Relation of Whole Blood Amino Acid and Acylcarnitine Metabolome to Age, Sex, BMI, Puberty, and Metabolic Markers in Children and Adolescents

Abstract:

BACKGROUND Changes in the metabolic fingerprint of blood during child growth and development are a largely under-investigated area of research. The examination of such aspects requires a cohort of healthy children and adolescents who have been subjected to deep phenotyping, including collection of biospecimens for metabolomic analysis. The present study considered whether amino acid (AA) and acylcarnitine (AC) concentrations are associated with age, sex, body mass index (BMI), and puberty during childhood and adolescence. It also investigated whether there are associations between amino acids (AAs) and acylcarnitines (ACs) and laboratory parameters of glucose and lipid metabolism, as well as liver, kidney, and thyroid parameters. METHODS A total of 3989 dried whole blood samples collected from 2191 healthy participants, aged 3 months to 18 years, from the LIFE Child cohort (Leipzig, Germany) were analyzed using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry to detect levels of 23 AAs, 6 ACs, and free carnitine (C0). Age- and sex-related percentiles were estimated for each metabolite. In addition, correlations between laboratory parameters and levels of the selected AAs and ACs were calculated using hierarchical models. RESULTS Four different age-dependent profile types were identified for AAs and ACs. Investigating the association with puberty, we mainly identified peak metabolite levels at Tanner stages 2 to 3 in girls and stages 3 to 5 in boys. Significant correlations were observed between BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS) and certain metabolites, among them, branched-chain (leucine/isoleucine, valine) and aromatic (phenylalanine, tyrosine) amino acids. Most of the metabolites correlated significantly with absolute concentrations of glucose, glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), triglycerides, cystatin C (CysC), and creatinine. After age adjustment, significant correlations were observed between most metabolites and CysC, as well as HbA1c. CONCLUSIONS During childhood, several AA and AC levels are related to age, sex, BMI, and puberty. Moreover, our data verified known associations but also revealed new correlations between AAs/ACs and specific key markers of metabolic function.

DOI: 10.3390/metabo10040149

Projects: Genetical Statistics and Systems Biology

Publication type: Journal article

Journal: Metabolites

Human Diseases: No Human Disease specified

Citation: Metabolites 10(4):149

Date Published: 1st Apr 2020

Registered Mode: imported from a bibtex file

Authors: Josephin Hirschel, Mandy Vogel, Ronny Baber, Antje Garten, Carl Beuchel, Yvonne Dietz, Julia Dittrich, Antje Körner, Wieland Kiess, Uta Ceglarek

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Hirschel, J., Vogel, M., Baber, R., Garten, A., Beuchel, C., Dietz, Y., Dittrich, J., Körner, A., Kiess, W., & Ceglarek, U. (2020). Relation of Whole Blood Amino Acid and Acylcarnitine Metabolome to Age, Sex, BMI, Puberty, and Metabolic Markers in Children and Adolescents. In Metabolites (Vol. 10, Issue 4, p. 149). MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo10040149
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Created: 15th Sep 2020 at 08:49

Last updated: 7th Dec 2021 at 17:58

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