Integration of lipidomics and metabolomics reveals plasma and urinary profiles associated with pediatric Mycoplasma pneumoniae infections and its severity

Author:

Chen Hui1,Chen Jia‐bin2,Du Li‐na3,Yuan Hai‐xia1,Shan Jin‐jun1ORCID,Wang Shou‐chuan1ORCID,Ye Jin1,Lin Li‐li1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Pediatric Respiratory Disease, Institute of Pediatrics, Medical Metabolomics Center, Pediatrics Department Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine Nanjing China

2. The First Clinical Medical College Zhejiang Chinese Medical University Hangzhou China

3. Department of Chinese Medicine Beijing Children's Hospital Affiliated to Capital Medical University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractMycoplasma pneumoniae is a significant contributor to lower respiratory infections in children. However, the lipidomics and metabolics bases of childhood M. pneumoniae infections remain unclear. In this study, lipidomics and metabolomics analyses were conducted using UHPLC‐LTQ‐Orbitrap XL mass spectrometry and gas chromatography‐triple quadrupole mass spectrometry on plasma (n = 65) and urine (n = 65) samples. MS‐DIAL software, in combination with LipidBlast and Fiehn BinBase DB, identified 163 lipids and 104 metabolites in plasma samples, as well as 208 metabolites in urine samples. Perturbed lipid species (adjusted p < 0.05) were observed, including lysophosphatidylethanolamines, phosphatidylinositols, phosphatidylcholines, phosphatidylethanol amines, and triglycerides. Additionally, differential metabolites (adjusted p < 0.05) exhibited associations with amino acid metabolism, nucleotide metabolism, and energy metabolism. Thirteen plasma metabolites, namely l‐hydroxyproline, 3‐phosphoglycerate, citric acid, creatine, inosine, ribitol, α tocopherol, cholesterol, cystine, serine, uric acid, tagatose, and glycine, showed significant associations with disease severity (p < 0.05) and exhibited distinct separation patterns in M. pneumoniae–infected bronchitis and pneumonia, with an area under the curve of 0.927. Nine of them exhibited either positive or negative correlations with neutrophil or lymphocyte percentages. These findings indicated significant systemic metabolic shifts in childhood M. pneumoniae infections, offering valuable insights into the associated metabolic alterations and their relationship with disease severity.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,Drug Discovery,Pharmacology,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Biochemistry,Analytical Chemistry

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