Propionic Acidemia, Methylmalonic Acidemia, and Cobalamin C Deficiency: Comparison of Untargeted Metabolomic Profiles

Author:

Sidorina Anna1ORCID,Catesini Giulio1ORCID,Sacchetti Elisa1,Rizzo Cristiano1,Dionisi-Vici Carlo1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Metabolic Diseases and Hepatology, Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital IRCCS, 00146 Rome, Italy

Abstract

Methylmalonic acidemia (MMA), propionic acidemia (PA), and cobalamin C deficiency (cblC) share a defect in propionic acid metabolism. In addition, cblC is also involved in the process of homocysteine remethylation. These three diseases produce various phenotypes and complex downstream metabolic effects. In this study, we used an untargeted metabolomics approach to investigate the biochemical differences and the possible connections among the pathophysiology of each disease. The significantly changed metabolites in the untargeted urine metabolomic profiles of 21 patients (seven MMA, seven PA, seven cblC) were identified through statistical analysis (p < 0.05; log2FC > |1|) and then used for annotation. Annotated features were associated with different metabolic pathways potentially involved in the disease’s development. Comparative statistics showed markedly different metabolomic profiles between MMA, PA, and cblC, highlighting the characteristic species for each disease. The most affected pathways were related to the metabolism of organic acids (all diseases), amino acids (all diseases), and glycine and its conjugates (in PA); the transsulfuration pathway; oxidative processes; and neurosteroid hormones (in cblC). The untargeted metabolomics study highlighted the presence of significant differences between the three diseases, pointing to the most relevant contrast in the cblC profile compared to MMA and PA. Some new biomarkers were proposed for PA, while novel data regarding the alterations of steroid hormone profiles and biomarkers of oxidative stress were obtained for cblC disease. The elevation of neurosteroids in cblC may indicate a potential connection with the development of ocular and neuronal deterioration.

Funder

La Vita è un Dono Odv

Cbl-C APS

Italian Ministry of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

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