wong Vincent Wai-SunORCID,Yu JunORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveAltered metabolites are important for the tumourigenicity of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We performed integrative metabolomics analysis of the metabolites changes in portal venous blood and in comparison with the metabolites changes in liver tissues and stool samples of HCC patients and healthy liver donors.DesignSerum (portal and central vein), liver tissue (HCC tumour and adjacent non-tumour, normal liver) and stool samples were collected from 102 subjects (52 HCC patients and 50 healthy controls) in the discovery cohort; and 100 subjects (50 HCC patients and 50 healthy controls) in an independent validation cohort. Untargeted metabolomic profiling was performed using high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. The function of candidate metabolites was validated in hepatocyte cell lines.ResultsDetailed metabolomic evaluation showed distinct clusters of metabolites in serum, liver tissue and stool samples from patients with HCC and control individuals (p<0.001). HCC patients had significantly higher levels of portal vein serum and HCC tissue metabolites of DL-3-phenyllactic acid, L-tryptophan, glycocholic acid and 1-methylnicotinamide than healthy controls, which were associated with impaired liver function and poor survival. On the other hand, HCC patients had lower levels of linoleic acid and phenol in portal vein and stool samples than healthy controls. Linoleic acid and phenol significantly inhibited HCC proliferation, inferring their anti-HCC function as protective metabolites.ConclusionsThe integrative metabolome analysis of serum, tissue and stool metabolites revealed unreported metabolic alterations in HCC patients. In portal vein, we identified elevated and depleted metabolites signifying that they might play a role in HCC development.

Funder

RGC-CRF Hong Kong

Guangdong Natural Science Foundation

RGC Theme-based Res Scheme Hong Kong

Vice-Chancellor's Discretionary Fund CUHK

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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