TY - JOUR
T1 - Metabolomic profiles of plasma, exhaled breath condensate, and saliva are correlated with potential for air toxics detection
AU - Ladva, Chandresh Nanji
AU - Golan, Rachel
AU - Greenwald, Roby
AU - Yu, Tianwei
AU - Sarnat, Stefanie Ebelt
AU - Flanders, W. Dana
AU - Uppal, Karan
AU - Walker, Douglas I.
AU - Tran, Vilinh
AU - Liang, Donghai
AU - Jones, Dean P.
AU - Sarnat, Jeremy A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - Introduction: Advances in the development of high-resolution metabolomics (HRM) have provided new opportunities for their use in characterizing exposures to environmental air pollutants and air pollution-related disease etiologies. Exposure assessment studies have considered blood, breath, and saliva as biological matrices suitable for measuring responses to air pollution exposures. The current study examines comparability among these three matrices using HRM and explores their potential for measuring mobile-source air toxics. Methods: Four participants provided saliva, exhaled breath concentrate (EBC), and plasma before and after a 2 h road traffic exposure. Samples were analyzed on a Thermo Scientific QExactive MS system in positive electrospray ionization mode and resolution of 70 000 full-width at half-maximum with C18 chromatography. Data were processed using an apLCMS and xMSanalyzer on the R statistical platform. Results: The analysis yielded 7110, 6019, and 7747 reproducible features in plasma, EBC, and saliva, respectively. Correlations were moderate-to-strong (R = 0.41-0.80) across all pairwise comparisons of feature intensity within profiles, with the strongest between EBC and saliva. The associations of mean intensities between matrix pairs were positive and significant, controlling for subject and sampling time effects. Six out of 20 features shared in all three matrices putatively matched a list of known mobile-source air toxics. Conclusions: Plasma, saliva, and EBC have largely comparable metabolic profiles measurable through HRM. These matrices have the potential to be used in identification and measurement of exposures to mobile-source air toxics, though further, targeted study is needed.
AB - Introduction: Advances in the development of high-resolution metabolomics (HRM) have provided new opportunities for their use in characterizing exposures to environmental air pollutants and air pollution-related disease etiologies. Exposure assessment studies have considered blood, breath, and saliva as biological matrices suitable for measuring responses to air pollution exposures. The current study examines comparability among these three matrices using HRM and explores their potential for measuring mobile-source air toxics. Methods: Four participants provided saliva, exhaled breath concentrate (EBC), and plasma before and after a 2 h road traffic exposure. Samples were analyzed on a Thermo Scientific QExactive MS system in positive electrospray ionization mode and resolution of 70 000 full-width at half-maximum with C18 chromatography. Data were processed using an apLCMS and xMSanalyzer on the R statistical platform. Results: The analysis yielded 7110, 6019, and 7747 reproducible features in plasma, EBC, and saliva, respectively. Correlations were moderate-to-strong (R = 0.41-0.80) across all pairwise comparisons of feature intensity within profiles, with the strongest between EBC and saliva. The associations of mean intensities between matrix pairs were positive and significant, controlling for subject and sampling time effects. Six out of 20 features shared in all three matrices putatively matched a list of known mobile-source air toxics. Conclusions: Plasma, saliva, and EBC have largely comparable metabolic profiles measurable through HRM. These matrices have the potential to be used in identification and measurement of exposures to mobile-source air toxics, though further, targeted study is needed.
KW - air toxics
KW - exhaled breath condensate
KW - exposure assessment
KW - high-resolution metabolomics
KW - plasma
KW - saliva
KW - traffic pollutants
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85040080636&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/1752-7163/aa863c
DO - 10.1088/1752-7163/aa863c
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85040080636
SN - 1752-7155
VL - 12
JO - Journal of Breath Research
JF - Journal of Breath Research
IS - 1
M1 - 016008
ER -