Application ofH NMR Metabolic Profiling of Serum in Canine Multicentric Lymphoma.

in Veterinary and comparative oncology by Rosina Sánchez Solé, Andrés López Radcenco, Guillermo Moyna, Martín Breijo, Paula Pessina

TLDR

  • The study used H NMR spectroscopy to compare metabolite profiles in serum from dogs with lymphoma and healthy controls.
  • The findings suggested glucose, lactate, N-acetyl glycoproteins, scyllo-inositol, and choline as possible new biomarkers for canine multicentric lymphoma.
  • The study demonstrated the potential of H NMR-based metabolite profiling for differentiating serum samples from dogs with lymphoma and healthy controls.

Abstract

Canine lymphoma represents a biologically and metabolically heterogeneous group of neoplasms that arise from malignant transformation of lymphoid cells. An accurate diagnosis is crucial because of its impact on survival. Current diagnostic methods include clinical laboratory tests and imaging, most of which are invasive and lack sensitivity and specificity. Interestingly, recent work in cancer patients focuses on the search for biomarkers for diagnosis, investigation of treatment response mechanisms, treatment efficacy and prognosis and the discovery of tumour metabolic pathways using metabolomic analysis. In this study, we compare the metabolite profiles in serum from 37 dogs with multicentric lymphoma (22 B-cell lymphomas/LB, 9 CD45+ T-cell lymphomas/LTCD45+, 6 CD45- T-cell lymphomas/LTCD45-) and 25 healthy dogs usingH nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR).H NMR-based metabolite profiling analysis recognised lipids and 22 metabolites, with 16 of them altered, and was shown to be an effective approach for differentiating samples from dogs with lymphoma and healthy controls based on principal component analysis of the NMR data. We also investigated variations in the serum metabolome between immunophenotypes and the control group through pairwise comparisons of the healthy against the LB, LTCD45+ and LTCD45- groups, respectively which showed similar metabolomic profiles. In addition, there were significant differences in the levels of five individual metabolites based on the univariate statistical analysis. Our results showed alterations in energy, protein and lipid metabolism, suggesting glucose, lactate, N-acetyl glycoproteins (NAGs), scyllo-inositol and choline as possible new candidate biomarkers in canine multicentric lymphoma.

Overview

  • The study focused on comparing metabolite profiles in serum from dogs with multicentric lymphoma and healthy dogs using H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR).
  • The study aimed to identify biomarkers for diagnosis, treatment response, and prognosis in canine lymphoma.
  • The primary objective of the study was to develop an effective method for differentiating serum samples from dogs with lymphoma and healthy controls.

Comparative Analysis & Findings

  • The analysis recognized 22 metabolites, with 16 of them altered in the serum of dogs with lymphoma compared to healthy controls.
  • The study found significant differences in the levels of five individual metabolites, which were related to energy, protein, and lipid metabolism.
  • The metabolomic profiles showed similar patterns between immunophenotypes (B-cell and T-cell lymphomas) and healthy controls.

Implications and Future Directions

  • The study's findings could potentially lead to the development of novel biomarkers for the diagnosis and monitoring of canine lymphoma.
  • Future studies could investigate the clinical relevance of these metabolites and their potential use as therapeutic targets.
  • The study's results could also inform the development of companion diagnostic assays for molecularly targeted therapies.