Non-Targeted Metabolomics Investigation of a Sub-Chronic Variable Stress Model Unveils Sex-Dependent Metabolic Differences Induced by Stress

Author:

Kang Seulgi1,Kim Woonhee2,Nam Jimin2,Li Ke1,Kang Yua1,Bae Boyeon1,Chun Kwang-Hoon3ORCID,Chung ChiHye2ORCID,Lee Jeongmi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Pharmacy, Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon 16419, Republic of Korea

2. Department of Biological Sciences, Konkuk University, Seoul 05029, Republic of Korea

3. Gachon Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, Gachon University, Incheon 21936, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Depression is twice as prevalent in women as in men, however, most preclinical studies of depression have used male rodent models. This study aimed to examine how stress affects metabolic profiles depending on sex using a rodent depression model: sub-chronic variable stress (SCVS). The SCVS model of male and female mice was established in discovery and validation sets. The stress-induced behavioral phenotypic changes were similar in both sexes, however, the metabolic profiles of female plasma and brain became substantially different after stress, whereas those of males did not. Four stress-differential plasma metabolites—β-hydroxybutyric acid (BHB), L-serine, glycerol, and myo-inositol—could yield biomarker panels with excellent performance to discern the stressed individuals only for females. Disturbances in BHB, glucose, 1,5-anhydrosorbitol, lactic acid, and several fatty acids in the plasma of stressed females implied a systemic metabolic shift to β-oxidation in females. The plasma levels of BHB and corticosterone only in stressed females were observed not only in SCVS but also in an acute stress model. These results collectively suggest a sex difference in the metabolic responses by stress, possibly involving the energy metabolism shift to β-oxidation and the HPA axis dysregulation in females.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

MDPI AG

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