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1H NMR spectroscopic characterisation of HepG2 cells as a model metabolic system for toxicology studies.

Authors :
Jinks, Maren
Davies, Emily C.
Boughton, Berin A.
Lodge, Samantha
Maker, Garth L.
Source :
Toxicology in Vitro. Aug2024, Vol. 99, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The immortalised human hepatocellular HepG2 cell line is commonly used for toxicology studies as an alternative to animal testing due to its characteristic liver-distinctive functions. However, little is known about the baseline metabolic changes within these cells upon toxin exposure. We have applied 1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to characterise the biochemical composition of HepG2 cells at baseline and post-exposure to hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2). Metabolic profiles of live cells, cell extracts, and their spent media supernatants were obtained using 1H high-resolution magic angle spinning (HR-MAS) NMR and 1H NMR spectroscopic techniques. Orthogonal partial least squares discriminant analysis (O-PLS-DA) was used to characterise the metabolites that differed between the baseline and H 2 O 2 treated groups. The results showed that H 2 O 2 caused alterations to 10 metabolites, including acetate, glutamate, lipids, phosphocholine, and creatine in the live cells; 25 metabolites, including acetate, alanine, adenosine diphosphate (ADP), aspartate, citrate, creatine, glucose, glutamine, glutathione, and lactate in the cell extracts, and 22 metabolites, including acetate, alanine, formate, glucose, pyruvate, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, tyrosine, and valine in the cell supernatants. At least 10 biochemical pathways associated with these metabolites were disrupted upon toxin exposure, including those involved in energy, lipid, and amino acid metabolism. Our findings illustrate the ability of NMR-based metabolic profiling of immortalised human cells to detect metabolic effects on central metabolism due to toxin exposure. The established data sets will enable more subtle biochemical changes in the HepG2 model cell system to be identified in future toxicity testing. [Display omitted] • 1H NMR spectroscopy characterises biochemistry of HepG2 cells post-exposure to H 2 O 2. • Metabolic profiling of live cells, cell extracts, and spent media supernatants. • Pathways involved in energy, lipid, and amino acid metabolism shown to affected. • NMR metabolic profiling maps effects of toxin exposure on central metabolism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08872333
Volume :
99
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Toxicology in Vitro
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178536513
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tiv.2024.105881