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Integrated lipidomic and transcriptomic analysis reveals clarithromycin-induced alteration of glycerophospholipid metabolism in the cerebral cortex of mice.

Authors :
Wang, Xiaojie
Wang, Liang
Luo, Mingyi
Bu, Qian
Liu, Chunqi
Jiang, Linhong
Xu, Rui
Wang, Shaomin
Zhang, Haoluo
Zhang, Jiamei
Wan, Xuemei
Li, Hongchun
Wang, Yonghai
Liu, Bin
Zhao, Ying
Chen, Yuanyuan
Dai, Yanping
Li, Min
Wang, Hongbo
Tian, Jingwei
Source :
Cell Biology & Toxicology; Jun2023, Vol. 39 Issue 3, p771-793, 23p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Clarithromycin (CLA) has been widely used in the treatment of bacterial infection. Research reveals the adverse effects on the central nervous system among patients receiving CLA treatment; whereas, a relevant underlying mechanism remains considerably unclear. According to our research, an integrated lipidomic and transcriptomic analysis was applied to explore the effect of CLA on neurobehavior. CLA treatment caused anxiety-like behaviors dose-dependently during open field as well as elevated plus maze trials on mice. Transcriptomes and LC/MS–MS–based metabolomes were adopted for investigating how CLA affected lipidomic profiling as well as metabolic pathway of the cerebral cortex. CLA exposure greatly disturbed glycerophospholipid metabolism and the carbon chain length of fatty acids. By using whole transcriptome sequencing, we found that CLA significantly downregulated the mRNA expression of CEPT1 and CHPT1, two key enzymes involved in the synthesis of glycerophospholipids, supporting the findings from the lipidomic profiling. Also, CLA causes changes in neuronal morphology and function in vitro, which support the existing findings concerning neurobehavior in vivo. We speculate that altered glycerophospholipid metabolism may be involved in the neurobehavioral effect of CLA. Our findings contribute to understanding the mechanisms of CLA-induced adverse effects on the central nervous system. 1. Clarithromycin treatment caused anxiety-like behavior with dose-dependent response both in the open field and elevated plus maze test in mice; 2. Clarithromycin exposing predominately disturbed the metabolism of glycerophospholipids in the cerebral cortex of mice; 3. Clarithromycin application remarkably attenuated CEPT1 and CHPT1 gene expression, which participate in the last step in the synthesis of glycerophospholipids; 4. The altered glycerophospholipid metabolomics may be involved in the abnormal neurobehavior caused by clarithromycin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07422091
Volume :
39
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cell Biology & Toxicology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169808864
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10565-021-09646-5